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New examples of ferroelectric nematic materials showing evidence for the antiferroelectric smectic-Z phase.

Authors :
Nacke, Pierre
Manabe, Atsutaka
Klasen-Memmer, Melanie
Chen, Xi
Martinez, Vikina
Freychet, Guillaume
Zhernenkov, Mikhail
Maclennan, Joseph E.
Clark, Noel A.
Bremer, Matthias
Giesselmann, Frank
Source :
Scientific Reports; 2/24/2024, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p1-13, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We present a new ferroelectric nematic material, 4-((4′-((trans)-5-ethyloxan-2-yl)-2′,3,5,6′-tetrafluoro-[1,1′-biphenyl]-4-yl)difluoromethoxy)-2,6-difluorobenzonitrile (AUUQU-2-N) and its higher homologues, the molecular structures of which include fluorinated building blocks, an oxane ring, and a terminal cyano group, all contributing to a large molecular dipole moment of about 12.5 D. We observed that AUUQU-2-N has three distinct liquid crystal phases, two of which were found to be polar phases with a spontaneous electric polarization P<subscript>s</subscript> of up to 6 µC cm<superscript>–2</superscript>. The highest temperature phase is a common enantiotropic nematic (N) exhibiting only field-induced polarization. The lowest-temperature, monotropic phase proved to be a new example of the ferroelectric nematic phase (N<subscript>F</subscript>), evidenced by a single-peak polarization reversal current response, a giant imaginary dielectric permittivity on the order of 10<superscript>3</superscript>, and the absence of any smectic layer X-ray diffraction peaks. The ordinary nematic phase N and the ferroelectric nematic phase N<subscript>F</subscript> are separated by an antiferroelectric liquid crystal phase which has low permittivity and a polarization reversal current exhibiting a characteristic double-peak response. In the polarizing light microscope, this antiferroelectric phase shows characteristic zig-zag defects, evidence of a layered structure. These observations suggest that this is another example of the recently discovered smectic Z<subscript>A</subscript> (SmZ<subscript>A</subscript>) phase, having smectic layers with the molecular director parallel to the layer planes. The diffraction peaks from the smectic layering have not been observed to date but detailed 2D X-ray studies indicate the presence of additional short-range structures including smectic C-type correlations in all three phases—N, SmZ<subscript>A</subscript> and N<subscript>F</subscript>—which may shed new light on the understanding of polar and antipolar order in these phases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
14
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175635828
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-54832-0