Topological colloids
Bohdan Senyuk, Qingkun Liu, Sailing He, Randall D. Kamien, Robert B., Kusner, Tom C. Lubensky, Ivan I. Smalyukh

TL;DR
This study fabricates colloidal particles with varying topologies and investigates their induced director fields and defects in nematic liquid crystals, confirming topological charge conservation and opening avenues for advanced applications.
Contribution
It introduces colloidal particles with controlled topology and experimentally verifies topological charge conservation in liquid crystal defects, linking colloid shape to defect structure.
Findings
Topological charge is conserved in particle-induced defects.
Total defect charge follows Gauss-Bonnet and Poincare-Hopf theorems.
Particle topology influences defect configurations in liquid crystals.
Abstract
Abundant in nature, colloids also find increasingly important applications in science and technology, ranging from direct probing of kinetics in crystals and glasses to fabrication of third-generation quantum-dot solar cells. Because naturally occurring colloids have a shape that is typically determined by minimization of interfacial tension (for example, during phase separation) or faceted crystal growth, their surfaces tend to have minimum-area spherical or topologically equivalent shapes such as prisms and irregular grains (all continuously deformable - homeomorphic - to spheres). Although toroidal DNA condensates and vesicles with different numbers of handles can exist and soft matter defects can be shaped as rings and knots, the role of particle topology in colloidal systems remains unexplored. Here we fabricate and study colloidal particles with different numbers of handles and…
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