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We create controllable active particles in the form of metal-dielectric Janus colloids which acquire motility through a nematic liquid crystal film by transducing the energy of an imposed perpendicular AC electric field. We achieve complete command over trajectories by varying field amplitude and frequency, piloting the colloids at will in the plane spanned by the axes of the particle and the nematic. The underlying mechanism exploits the sensitivity of electro-osmotic flow to the asymmetries of the particle surface and the liquid-crystal defect structure. We present a calculation of the dipolar force density produced by the interplay of the electric field with director anchoring and the contrasting electrostatic boundary conditions on the two hemispheres, that accounts for the dielectric-forward (metal-forward) motion of the colloids due to induced puller (pusher) force dipoles. These findings open unexplored directions for the use of colloids and liquid crystals in controlled transport, assembly and collective dynamics.
In a sharp contrast to the response of silica particles we show that the metal-dielectric Janus particles with boojum defects in a nematic liquid crystal are self-propelled under the action of an electric field applied perpendicular to the director.
We found that multiple circular walls (MCW) can be generated on a thin film of a nematic liquid crystal through a spiral scanning of a focused IR laser. The ratios between radii of adjacent rings of MCW were almost constant. These constant ratios can
We consider a mathematical model that describes the flow of a Nematic Liquid Crystal (NLC) film placed on a flat substrate, across which a spatially-varying electric potential is applied. Due to their polar nature, NLC molecules interact with the (no
We report a dynamic light scattering study of the fluctuation modes in a thermotropic liquid crystalline mixture of monomer and dimer compounds that exhibits the twist-bend nematic ($mathrm{N_{TB}}$) phase. The results reveal a spectrum of overdamped
We study the flow behaviour of a twist-bend nematic $(N_{TB})$ liquid crystal. It shows three distinct shear stress ($sigma$) responses in a certain range of temperatures and shear rates ($dot{gamma}$). In Region-I, $sigmasimsqrt{dot{gamma}}$, in reg