4.8 Article

Elastic Instability of Cubic Blue Phase Nano Crystals in Curved Shells

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages 15894-15906

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.2c02799

Keywords

blue phase; liquid crystals; skyrmions; curved confinement; elastic instability

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, Division of Materials Research, Condensed Matter Physics program
  2. NSF CAREER award [CF-2019-74885]
  3. SC EPSCoR [201901023N]
  4. Ciencia de Frontera CONACYT [DESC0019762]
  5. Laboratorio Nacional de Supercomputo del Sureste de Mexico (LNS) [P30CA014599]
  6. Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science
  7. Cancer Center Support Grant
  8. [2146428]
  9. [21-GE03]

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This study investigates the crystallization behavior of blue phase liquid crystals under curved confinement. The results show that the high curvature and spatial confinement can lead to the reconfiguration of the BPI phase into the BPII phase, resulting in different optical characteristics and structural morphologies. Additionally, the coupling of curvature and confinement leads to the nucleation of skyrmions at greater thicknesses.
Many crystallization processes, including biomineralization and ice-freezing, occur in small and curved volumes, where surface curvature can strain the crystal, leading to unusual configurations and defect formation. The role of curvature on crystallization, however, remains poorly understood. Here, we study the crystallization of blue phase (BP) liquid crystals under curved confinement, which provides insights into the mechanism by which BPs reconfigure their three-dimensional lattice structure to adapt to curvature. BPs are a three-dimensional assembly of high-chirality liquid crystal molecules arranged into body-centered (BPI) or simple cubic (BPII) symmetries. BPs with submicrometer cubic-crystalline lattices exhibit tunable Bragg reflection and submillisecond response time to external stimuli such as an electric field, making them attractive for advanced photonic materials. In this work, we have systematically studied BPs confined in spherical shells with well-defined curvature and boundary conditions. The optical behavior of shells has also been examined at room temperature, where the cholesteric structure forms. In the cholesteric phase, perpendicular anchoring generates focal conic domains on the shell's surface, which transition into stripe patterns as the degree of curvature increases. Our results demonstrate that both higher degrees of curvature and strong spatial confinement destabilize BPI and reconfigure that phase to adopt the structure and optical features of BPII. We also show that the coupling of curvature and confinement nucleates skyrmions at greater thicknesses than those observed for a flat geometry. These findings are particularly important for integrating BPs into miniaturized and curved/flexible devices, including flexible displays, wearable sensors, and smart fabrics.

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