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Shear cell rupture of nematic liquid crystal droplets in viscous fluids
Authors:Xiaofeng Yang  M. Gregory Forest  Chun Liu  Jie Shen
Affiliation:1. Department of Mathematics, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29083, United States;2. Department of Mathematics, Institute for Advanced Materials, Nanoscience & Technology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3250, United States;3. Department of Mathematics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802, United States;4. Department of Mathematics, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907, United States;1. Stepanov Institute of Physics of the National Academy of Sciences of Belarus, Minsk 220072, Belarus;2. Kirensky Institute of Physics, Krasnoyarsk Scientific Center, Russian Academy of Sciences, Krasnoyarsk 660036, Russia;3. Siberian Federal University, Krasnoyarsk 660041, Russia;1. Istituto di Matematica Applicata e Tecnologie Informatiche, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, via Ferrata 1, 27100 Pavia, Italy;2. Dipartimento di Ingegneria Civile, Edile e Ambientale - ICEA, Università di Padova, 35131 Padova, Italy
Abstract:We model the hydrodynamics of a shear cell experiment with an immiscible nematic liquid crystal droplet in a viscous fluid using an energetic variational approach and phase-field methods [86]. The model includes the coupled system for the flow field for each phase, a phase-field function for the diffuse interface and the orientational director field of the liquid crystal phase. An efficient numerical scheme is implemented for the two-dimensional evolution of the shear cell experiment for this initial data. The same model reduces to an immiscible viscous droplet in a viscous fluid, which we simulate first to compare with other numerical and experimental behavior. Then we simulate drop deformation by varying capillary number (independent of liquid crystal physics), liquid crystal interfacial anchoring energy and Oseen–Frank distortional elastic energy. We show the number of eventual droplets (one to several) and “beads on a string” behavior are tunable with these three physical parameters. All stable droplets possess signature quadrupolar shear and normal stress distributions. The liquid crystal droplets always possess a global surface defect structure, called a boojum, when tangential surface anchoring is imposed. Boojums [79], [32] consist of degree +1/2 and ?1/2 surface defects within a bipolar global orientational structure.
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