Droplet Breakup of the Nematic Liquid Crystal MBBA
Benjamin Nachman, Itai Cohen

TL;DR
This study investigates droplet breakup in the nematic liquid crystal MBBA, revealing phase-dependent thinning behaviors and proposing mechanisms involving defect dynamics and domain alignment, contrasting with Newtonian fluid behavior.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of droplet breakup in MBBA, highlighting phase-dependent scaling laws and introducing interpretations involving defect dynamics and domain alignment.
Findings
In the isotropic phase, the minimum radius scales as tau^{1.03}
In the nematic phase, two regimes with different scaling laws are observed
Thinning behavior can be modeled with exponential decay, suggesting polymer-like entropic effects
Abstract
Droplet breakup is a well studied phenomena in Newtonian fluids. One property of this behavior is that, independent of initial conditions, the minimum radius exhibits power law scaling with the time left to breakup tau. Because they have additional structure and shear dependent viscosity, liquid crystals pose an interesting complication to such studies. Here, we investigate the breakup of a synthetic nematic liquid crystal known as MBBA. We determine the phase of the solution by using a cross polarizer setup in situ with the liquid bridge breakup apparatus. Consistent with previous studies of scaling behavior in viscous-inertial fluid breakup, when MBBA is in the isotropic phase, the minimum radius decreases as tau^{1.03 \pm 0.04}. In the nematic phase however, we observe very different thinning behavior. Our measurements of the thinning profile are consistent with two interpretations.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFluid Dynamics and Heat Transfer · Liquid Crystal Research Advancements · Plant Surface Properties and Treatments
