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Cholesteric alignment

Figure 7.5 Orientation of cholesteric helices in planar and fingerprint alignment. Figure 7.5 Orientation of cholesteric helices in planar and fingerprint alignment.
The discotic phases can show also a complex polymorphism. Nematic and cholesteric-like, low viscosity phases have been reported recently. In these, the director vector is perpendicular to the plane of alignment of the flat molecules56) in contrast to the normal nematics and cholesterics where it is parallel to the molecular axis. Most frequently, however, discotics form columnar arrangements as shown in Fig. 10. The order within the columns may change from liquid to quasi-crystalline. The columns are then packed in hexagonal or tetragonal coordination, but are free to slide in the direction parallel to their axes S7). The viscosity of these more ordered discotics is considerably higher than the nematic discotics. [Pg.20]

A cholesteric, or chiral nematic (N ) phase. This is a positionally disordered fluid in which the constituent molecules align on average their axes along a common direction called the nematic director. Being the DNA helices chiral, the orientational order develops an additional macro-helical superstructure with the twist axis perpendicular to the local director. The phase thus consists of local nematic layers continuously twisted with respect to each other, with periodicity p/2 (where p is the cholesteric pitch see Fig. 8a) [27,28]. For 150-bp helices, the N phase appears at a concentration around 150 mg/mL in 100 mM monovalent salt conditions. This LC phase is easily observed in polarized optical microscopy. Since the N pitch extends to tens of micrometers (that is, across... [Pg.237]

Liquid crystals may be classified as nematic, cholesteric, smectic, or columnar. Nematic liquid crystals are characterized only by orientational order. Molecules tend to be aligned with a director, as illustrated in Figure 16.1. [Pg.168]

In cholesteric structures there is also alignment, but the direction of alignment rotates on a screw axis normal to the direction of alignment (Figure 16.2). This spiraling is responsible for unique optical properties. [Pg.168]

Order in a cholesteric liquid crystal. The alignment direction spirals about a screw axis normal to the alignment direction. [Pg.169]

A purely organic chiral nitroxide which shows liquid crystalline behaviour as well as intriguing magnetic properties and a dependence on the enantiomeric nature has been reported [180]. The reason for studying the compounds was to increase the sensitivity of mesophases to magnetic and electric fields. The racemic modification of the radical, which displays a nematic phase, proved to be more sensitive to alignment than the cholesteric phase with the enantiomers present. It was proposed that the compounds may also be used to study the dynamic nature of mesophases by electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. [Pg.283]

Cholesteric liquid crystals are optically active nematic phases as a result of their gradual twist in orientational alignment. Therefore, cholesteric liquid-crystalline solvents are expected to induce enantioselectivity in chemical reactions see reference [713] for a review on photoasymmetric induction by chiral mesophases. The existing results are not very promising. So far, the maximum photoasymmetric induction reported has... [Pg.302]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.233 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.29 ]




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