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Back to Colloquia
Physics Colloquium Monday, February 19th, 2007,
4:00 P.M.
E300 Math/Science
Center; Refreshments at 3:30 P.M. in
Room E200
Alberto Fernandez-Nieves
Harvard University
Nematic order in spherical shells
We use double emulsion drops to experimentally
realize a system
to investigate the defect structure in spherical
shells of
nematic liquid crystal. The ground state of this
system is
predicted to exhibit a tetrahedral arrangement of
four surface
defects in a structure reminiscent of a baseball.
Instead, we
find a much richer set of coexisting defect
structures dictated
by the inevitable thickness of even the thinnest
shells,
and the resultant variation of the shell thickness
around the
sphere. These structures are characterized by a
varying number
of disclination lines and pairs of surface point
defects, one
each on the inner and outer surfaces of the nematic
shell. The
inevitable thickness variation of the shell
determines the
separation of the defects, and the ultimate
configuration. In
the limit of thick shells, the structure ultimately
merges
with that of a bulk nematic liquid crystal drop.
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