posted on 2019-09-17, 12:24authored byJan-Christoph Eichler, Robert A Skutnik, Anupam Sengupta, Marco MazzaMarco Mazza, Martin Schoen
Anisotropic fluids (e.g. liquid crystals) offer a remarkable promise as optofluidic materials owing to
the directional, tunable, and coupled interactions between the material, flow, and the optical fields.
Here we present a comprehensive in silico treatment of this anisotropic interaction by performing
nonequilibrium molecular dynamics simulations. We quantify the response of a nematic liquid crystal
(NLC) undergoing a Poiseuille flow in the Stokes regime, while being illuminated by a laser beam incident perpendicular to the flow direction. We adopt a minimalistic model to capture the interactions,
accounting for two features: first, the laser heats up the NLC locally; and second, the laser polarises
the NLC and exerts an optical torque that tends to reorient molecules of the nematic phase. Because
of this reorientation the liquid crystal exhibits small regions of biaxiality, where the nematic director
is one symmetry axis and the axis of rotation for the reorientation of the molecules is the other one.
We find that the relative strength of the viscous and the optical torques mediates the flow-induced
response of the biaxial regions, thereby tuning the emergence, shape and location of the regions of
enhanced biaxiality. The mechanistic framework presented here promises experimentally tractable
routes toward novel optofluidic applications based on material-flow-light interactions.
Funding
ATTRACT Investigator Grant of the Luxembourg National Research Fund [grant number A17/MS/11572821/MBRACE].
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular Physics on 16/09/2019 available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/00268976.2019.1663286