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Oligomeric odd–even effect in liquid crystals.

ORAL

Abstract

In organic materials, they are usually associated with the number of methylene groups in aliphatic chains. In this work, we unveil multiple signatures of a new odd–even effect in liquid crystals that occurs at the larger scale of molecular moieties that by themselves express liquid crystalline behavior. We demonstrate that oligomeric liquid crystals, with n= 1–4 number of rigid mesogenic segments connected by flexible aliphatic chains with an odd number of methylene groups, produce an odd–even effect in optical anisotropy and the bend elastic constant of the liquid crystal oligomer. This effect is different from the usual odd–even effects with respect to the parity of carbon atoms in an aliphatic chain and can be understood in term of the average molecular shape and the associations between n-mers based on the packing of these shapes. We also show that, in spite of the fact that there is no long-range electron density modulation, careful analysis of synchrotron SAXS results can provide important information about the molecular associations in the N and NTB phases that other techniques cannot access.

Presenters

  • Rony Saha

    Kent State Univ - Kent

Authors

  • Rony Saha

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Greta Babakhanova

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Zeinab Parsouzi A.Sh

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Mojtaba Rajabi

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Prabesh Gyawali

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Chris Welch

    University of Hull

  • Georg H. Mehl

    University of Hull

  • James Gleeson

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Oleg D Lavrentovich

    Kent State Univ - Kent, Chemical Physics Interdisciplinary Program; Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State Univ - Kent, Department of Physics, Chemical Physics Interdisciplinary Program, and Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University

  • Samuel N Sprunt

    Kent State Univ - Kent

  • Antal Istvan Jakli

    Kent State Univ - Kent, Department of Physics, Kent State University, Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute, Kent State University