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Decay of skeins of dislocations in cholesterics

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Resumo:Knotted and linked skeins of vortices and disclinations generated, respectively, by symmetry-breaking normal → superfluid and isotropic → nematic phase transitions are known to untie, by rewiring of their crossings, into independent unknots that finally shrink and collapse until the defect-free ground state is reached. We demonstrate that the decay of skeins of dislocations, generated by the isotropic → cholesteric phase transition within a cylinder/cylinder gap, leads to stable necklace-like states made of numerous minimal loops, called bangles, tethered to kinks of much larger loops called cargo. We analyze the topological decay of skeins of dislocations in terms of the Conway-Kauffman theory of knots, showing that the necklace state results from rewiring of crossings triggered by collisions of tangles with their numerator closure. We point out that, in general, for symmetry reasons, kinks on edge dislocations are chiral. Their handedness, right or left, directly depends on the sign of kinks on which they are localized. In cholesterics with intrinsic chirality, the energy of kinks bearing bangles depends on their handedness. For this reason, within necklaces, all bangles are tethered to kinks of the same sign.
Autores principais:Lee, Jun Yong
Outros Autores:Zeghal, Mehdi; Judeinstein, Patrick; Godinho, Maria Helena; Smalyukh, Ivan; Pieranski, Pawel
Assunto:General Chemistry Condensed Matter Physics
Ano:2025
País:Portugal
Tipo de documento:artigo
Tipo de acesso:acesso aberto
Instituição associada:Universidade Nova de Lisboa
Idioma:inglês
Origem:Repositório Institucional da UNL
Descrição
Resumo:Knotted and linked skeins of vortices and disclinations generated, respectively, by symmetry-breaking normal → superfluid and isotropic → nematic phase transitions are known to untie, by rewiring of their crossings, into independent unknots that finally shrink and collapse until the defect-free ground state is reached. We demonstrate that the decay of skeins of dislocations, generated by the isotropic → cholesteric phase transition within a cylinder/cylinder gap, leads to stable necklace-like states made of numerous minimal loops, called bangles, tethered to kinks of much larger loops called cargo. We analyze the topological decay of skeins of dislocations in terms of the Conway-Kauffman theory of knots, showing that the necklace state results from rewiring of crossings triggered by collisions of tangles with their numerator closure. We point out that, in general, for symmetry reasons, kinks on edge dislocations are chiral. Their handedness, right or left, directly depends on the sign of kinks on which they are localized. In cholesterics with intrinsic chirality, the energy of kinks bearing bangles depends on their handedness. For this reason, within necklaces, all bangles are tethered to kinks of the same sign.