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Elasticity and Dynamics of LC Elastomers

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Title: Elasticity and Dynamics of LC Elastomers


1
Elasticity and Dynamics of LC Elastomers
  • Leo Radzihovsky
  • Xiangjing Xing
  • Ranjan Mukhopadhyay
  • Olaf Stenull

2
Outline
  • Review of Elasticity of Nematic Elastomers
  • Soft and Semi-Soft Strain-only theories
  • Coupling to the director
  • Phenomenological Dynamics
  • Hydrodynamic
  • Non-hydrodynamic
  • Phenomenological Dynamics of NE
  • Soft hydrodynamic
  • Semi-soft with non-hydro modes

3
Strain
Displacements
Cauchy DeformationTensor (A tangent plane
vector)
Displacement strain
a,b Ref. Space i,j Target space
Invariances
TCL, Mukhopadhyay, Radzihovsky, Xing, Phys. Rev.
E 66, 011702/1-22(2002)
4
Isotropic and Uniaxial Solid
Isotropic free energy density f has two harmonic
elastic constants
Uniaxial five harmonic elastic constants
Nematic elastomer uniaxial. Is this enough?
5
Nonlinear strain
Green Saint Venant strain tensor-
Physicists favorite invariant under U
u is a tensor is the reference space, and a
scalar in the target space
6
Spontaneous Symmetry Breaking
Phase transition to anisotropic state as m goes
to zero
Direction of n0 is arbitrary
Symmetric- Traceless part
Golubovic, L., and Lubensky, T.C.,, PRL 63,
1082-1085, (1989).
7
Strain of New Phase
u is the strain relative to the new state at
points x
du is the deviation of the strain relative to the
original reference frame R from u0
du is linearly proportional to u
8
Elasticity of New Phase
Rotation of anisotropy direction costs no energy
C50 because of rotational invariance
This 2nd order expansion is invariant under all U
but only infinitesimal V
9
Soft Extensional Elasticity
Strain uxx can be converted to a zero energy
rotation by developing strains uzz and uxz until
uxx (r-1)/2
10
Frozen anisotropy Semi-soft
System is now uniaxial why not simply use
uniaxial elastic energy? This predicts linear
stress-stain curve and misses lowering of energy
by reorientation
Model Uniaxial system Produces harmonic uniaxial
energy for small strain but has nonlinear terms
reduces to isotropic when h0
f (u) isotropic
Rotation
11
Semi-soft stress-strain
Ward Identity
Second Piola-Kirchoff stress tensor not the same
as the familiar Cauchy stress tensor
Ranjan Mukhopadhyay and TCL in preparation
12
Semi-soft Extensions
Break rotational symmetry
Stripes form in real systems semi-soft, BC
Not perfectly soft because of residual anisotropy
arising from crosslinking in the the nematic
phase - semi-soft. length of plateau depends on
magnitude of spontaneous anisotropy
r. Warner-Terentjev
Note Semi-softness only visible in nonlinear
properties
Finkelmann, et al., J. Phys. II 7, 1059
(1997) Warner, J. Mech. Phys. Solids 47, 1355
(1999)
13
Soft Biaxial SmA and SmC
Free energy density for a uniaxial solid (SmA
with locked layers)
Red Corrections for transition to biaxial
SmA Green Corrections for trtansition to SmC
C40 Transition to Biaxial Smectic with soft
in-plane elasticity C50 Transition to SmC with
a complicated soft elasticity
Olaf Stenull, TCL, PRL 94, 081304 (2005)
14
Coupling to Nematic Order
  • Strain uab transforms like a tensor in the ref.
    space but as a scalar in the target space.
  • The director ni and the nematic order parameter
    Qij transform as scalars in the ref. space but ,
    respectively, as a vector and a tensor in the
    target space.
  • How can they be coupled? Transform between
    spaces using the Polar Decomposition Theorem.

Ref-gttarget
Target-gtref
15
Strain and Rotation
Simple Shear
Symmetric shear
Rotation
16
Softness with Director
Na unit vector along uniaxial direction in
reference space layer normal in a locked SmA
phase
Red SmA-SmC transition
Director relaxes to zero
17
Harmonic Free energy with Frank part
18
NE Relaxed elastic energy
Uniaxial solid when C5Rgt0, including Frank
director energy
19
Slow Dynamics General Approach
  • Identify slow variables ? Determine static
    thermodynamics F(?)
  • Develop dynamics Poisson-brackets plus
    dissipation
  • Mode Counting (Martin,Pershan, Parodi 72)
  • One hydrodynamic mode for each conserved or
    broken-symmetry variable
  • Extra Modes for slow non-hydrodynamic
  • Friction and constraints may reduce number of
    hydrodynamics variables

20
Preliminaries
Harmonic Oscillator seeds of complete formalism
Poisson bracket
Poisson brackets mechanical coupling between
variables time-reversal invariant. Dissipative
couplings not time-reversal invariant
friction
Dissipative time derivative of field (p) to its
conjugate field (v)
21
Fluid Flow Navier Stokes
Conserved densities mass r Energy e Momentum
gi rvi
22
Crystalline Solid I
Mass density is periodic
Conserved densities mass r Energy e Momentum
gi rvi
Broken-symmetry field Phase of mass-density
field u describes displacement of periodic part
of density
Aside Nonlinear strain is not the Green
Saint-Venant tensor
Strain
Free energy
23
Crystalline Solid II
Modes Transverse phonon 4 Long. Phonon
2 Permeation (vacancy diffusion) 1 Thermal
Diffusion 1
permeation
Aside full nonlinear theory requires more care
Permeation independent motion of mass-density
wave and mass mass motion with static density
wave
24
Tethered Solid
7 hydrodynamic variables 1 density,3 momenta, 3
displacements, 1 energy 1 constraint 8-17
Classic equations of motion for a Lagrangian
solid use Cauchy-Saint-Venant Strain
Isotropic elastic free energy
energy mode (1)
25
Gel Tethered Solid in a Fluid
Tethered solid
Friction only for relative motion- Galilean
invariance
Fluid
Frictional Coupling
Total momentum conserved
Fast non-hydro mode but not valid if there are
time scales in G
Fluid and Solid move together
26
Nematic Hydrodynamics Harvard I
g is the total momentum density determines
angular momentum
Frank free energy for a nematic
27
Nematic Hydrodynamics Harvard II
permeation
w fluid vorticity not spin frequency of rods
Symmetric strain rate rotates n
Modes 2 long sound, 2 slow director
diffusion. 2 fast velocity diff.
Stress tensor can be made symmetric
28
NE Director-displacement dynamics
Stenull, TCL, PRE 65, 058091 (2004)
Tethered anisotropic solid plus nematic
Note all variables in target space
Director relaxes in a microscopic time to the
local shear nonhydrodynamic mode
Modifications if g depends on frequency
Semi-soft Hydrodynamic modes same as a uniaxial
solid 3 pairs of sound modes
29
Soft Elastomer Hydrodynamics
Same mode structure as a discotic liquid crystal
2 longitudinal sound, 2 columnar modes with
zero velocity along n, 2 smectic modes with zero
velocity along both symmetry directions
Slow and fast diffusive modes along symmetry
directions
30
Beyond Hydrodynamics Rouse Modes
Standard hydrodynamics for wtEltlt1 nonanalytic
wtEgtgt1
31
Rouse in NEs
References Martinoty, Pleiner, et al. Stenull
TL Warner Terentjev, EPJ 14, (2005)
Second plateau in G'
Rouse Behavior before plateau
32
Rheology
Conclusion Linear rheology is not a good probe
of semi-softness
33
Summary and Prospectives
  • Ideal nematic elastomers can exhibit soft
    elasticity.
  • Semi-soft elasticity is manifested in nonlinear
    phenomena.
  • Linearized hydrodynamics of soft NE is same as
    that of columnar phase, that of a semi-soft NE is
    the same as that of a uniaxial solid.
  • At high frequencies, NEs will exhibit polymer
    modes semisoft can exhibit plateaus for
    appropriate relaxation times.
  • Randomness will affect analysis random
    transverse stress, random elastic constants will
    complicate damping and high-frequency behavior.
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