Frustrated orientational order on extrinsic geometries
ORAL
Abstract
The ground state of an anisotropic liquid on a curved surface has topological defects due to the surface's Gaussian curvature. The extrinsic geometry of the surface, however, frustrates the ground state arising from Gaussian curvature alone, changing the defect configurations in the ground state or expelling them from the surface altogether. We study nematic order on unduloids - a family of undulated cylinders with constant mean curvature spanning from the cylinder to a chain of spherical droplets - arising in systems ranging from liquid bridges to fluid membranes. We identify structural transitions in which pairs of disclinations of opposite signs are nucleated as the unduloid progresses from cylinder to spheres, explicitly separating the role of intrinsic geometry, which nucleates disclinations to screen Gaussian curvature, and extrinsic geometry, which expels defects from the neck. We describe some implications for the pinching off of a cylinder.
*This work is supported as part of Polymer-Based Materials for Harvesting Solar Energy, an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences under Award Number DE-SC0001087.
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