Morphogenesis of defects and tactoids during isotropic-nematic phase transition in self-assembled lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals
Young-Ki Kim, Sergij V. Shiyanovskii, Oleg D. Lavrentovich

TL;DR
This paper investigates the formation and structure of topological defects and tactoids during the isotropic-nematic phase transition in lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals, revealing how surface anisotropy influences morphogenesis.
Contribution
It introduces new insights into defect formation mechanisms and derives topological conservation laws, linking tactoid shape and defect topology during phase transitions.
Findings
Defects arise from surface anisotropy and Kibble mechanisms.
The shape of tactoids depends on interfacial tension anisotropy.
Conservation laws connect cusp number to defect topological strength.
Abstract
We explore the structure of nuclei and topological defects in the first-order phase transition between the nematic (N) and isotropic (I) phases in lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs). The LCLCs are formed by self-assembled molecular aggregates of various lengths and show a broad biphasic region. The defects emerge as a result of two mechanisms. 1) Surface anisotropy mechanism that endows each N nucleus (tactoid) with topological defects thanks to preferential (tangential) orientation of the director at the closed I-N interface, and 2) Kibble mechanism with defects forming when differently oriented N tactoids merge with each other. Different scenarios of phase transition involve positive (N-in-I) and negative (I-in-N) tactoids with non-trivial topology of the director field and also multiply connected tactoids-in-tactoids configurations. The closed I-N interface limiting a…
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