The smectic layer spacing of a nonfluorinated ferroelectric liquid crystal (FLC) compound with almost no shrinkage and only minor tendency to form zigzag defects was characterized by small angle x-ray diffraction. The material lacks a nematic phase. The smectic-A*-smectic-C* phase transition was studied by measuring the thermal and electric field response of the optical tilt and the electric polarization. These properties are described very well by a Landau expansion even without introduction of a higher-order Theta(6) term. This result suggests a pure second-order phase transition far from tricriticality and differs considerably from the typical behavior of the A*-C* transition in most FLC materials.
In this work, two selectively deuterium-labeled isotopomers of the (S)-2-methylbutyl- [4'-(4' '-heptyloxyphenyl)-benzoyl-4-oxy-(S)-2-((S)-2')-benzoyl)-propionyl)]-propionate (ZLL 7/), one labeled on the phenyl ring (ZLL 7/-phe-D2) and the other one on the biphenyl fragment (ZLL 7/-biphe-D2), have been investigated by deuterium NMR (DNMR) spectroscopy and other experimental techniques. These compounds possess the paraelectric SmA, the ferroelectric SmC, the antiferroelectric SmC(A), the re-entrant ferroelectric SmC(re), and the ferroelectric hexatic phases down to room temperature. The orientational ordering properties of the two labeled fragments have been determined by means of DNMR, and the mesophase behavior at two magnetic fields is discussed. In particular, the effect of the magnetic field on the supramolecular structure of the SmC and SmC(re) phases is commented. This study revealed to be useful to understand the structural and conformational properties of the ferroelectric/antiferroelectric/re-entrant/hexatic smectic phases. Mesomorphic properties, spontaneous tilt angle, polarization, and layer spacing have been studied for the labeled materials and compared with those obtained for the nonlabeled compound. The two self-consistent set of data, from optical and DNMR measurements and X-ray results, allow us to associate at the transition from the SmC to the SmC(A) phase a change of the molecular conformation.
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