Helical Ribbons as Isometric Textures
M.-F. Achard (1), M. Kleman (2), Yu.A. Nastishin (1,3), H.-T. Nguyen, ((1) CRPP, CNRS, Universite Bordeaux-I, France, (2) LMCP, Universite Paris, VII, (3) Institute for Physical Optics, Lviv, Ukraine)

TL;DR
This paper explores the geometric and energetic properties of isometric, helical textures in liquid crystal phases, proposing that observed helical ribbons are likely such structures characterized by layered helicoids and helical disclination lines.
Contribution
It introduces a geometric model of helical ribbons as frustrated isometric textures composed of layered helicoids with specific disclination lines, linking theory to observed structures in liquid crystals.
Findings
Helical ribbons can be modeled as layered helicoids with disclination lines.
Isometric textures in helical structures are necessarily frustrated.
The energy calculation supports the stability of these helical textures.
Abstract
Deformations that conserve the parallelism and the distances --between layers, in smectic phases; between columns, in columnar phases-- are commonplace in liquid crystals. The resulting deformed textures have the same mass density as in the ground state (an expected property in a liquid) and are at the same time isogonic and isometric, which imposes specific geometric features. The corresponding order parameter singularities extend over rather large, macroscopic, distances, e.g., cofocal conics in smectics. This well-known picture is modified when, superimposed to the 1D or 2D periodicities, the structure is helical. Isogony is no longer the rule, but isometry (and mass density) can be preserved. This paper discusses the case of a medium whose structure is made of 1D modulated layers (a lamello-columnar phase), assuming that the modulations rotate helically from one layer to the next.…
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