Elastic colloidal monopoles and reconfigurable self-assembly in liquid crystals
Ye Yuan, Qingkun Liu, Bohdan Senyuk, Ivan I. Smalyukh

TL;DR
This paper introduces reconfigurable elastic monopoles in liquid crystal colloids, enabling switching of monopole charge sign and dynamic self-assembly driven by optical manipulation, mimicking atomic state transitions.
Contribution
It develops nematic colloids with strong elastic monopoles that can be optically reconfigured, including sign switching and monopole-to-quadrupole transformations, which was previously thought impossible.
Findings
Elastic monopoles can be reconfigured using light.
Sign of elastic monopoles can be switched.
Like-charged monopoles attract, unlike repel, mimicking electrostatics.
Abstract
Monopole-like electrostatic interactions are ubiquitous in biology and condensed matter, but they are often screened by counter-ions and cannot be switched from attractive to repulsive. In colloidal science, where the prime goal is to develop colloidal particles that mimic and exceed the diversity and length-scales of atomic and molecular assembly, electrostatically charged particles cannot change the sign of their surface charge or transform from monopoles to higher-order multipoles. In liquid-crystal colloids, elastic interactions between particles arise to minimize the free energy associated with elastic distortions in the long-range alignment of rod-like molecules around the particles. In dipolar, quadrupolar and hexadecapolar nematic colloids, the symmetries of such elastic distortions mimic both electrostatic multipoles and the outmost occupied electron shells of atoms. Electric…
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