ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
We investigate by means of continuum percolation theory and Monte Carlo simulations how spontaneous uniaxial symmetry breaking affects geometric percolation in dispersions of hard rod-like particles. If the particle aspect ratio exceeds about twenty, percolation in the nematic phase can be lost upon adding particles to the dispersion. This contrasts with percolation in the isotropic phase, where a minimum particle loading is always required to obtain system-spanning clusters. For sufficiently short rods, percolation in the uniaxial nematic mimics that of the isotropic phase, where the addition of particles always aids percolation. For aspect ratios between twenty and infinity, but not including infinity, we find re-entrance behavior: percolation in the low-density nematic may be lost upon increasing the amount of nanofillers but can be re-gained by the addition of even more particles to the suspension. Our simulation results for aspect ratios of 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 strongly support our theoretical predictions, with almost quantitative agreement. We show that a new closure of the connectedness Ornstein-Zernike equation, inspired by Scaled Particle Theory, is more accurate than the Lee-Parsons closure that effectively describes the impact of many-body direct contacts.
Based on simplifications of previous numerical calculations [Graf and L{o}wen, Phys. Rev. E textbf{59}, 1932 (1999)], we propose algebraic free energy expressions for the smectic-A liquid crystal phase and the crystal phases of hard spherocylinders.
We investigate the connections between some simple Maier-Saupe lattice models, with a discrete choice of orientations of the microscopic directors, and a recent proposal of a two-tensor formalism to describe the phase diagrams of nematic liquid-cryst
Percolation of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in liquid crystals (LCs) opens way for a unique class of anisotropic hybrid materials with a complex dielectric constant widely controlled by CNT concentration. Percolation in such systems is commonly described
Topological defects resulted from boundary constraints in confined liquid crystals have attracted extensive research interests. In this paper, we use numerical simulation to study the phase transition dynamics in the context of stochastic resonance i
Using computer simulations we investigate the microscopic structure of the singular director field within a nematic droplet. As a theoretical model for nematic liquid crystals we take hard spherocylinders. To induce an overall topological charge, the