Orientational transitions of discotic columnar liquid crystals in cylindrical pores

  • Rui Bin Zhang
  • , Marco A. Grunwald
  • , Xiang Bing Zeng
  • , Sabine Laschat
  • , Andrew N. Cammidge
  • , Goran Ungar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Confined in a cylindrical pore with homeotropic anchoring condition, the hexagonal columnar phase of discotic liquid crystals can form a “log-pile” configuration, in which the columns are perpendicular to the long axis of the pore. However, the {100} planes of the hexagonal lattice can orient either parallel (termed (100) orientation) or perpendicular ((100)) to pore axis. Here we experimentally show that the (100) orientation is found in narrower cylindrical pores, and the (100)-(100) transition can be controlled by engineering the structure of the molecules. The (100) orientation is destroyed in asymmetric discotics hepta(heptenyloxy)triphenylene (SATO7); replacing the oxygen linkage in hexa(hexyloxy)triphenylene (HATO6) by sulphur (HATS6) improves the (100) orientation in small pores; adding a perfluorooctyl end to each alkyl chain of HATO6 (HATO6F8) moves the (100)-(100) transition to larger pores. We have provided a semi-quantitative explanation of the experimental observations, and discussed them in the context of previous findings on related materials in a wider pore size range from 60 nm to 100 μm. This allows us to produce a comprehensive picture of confined columnar liquid crystals whose applications critically depend on our ability to align them.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6193-6203
Number of pages11
JournalSoft Matter
Volume20
Issue number31
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Jul 2024

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