Phase Behaviours of Asymmetric Benti-Shaped Mesogens and the study of Interfacial Phenomenon involving Nematics
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Abstract
Liquid crystals (LCs) are fascinating molecules due to their intriguing properties like long-range
orientational order, less positional order plus birefringence. Their occurrence as the intermediate
state of matter imparts them with the liquid-like flow and crystal-like positional ordering. Among
the three major categories depending on the molecular shape, bent-shaped molecules are drawing
massive attention from researchers these days. In general, bent-shaped liquid crystals possess
distinctive banana phases. However, the small ringed bent-shaped molecules particularly the three
and four rings act as a borderline between the rod-like and banana-shaped LCs. These frontier
molecules were found to exhibit the nematic and smectic phases. Materials displaying these phases
were called hockey-stick-shaped LCs when asymmetric and Boomerang LCs while V-shape or
symmetric. Hence, miniaturization plays a key role here. This enables the reallocation of the LC
phase from higher temperatures to room temperature. Furthermore, it results in a reduction in the
number of synthetic steps, low viscosity, lowering in melting point, etc.
In the present thesis, the aim is the surveillance of mesomorphic fluctuations of novel bent-core
systems as a result of chemical structural modifications. The consequences of variable aliphatic
chain units, terminal polar functional group (i.e., F, Cl, Br, I, NO 2 ) substitution as well as the imine
bond linkage isomerism on the liquid crystalline phase behavior have been focused on. The type
and range of the LC phase of synthesized compounds are predicted through elaborative
temperature-dependent small-angle and wide-angle X-ray scattering studies together with
polarizing optical photomicrographs and differential scanning calorimetry. The density functional
theory calculations have also been performed to obtain the molecular parameters such as molecular
length, bent-angle, resultant dipole moment and principal polarizability components. In the latter
part, hydrogen bond-assisted anchoring transitions amid nematic 5CB (4-Cyano-4'-
pentylbiphenyl) LC and phenols at the LC-aqueous interface have been studied. The Raman
spectroscopy accompanied by the polarizing optical microscopy is being utilized to monitor the
interfacial H-bonding interactions.