Cholesteric Shells: Two-Dimensional Blue Fog and Finite Quasicrystals
Abstract
We study the phase behavior of a quasi-two-dimensional cholesteric liquid crystal shell. We characterize the topological phases arising close to the isotropic-cholesteric transition and show that they differ in a fundamental way from those observed on a flat geometry. For spherical shells, we discover two types of quasi-two-dimensional topological phases: finite quasicrystals and amorphous structures, both made up of mixtures of polygonal tessellations of half-skyrmions. These structures generically emerge instead of regular double twist lattices because of geometric frustration, which disallows a regular hexagonal tiling of curved space. For toroidal shells, the variations in the local curvature of the surface stabilizes heterogeneous phases where cholesteric patterns coexist with hexagonal lattices of half-skyrmions. Quasicrystals and amorphous and heterogeneous structures could be sought experimentally by self-assembling cholesteric shells on the surface of emulsion droplets.
- Publication:
-
Physical Review Letters
- Pub Date:
- January 2022
- DOI:
- 10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.027801
- arXiv:
- arXiv:2106.04498
- Bibcode:
- 2022PhRvL.128b7801C
- Keywords:
-
- Condensed Matter - Soft Condensed Matter
- E-Print:
- Physical Review Letters 2022