4.8 Article

Structures and topological defects in pressure-driven lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108361118|1of9

Keywords

lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals; pressure-driven flow of nematics; topological defects; pure-twist disclination loops; polarized shearing; interference microscopy

Funding

  1. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Research Support Committee
  2. NIH [R01DA045549, R21GM140613-02, 5-P41-EB015871-27, 5R21NS091982-02]
  3. Hamamatsu Corporation
  4. Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology Center
  5. Hong Kong Research Grants Council [26302320]
  6. Critical Analytics for Manufacturing Personalized-Medicine Interdisciplinary Research Group

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The study uses polarized shearing interference microscopy to investigate the structure and dynamics of lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals, revealing the formation and behavior of pure-twist disclination loops in the fluid. The size and behavior of these loops are determined by the balance between nucleation and annihilation forces, and are influenced by the twisting characteristics of the fluid.
Lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals are water-based materials composed of self-assembled cylindrical aggregates. Their behavior under flow is poorly understood, and quantitatively resolving the optical retardance of the flowing liquid crystal has so far been limited by the imaging speed of current polarization-resolved imaging techniques. Here, we employ a single-shot quantitative polarization imaging method, termed polarized shearing interference microscopy, to quantify the spatial distribution and the dynamics of the structures emerging in nematic disodium cromoglycate solutions in a microfluidic channel. We show that pure-twist disclination loops nucleate in the bulk flow over a range of shear rates. These loops are elongated in the flow direction and exhibit a constant aspect ratio that is governed by the nonnegligible splay-bend anisotropy at the loop boundary. The size of the loops is set by the balance between nucleation forces and annihilation forces acting on the disclination. The fluctuations of the pure-twist disclination loops reflect the tumbling character of nematic disodium cromoglycate. Our study, including experiment, simulation, and scaling analysis, provides a comprehensive understanding of the structure and dynamics of pressure-driven lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals and might open new routes for using these materials to control assembly and flow of biological systems or particles in microfluidic devices.

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