Liquid crystal (5CB) adsorption on two-dimensional materials
ORAL
Abstract
Liquid crystals are widely used in display technologies. Their collective behavior and use ultimately hinges on single molecules interacting with a supporting surface. Since the isolation of graphene in 2004, the potential for combining two-dimensional nanosheets with liquid crystals has become an area of scientific interest. However, little attention has focused on the local interfacial interactions between the mesogen and two-dimensional materials. In this presentation, we discuss the local mesogenic interactions between the well-known nematic liquid crystal 5CB, and a series of monolayer crystals such as graphene, molybdenum disulfide, phosphorene, and h-BN. In particular, we present electronic ground state properties obtained using density functional theory with nonlocal van der Waals corrections that reveal subtle orientational, energetic, and electronic properties for the characterization of local mesogen-substrate interactions, whereby the anchoring of liquid crystal can be understood more generally across atomically flat surfaces.
*This work has been supported by the Office of Naval Research, directly and through the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.
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Presenters
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Paul Brown
- ASEE Fellow for the United States Naval Research Laboratory