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Optical studies of the nematic phase of an oxazole-derived bent-core liquid crystal
Author(s) -
J. A. Olivares,
Strahinja Stojadinović,
Theo J. Dingemans,
Samuel Sprunt,
Antal Jákli
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
physical review. e, statistical physics, plasmas, fluids, and related interdisciplinary topics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1095-3787
pISSN - 1063-651X
DOI - 10.1103/physreve.68.041704
Subject(s) - liquid crystal , biaxial nematic , bent molecular geometry , refractive index , materials science , phase (matter) , oxazole , core (optical fiber) , birefringence , condensed matter physics , ring (chemistry) , relaxation (psychology) , optics , molecular physics , scattering , physics , chemistry , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , psychology , social psychology , composite material
Various optical and dynamic light scattering studies have been conducted on the nematic phase of an oxazole-derived bent-core liquid crystal. At optical length scales and in the absence of applied fields, homo- geneously aligned samples of this material, which has an oxazole heterocyclic ring in the central core, are found to behave more like a conventional straight-core nematic than a previously investigated ester-based class of bent-core molecules that have a benzene ring as the core linkage between the two arms of the bow-shaped molecule. In particular, the nematic refractive indices of the oxazole compound combine in the standard way @i.e., A(2no 2 1ne 2 )/3) to match the isotropic value throughout the nematic range, and the observed director fluctuation modes have relaxation rates comparable to those of the usual thermotropics. However, polarized light scattering data reveal evidence of weak biaxial fluctuations, and indications of electric-field-induced biaxiality are observed in the refractive index measurements.

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