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Layering transitions and metastable structures of cholesteric liquid crystals in cylindrical confinement
Authors:Jonghee Eun  Joseph Pollard  Sung-Jo Kim  Thomas Machon  Joonwoo Jeong
Institution:aDepartment of Physics, Ulsan National Institute of Science and Technology, Ulsan 44919, Republic of Korea;bDepartment of Physics, Durham University, Durham DH1 3LE, United Kingdom;cCenter for Soft and Living Matter, Institute for Basic Science, Ulsan 44919, Republic of Korea;dH. H. Wills Physics Laboratory, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 1TL, United Kingdom
Abstract:Our study of cholesteric lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals in cylindrical confinement reveals the topological aspects of cholesteric liquid crystals. The double-twist configurations we observe exhibit discontinuous layering transitions, domain formation, metastability, and chiral point defects as the concentration of chiral dopant is varied. We demonstrate that these distinct layer states can be distinguished by chiral topological invariants. We show that changes in the layer structure give rise to a chiral soliton similar to a toron, comprising a metastable pair of chiral point defects. Through the applicability of the invariants we describe to general systems, our work has broad relevance to the study of chiral materials.

Chiral liquid crystals (LCs) are ubiquitous, useful, and rich systems (14). From the first discovery of the liquid crystalline phase to the variety of chiral structures formed by biomolecules (59), the twisted structure, breaking both mirror and continuous spatial symmetries, is omnipresent. The unique structure also makes the chiral nematic (cholesteric) LC, an essential material for applications utilizing the tunable, responsive, and periodic modulation of anisotropic properties.The cholesteric is also a popular model system to study the geometry and topology of partially ordered matter. The twisted ground state of the cholesteric is often incompatible with confinement and external fields, exhibiting a large variety of frustrated and metastable director configurations accompanying topological defects. Besides the classic example of cholesterics in a Grandjean−Cano wedge (10, 11), examples include cholesteric droplets (1216), colloids (1719), shells (2022), tori (23, 24), cylinders (2529), microfabricated structures (30, 31), and films between parallel plates with external fields (3240). These structures are typically understood using a combination of nematic (achiral) topology (41, 42) and energetic arguments, for example, the highly successful Landau−de Gennes approach (43). However, traditional extensions of the nematic topological approach to cholesterics are known to be conceptually incomplete and difficult to apply in regimes where the system size is comparable to the cholesteric pitch (41, 44).An alternative perspective, chiral topology, can give a deeper understanding of these structures (4547). In this approach, the key role is played by the twist density, given in terms of the director field n by n×n. This choice is not arbitrary; the Frank free energy prefers n×nq0=2π/p0 with a helical pitch p0, and, from a geometric perspective, n×n0 defines a contact structure (48). This allows a number of new integer-valued invariants of chiral textures to be defined (45). A configuration with a single sign of twist is chiral, and two configurations which cannot be connected by a path of chiral configurations are chirally distinct, and hence separated by a chiral energy barrier. Within each chiral class of configuration, additional topological invariants may be defined using methods of contact topology (4548), such as layer numbers. Changing these chiral topological invariants requires passing through a nonchiral configuration. Cholesterics serve as model systems for the exploration of chirality in ordered media, and the phenomena we describe here—metastability in chiral systems controlled by chiral topological invariants—has applicability to chiral order generally. This, in particular, includes chiral ferromagnets, where, for example, our results on chiral topological invariants apply to highly twisted nontopological Skyrmions (49, 50) (“Skyrmionium”).Our experimental model to explore the chiral topological invariants is the cholesteric phase of lyotropic chromonic LCs (LCLCs). The majority of experimental systems hitherto studied are based on thermotropic LCs with typical elastic and surface-anchoring properties. The aqueous LCLCs exhibiting unusual elastic properties, that is, very small twist modulus K2 and large saddle-splay modulus K24 (5156), often leading to chiral symmetry breaking of confined achiral LCLCs (53, 54, 5661), may enable us to access uncharted configurations and defects of topological interests. For instance, in the layer configuration by cholesteric LCLCs doped with chiral molecules, their small K2 provides energetic flexibility to the thickness of the cholesteric layer, that is, the repeating structure where the director n twists by π. The large K24 affords curvature-induced surface interactions in combination with a weak anchoring strength of the lyotropic LCs (6264).We present a systematic investigation of the director configuration of cholesteric LCLCs confined in cylinders with degenerate planar anchoring, depending on the chiral dopant concentration. We show that the structure of cholesteric configurations is controlled by higher-order chiral topological invariants. We focus on two intriguing phenomena observed in cylindrically confined cholesterics. First, the cylindrical symmetry renders multiple local minima to the energy landscape and induces discontinuous increase of twist angles, that is, a layering transition, upon the dopant concentration increase. Additionally, the director configurations of local minima coexist as metastable domains with point-like defects between them. We demonstrate that a chiral layer number invariant distinguishes these configurations, protects the distinct layer configurations (45), and explains the existence of the topological defect where the invariant changes.
Keywords:cholesterics  contact topology  chiral soliton  chromonics
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