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.
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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