Abstract
Optical textures pictured in the seminal 1974 textbook, The Microscopy of Liquid Crystals, by Norman Hartshorne, have been reappraised. Some of these, which were described by Hartshorne (and many others) as confused focal conics, were of chromonic and discotic phases, which had not been identified at that time—and would now be recognized as developable domain structures of columnar phases. It is suggested that the rigorous constraint of isometry in these is relaxed in regions of the director field under high stress. A rationale for the characteristic striated appearance of columnar textures is proposed, in which the molecular columns are bundled together, forming twisted ropes within the domains. It is also suggested that the regular alternation of opposing domains in M ribbons minimizes the slippage of columns required as the mesophase develops, and an explanation of the characteristic multi-pole appearance of the brushes in the optical textures of columnar structures is proposed.
Subject
Inorganic Chemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science,General Chemical Engineering
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