Ian R. Nemitz
Case Western Reserve University
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Featured researches published by Ian R. Nemitz.
Liquid Crystals | 2016
Ian R. Nemitz; Kevin McEleney; Cathleen M. Crudden; Robert P. Lemieux; Rolfe G. Petschek; Charles Rosenblatt
ABSTRACT Chiral periodic mesoporous organosilica (PMO) materials have been shown to deracemise a configurationally achiral, but conformationally racemic liquid crystal in which the PMO is embedded. In particular, application of an electric field E in the liquid crystal’s smectic-A phase results in a rotation of the liquid-crystal director by an angle proportional to E, which is detected optically – this is the so-called ‘electroclinic’ effect. Here we present results from electroclinic measurements as a function of frequency and temperature, which allow us to distinguish the component of optical signal that arises from liquid-crystal chirality induced within the PMO’s chiral pores from that induced just outside the silica colloids. Our central result is that the overwhelming source of our electrooptic signal emanates from outside the PMO, and that the contribution from the liquid crystal embedded in the chiral pores is much smaller and below the noise level. GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT
Physical Review E | 2017
Ahmed Mouhli; Habib Ayeb; Tahar Othman; Jérôme Fresnais; Vincent Dupuis; Ian R. Nemitz; Joel Pendery; Charles Rosenblatt; Olivier Sandre; Emmanuelle Lacaze
A long time ago, Brochard and de Gennes predicted the possibility of significantly decreasing the critical magnetic field of the Fredericksz transition (the magnetic Fredericksz threshold) in a mixture of nematic liquid crystals and ferromagnetic particles, the so-called ferronematics. This phenomenon is rarely measured to be large, due to soft homeotropic anchoring induced at the nanoparticle surface. Here we present an optical study of the magnetic Fredericksz transition combined with a light scattering study of the classical nematic liquid crystal: the pentylcyanobiphenyl (5CB), doped with 6 nm diameter magnetic and nonmagnetic nanoparticles. Surprisingly, for both nanoparticles, we observe at room temperature a net decrease of the threshold field of the Fredericksz transition at low nanoparticle concentrations, which appears associated with a coating of the nanoparticles by a brush of polydimethylsiloxane copolymer chains inducing planar anchoring of the director on the nanoparticle surface. Moreover, the magnetic Fredericksz threshold exhibits nonmonotonic behavior as a function of the nanoparticle concentration for both types of nanoparticles, first decreasing down to a value from 23% to 31% below that of pure 5CB, then increasing with a further increase of nanoparticle concentration. This is interpreted as an aggregation starting at around 0.02 weight fraction that consumes more isolated nanoparticles than those introduced when the concentration is increased above c=0.05 weight fraction (volume fraction 3.5×10^{-2}). This shows the larger effect of isolated nanoparticles on the threshold with respect to aggregates. From dynamic light scattering measurements we deduced that, if the decrease of the magnetic threshold when the nanoparticle concentration increases is similar for both kinds of nanoparticles, the origin of this decrease is different for magnetic and nonmagnetic nanoparticles. For nonmagnetic nanoparticles, the behavior may be associated with a decrease of the elastic constant due to weak planar anchoring. For magnetic nanoparticles there are non-negligible local magnetic interactions between liquid crystal molecules and magnetic nanoparticles, leading to an increase of the average order parameter. This magnetic interaction thus favors an easier liquid crystal director rotation in the presence of external magnetic field, able to reorient the magnetic moments of the nanoparticles along with the molecules.
Physical Review E | 2016
Ian R. Nemitz; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Charles Rosenblatt
Electroclinic measurements are reported for two chiral liquid crystals above their bulk chiral isotropic-nematic phase transition temperatures. It is found that an applied electric field E induces a rotation θ [∝Ε] of the director in the very thin paranematic layers that are induced by the cells two planar-aligning substrates. The magnitude of the electroclinic coefficient dθ/dE close to the transition temperature is comparable to that of a bulk chiral nematic, as well as to that of a parasmectic region above a bulk isotropic-to-chiral smectic-A phase. However, dθ/dE in the paranematic layer varies much more slowly with temperature than in the parasmectic phase, and its relaxation time is slower by more than three orders of magnitude than that of the bulk chiral nematic electroclinic effect.
Applied Physics Letters | 2013
Tzu-Chieh Lin; Ian R. Nemitz; Joel Pendery; Christopher P. J. Schubert; Robert P. Lemieux; Charles Rosenblatt
A nematic twist cell having a thickness gradient was filled with a mixture containing a configurationally achiral liquid crystal (LC) and chiral dopant. A chiral-based linear electrooptic effect was observed on application of an ac electric field. This “electroclinic effect” varied monotonically with d, changing sign at d=d0 where the chiral dopant exactly compensated the imposed twist. The results indicate that a significant chiral electrooptic effect always exists near the surfaces of a twist cell containing molecules that can be conformationally deracemized. Additionally, this approach can be used to measure the helical twisting power (HTP) of a chiral dopant in a liquid crystal.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2014
Parvathalu Kalakonda; Rajratan Basu; Ian R. Nemitz; Charles Rosenblatt; Germano S. Iannacchione
Soft Matter | 2016
Ian R. Nemitz; Andrew J. Ferris; Emmanuelle Lacaze; Charles Rosenblatt
Soft Matter | 2018
Ian R. Nemitz; I. Gryn; Nathalie Boudet; Robert P. Lemieux; Michel Goldmann; B. Zappone; Rolfe G. Petschek; Charles Rosenblatt; Emmanuelle Lacaze
Physical Review E | 2017
Ahmaed Mouhli; Habib Ayeb; Tahar Othman; Jérôme Fresnais; Vincent Dupuis; Ian R. Nemitz; Joel Pendery; Charles Rosenblatt; Olivier Sandre; Emmanuelle Lacaze
Archive | 2017
Ian R. Nemitz
Physical Review E | 2013
Tzu-Chieh Lin; Ian R. Nemitz; Christopher J. McGrath; Christopher P. J. Schubert; Hiroshi Yokoyama; Robert P. Lemieux; Charles Rosenblatt