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Antiferroelectric Smectic Ordering as a Prelude to the Ferroelectric Nematic: Introducing the Smectic Z Phase

ORAL

Abstract

In 2020, the Boulder group demonstrated direct evidence of ferroelectricity in the nematic phase of the molecule RM734 [1,2]. DIO [3] is one of the few other molecules demonstrating nematic ferroelectricity, and the Boulder group has recently shown that RM734 and DIO have the same ferroelectric nematic (NF) phase [4]. As previously reported [3], there is also an intermediate phase of unknown structure in DIO, between the nematic and NF phases. Here we report that this phase is a new class of smectic liquid crystal, one having the molecular long axes on average parallel to the layers. Synchrotron-based non resonant SAXS and electro-optical microscopy experiments show that the intermediate phase is density modulated with a 90Å periodicity. The layers are parallel to director n which is the limit opposite to that of the smectic A, so we call this phase the smectic Z. The space-filling periodic structure of the SmZ phase results in textures familiar in smectics, such as the bookshelf layer organization, including the formation of chevron textures having zig-zag walls. The SmZ is antiferroelectric, with polarization along n and oppositely directed in neighboring layers.

Publication: [1] X. Chen et al pnas.2002290117 (2020)<br>[2] X. Chen et al pnas.2104092118 (2021)<br>[3] H. Nishikawa et al., Adv. Mater. 29, 1702354 (2017).<br>[4] X. Chen et al arXiv:2110.10826 (2021)

Presenters

  • Xi Chen

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

Authors

  • Xi Chen

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Eva Korblova

    Chemistry Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Guillaume Freychet

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Mikhail Zhernenkov

    Brookhaven National Laboratory

  • Vikina Martinez

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Mitchell Magrini

    Chemistry Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Matthew A Glaser

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Joseph E MacLennan

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • David M Walba

    Chemistry Department, University of Colorado, Boulder

  • Noel A Clark

    Physics Department, University of Colorado, Boulder