4.8 Article

Light-activated helical inversion in cholesteric liquid crystal microdroplets

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1720742115

Keywords

chiral liquid crystals; droplets; confinement; photoinduced helix inversion; molecular motors

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) [Phelix 307784]
  2. FP7 Marie Curie ILSES Project [61620]
  3. Partner University Fund
  4. US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Science and Engineering [DE-SC004025]
  5. University of Chicago

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Cholesteric liquid crystal (CLC) droplets exhibit nontrivial topological features, which are controlled by the ratio between the cholesteric pitch and the droplet radius. The radial spherical structure (RSS) is of particular interest, as it reveals an onion-like concentric organization of the cholesteric helices, leading to the expression of spherical Bragg microcavities. Using an overcrowded alkene-based unidirectional molecular motor as a dopant, we show that the topological defect structure in the droplet can be activated by illumination. By using appropriate molecular motor concentrations, light can either break the symmetry of topological defects (as observed for the bent-twisted bipolar structure), or it can induce inversion of hand-edness in an onion-like organization (in the case of RSS). This latter feature may pave the way toward alternative activation modes of lasers based on cholesteric droplets. By also studying CLC droplets once they have reached full photoconversion at photostationary state (PSS), we highlight that the strong influence of confinement on the droplets structure occurs to the same extent after the helix inversion event. Our results are interpreted in terms of numerical simulations of the droplets' structure, which shed light on the major role played by curvature close to the droplets' center, this latter one becoming dominant when the droplet radius is small.

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