2018
DOI: 10.1103/revmodphys.90.045004
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Physics of liquid crystals of bent-shaped molecules

Abstract: Thermotropic liquid crystals can be formed by various molecular shapes, some discovered over 125 years ago. The simplest and most-studied liquid crystals are made of rodshaped molecules and led to today's omnipresent LCDs. While applied scientists and engineers have been perfecting LCDs, a large group of liquid crystal scientists have become excited about liquid crystals of bent-shaped (banana-shaped) molecules. These compounds were first reported 20 years ago, and since then have taken center stage in current… Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(130 citation statements)
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References 493 publications
(522 reference statements)
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“…Bent‐core liquid crystals (BCLCs) are unique materials, since they may exhibit polar order and spontaneous symmetry breaking in ordered liquid crystalline fluids consisting of achiral molecules . The bent molecular shape causes differences also in other physical properties of BCLCs, such as anomalous anisotropies of elastic constants or a giant flexoelectric effect . In addition, the introduction of a functional group that allows for the modulation of the properties of BCLCs by means of magnetic field or light is nowadays of eminent interest.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bent‐core liquid crystals (BCLCs) are unique materials, since they may exhibit polar order and spontaneous symmetry breaking in ordered liquid crystalline fluids consisting of achiral molecules . The bent molecular shape causes differences also in other physical properties of BCLCs, such as anomalous anisotropies of elastic constants or a giant flexoelectric effect . In addition, the introduction of a functional group that allows for the modulation of the properties of BCLCs by means of magnetic field or light is nowadays of eminent interest.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If smectic layers are formed of molecules with a shape that hinders molecular rotation, the molecules may orient in a way that the layer becomes polar. An example is a system made of molecules with a bent core, which are not chiral, but some phases they form have polar properties [2]. First compounds with bent-shaped molecules that formed liquid crystalline phases were intentionally designed and synthesized two decades ago [3].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different LC mesophase are principally characterised by their degree of positional order; the nematic LC phase possesses long range orientational order, whereas smectic phases also exhibit positional order in one dimension. The discovery of nematic phases in which the average orientational order varies periodically – so called modulated nematics – has recently attracted significant interest . The twist‐bend nematic phase (N TB ) exhibits a heliconical precession of the nematic director through space with a periodic length scale of a few tens of nanometers .…”
Section: Transition Temperatures (T °C) and Associated Enthalpies Omentioning
confidence: 99%