Statistical physics of isotropic-genesis nematic elastomers: I. Structure and correlations at high temperatures
Bing-Sui Lu, Fangfu Ye, Xiangjun Xing, Paul M. Goldbart

TL;DR
This paper investigates how network-induced localization affects the high-temperature liquid crystalline properties of isotropic-genesis nematic elastomers, revealing short-range oscillatory correlations influenced by quenched disorder.
Contribution
It introduces microscopic models for IGNEs, connecting them to a phenomenological Landau theory and analyzing the impact of cross-linking on nematic correlations.
Findings
Predicts short-range oscillatory spatial correlations in nematic alignment.
Shows consistency of microscopic models with phenomenological Landau theory.
Identifies the role of quenched disorder in high-temperature nematic behavior.
Abstract
Isotropic-genesis nematic elastomers (IGNEs) are liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) that have been randomly, permanently cross-linked in the high-temperature state so as to form an equilibrium random solid. Thus, instead of being free to diffuse throughout the entire volume, as they would be in the liquid state, the constituent LCPs in an IGNE are mobile only over a finite length-scale controlled by the density of cross-links. We address the effects that such network-induced localization have on the liquid-crystalline characteristics of an IGNE, as probed via measurements made at high temperatures. In contrast with the case of uncross-linked LCPs, for IGNEs these characteristics are determined not only by thermal fluctuations but also by the quenched disorder associated with the cross-link constraints. To study IGNEs, we consider a microscopic model of dimer nematogens in which the…
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