Issue 12, 2019

Lehmann rotation of cholesteric droplets driven by Marangoni convection

Abstract

We show experimentally and theoretically that the Lehmann effect recently observed by Yoshioka and Araoka (Nat. Commun., 2018, 9, 432) in emulsified cholesteric liquid crystal droplets under temperature gradients is due to Marangoni flows rather than to the thermomechanical or chemomechanical couplings often invoked to explain the phenomenon. Using colloidal tracers we visualize convection rolls surrounding stationary cholesteric droplets in vertical temperature gradients, while a shift in the position of internal point defects reveals the corresponding inner convection in nematic droplets thermomigrating in a horizontal temperature gradient. We attribute these phenomena to the temperature dependence of the surface tension at the interface between these partially-miscible liquids, and justify their absence in the usual case of purely lyophobic emulsions. We perform a theoretical analysis to help validate this hypothesis, demonstrating the strong dependence of the precession velocity on the configuration of the cholesteric director field.

Graphical abstract: Lehmann rotation of cholesteric droplets driven by Marangoni convection

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Dec 2018
Accepted
17 Feb 2019
First published
22 Feb 2019

Soft Matter, 2019,15, 2591-2604

Lehmann rotation of cholesteric droplets driven by Marangoni convection

P. Oswald, J. Ignés-Mullol and A. Dequidt, Soft Matter, 2019, 15, 2591 DOI: 10.1039/C8SM02574F

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