Bulletin of the American Physical Society
APS March Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2020; Denver, Colorado
Session M71: Poster Session III (11:15am - 2:15pm)
11:15 AM,
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Room: Exhibit Hall C/D
Abstract: M71.00230 : Hydrodynamically-driven assembly of nanoparticles in an anisotropic media
Presenter:
Viviana Palacio-Betancur
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
Authors:
Stiven Villada Gil
(Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede Medellín, Politécnico Colombiano Jaime Isaza Cadavid)
Viviana Palacio-Betancur
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago)
Julio C. Armas-Pérez
(División de Ciencias e Ingenierías, Campus León, Universidad de Guanajuato)
Juan P. Hernández-Ortiz
(Departamento de Materiales y Minerales, Universidad Nacional de Colombia sede Medellín)
Juan De Pablo
(Institute for Molecular Engineering, University of Chicago. Argonne National Laboratory)
Nanoparticle (NP) self-assembly in liquid crystals (LCs) depends on the elasticity of the material to form arrays with crystalline symmetry. These arrays can be tuned via the anchoring of the NP, and the orientation of the director field, effectively using the defects around the NP as sites for assembly. Additionally, confinement and hydrodynamic fields can also be used to control the assembly. Scenarios often consider one, two, or three NPs under various flow regimes and in moderate confinement. The simulations presented here use the Stark-Lubensky formalism, where the Landau-de Gennes free energy functional is coupled with the momentum balance through a Poisson-bracket formulation. To describe NP-LC suspensions, a transient three-dimensional Galerkin finite element framework was implemented to achieve a numerical solution. We show that, independent of NP anchoring, defects are displaced in the up-stream direction, ultimately forming a hedgehog defect. The assembly mechanism for a pair of NPs is modified in the large Ericksen regime, where the NPs show an unexpected non-monotonic tendency to aggregate. The modifications to the defect structure and the free energy landscape open a new avenue to the directed assembly of NPs immersed in LC under conditions far from equilibrium.
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