Self-assembly of colloidal particles in deformation landscapes of electrically driven layer undulations in cholesteric liquid crystals
Michael C. M. Varney, Qiaoxuan Zhang, Bohdan Senyuk, and Ivan I., Smalyukh

TL;DR
This study explores how colloidal particles interact with and influence layer undulations in cholesteric liquid crystals under electric fields, revealing mechanisms for controlled self-assembly and potential applications in optics.
Contribution
It demonstrates how colloids induce and are affected by undulation patterns, enabling reconfigurable self-assembly in liquid crystal environments.
Findings
Colloids lower the threshold for undulation lattice formation.
Particles localize in regions of strong layer distortion.
Magnetic colloids can be manipulated in three dimensions.
Abstract
We study elastic interactions between colloidal particles and deformation landscapes of undulations in a cholesteric liquid crystal under an electric field applied normal to cholesteric layers. The onset of undulation instability is influenced by the presence of colloidal inclusions and, in turn, layers' undulations mediate the spatial patterning of particle locations. We find that the bending of cholesteric layers around a colloidal particle surface prompts the local nucleation of an undulations lattice at electric fields below the well-defined threshold known for liquid crystals without inclusions, and that the onset of the resulting lattice is locally influenced, both dimensionally and orientationally, by the initial arrangements of colloids defined using laser tweezers. Spherical particles tend to spatially localize in the regions of strong distortions of the cholesteric layers,…
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