Issue |
J. Phys. II France
Volume 2, Number 5, May 1992
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Page(s) | 1215 - 1236 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/jp2:1992180 |
J. Phys. II France 2 (1992) 1215-1236
Statistical mechanics of defects in polymer liquid crystals
Jonathan V. Selinger and Robijn F. BruinsmaDepartment of Physics, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90024, U.S.A.
(Received 4 March 1991, revised 30 December 1991, accepted 8 January 1992)
Abstract
We develop a continuum theory for the statistical mechanics of thermally activated point defects in the nematic and hexagonal
phases of polymer liquid crystals. In the nematic phase, there are elementary splay defects (chain ends and hairpins), and
in the hexagonal phase, there are both splay defects and twist defects. In the nematic phase, splay defects are free in the
limit of large separation; i.e., their binding energy is finite. By contrast, in the hexagonal phase, both types of defects
are bound in
+- pairs. We derive expressions for two correlation functions, the structure factor and the director fluctuation spectrum, in
the presence of defects, and we use these correlation functions to define macroscopic Frank constants and elastic moduli.
In the nematic phase, the presence of ionized splay defects causes the macroscopic splay constant
to be finite. It is large and strongly temperature-dependent in the low-temperature regime, but smaller and temperature-independent
in the higher-temperature Debye-Hückel regime. By contrast, in the hexagonal phase, the macroscopic splay and twist constants
and
are infinite, just as in harmonic theory. These effects should be observable in x-ray and light-scattering experiments on
polymer liquid crystals.
61.30 - 61.25H - 64.70M
© Les Editions de Physique 1992