Origin of shear-induced phase transitions in melts of liquid-crystal polymers
Author(s) -
Laurence Noirez
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
physical review e
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1550-2376
pISSN - 1539-3755
DOI - 10.1103/physreve.72.051701
Subject(s) - liquid crystal , viscoelasticity , isotropy , materials science , shear flow , polymer , phase transition , plateau (mathematics) , shear (geology) , flow (mathematics) , coupling (piping) , phase (matter) , nonlinear system , condensed matter physics , relaxation (psychology) , thermodynamics , mechanics , physics , optics , composite material , mathematics , psychology , mathematical analysis , social psychology , quantum mechanics , optoelectronics
International audienceFlow induced mechanical properties are often coupled with instabilities, spurt effects, or induced phase transitions. Recent studies have revealed that side-chain liquid crystal polymers exhibit typically shear-induced phases inside the isotropic ͑nonmesomorphic͒ liquid state. We present an experimental approach which brings a new understanding for nonlinear flow behaviors. The strategy consists in comparing the critical times issued from the flow behavior of a liquid-crystal polymer to the equilibrium orientational-order relaxation time was characterized. We demonstrate that shear-induced phases do not originate from a flow coupling to conventional orientational order parameter fluctuations. It does not also correspond to a direct coupling with the viscoelastic terminal time, leading to the conclusion that an additional relaxation process takes place with time scales longer than the terminal time. The identification of a low-frequency elastic plateau by viscoelastic measurements corroborates this conclusion
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