Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




TECH SPACE
Liquid crystal research, future applications advance
by Staff Writers
Amherst, MA (SPX) Dec 28, 2012


This image shows polarized light interacting with a particle injected into a liquid crystal medium. Credit: Bohdan Senyuk and Ivan Smalyukh, Colorado University

Contributing geometric and topological analyses of micro-materials, University of Massachusetts Amherst mathematician Robert Kusner aided experimental physicists at the University of Colorado (UC) by successfully explaining the observed "beautiful and complex patterns revealed" in three-dimensional liquid crystal experiments. The work is expected to lead to creation of new materials that can be actively controlled.

Kusner is a geometer, an expert in the analysis of variational problems in low-dimensional geometry and topology, which concerns properties preserved under continuous deformation such as stretching and bending.

His work over 3 decades has focused on the geometry and topology of curves, surfaces and other spaces that arise in nature, such as soap films, knots and the shapes of fluid droplets.

Kusner agrees with physicist and lead author Ivan Smalyukh of UC Boulder that their collaboration is the first to show in experiments that some of the most fundamental topological theorems hold up in real materials. Their findings appear in the current early online issue of Nature.

UMass Amherst's Kusner explains, "There are two important aspects of this work. First, the experimental work by the Colorado team, who fabricated topologically complex micro-materials allowing controlled experiments of three-dimensional liquid crystals.

"Second, the theoretical work performed by us mathematicians and theoretical physicists while visiting the University of California Santa Barbara's Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics (KITP).

"We provided the geometric and topological analysis of these experiments, to explain the observed patterns and predict what patterns should be seen when experimental conditions are changed."

Kusner was the lone mathematician among four organizers of last summer's workshop on "Knotted Fields" at KITP, which led to this work.

The workshop engaged about a dozen other mathematicians and about twice as many theoretical and experimental physicists in a month-long investigation of the interplay between low-dimensional topology and what physicists call "soft matter."

In their experiments, the physicists at UC Boulder showed that tiny topological particles injected into a liquid crystal medium behave in a manner consistent with established theorems in geometry and topology, Kusner says. The researchers say they have thus identified approaches for building new materials using topology.

UC Boulder's Smalyukh and colleagues set up the experiment by first creating colloids, solutions in which tiny particles are dispersed but not dissolved in a host medium, such as milk, paint and shaving cream.

Specifically, they injected tiny, different-shaped particles into a liquid crystal, which behaves something like a liquid and a solid. Once injected into a liquid crystal, the particles behaved as predicted by topology.

Smalyukh says, "Our study shows that interaction between particles and molecular alignment in liquid crystals follows the predictions of topological theorems, making it possible to use these theorems in designing new composite materials with unique properties that cannot be encountered in nature or synthesized by chemists.

These findings lay the groundwork for new applications in experimental studies of low-dimensional topology, with important potential ramifications for many branches of science and technology."

For example, he adds, these topological liquid crystal colloids could be used to upgrade current liquid crystal displays like those used in laptops and television screens, to allow them to interact with light in new, more energy efficient ways.

Besides Kusner at UMass Amherst and Smalyukh's group at UC Boulder, other investigators for this study are Sailing He of Zhejiang University, China and Randall Kamien and Tom Lubensky at the University of Pennsylvania.

.


Related Links
University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Space Technology News - Applications and Research






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TECH SPACE
US readers turn increasingly to digital books: study
San Francisco (AFP) Dec 27, 2012
US readers are increasingly opting for digital books instead of ink-and-paper editions, according to a Pew Research Center study released on Thursday. The share of US adults reading electronic books rose to 23 percent in November from 16 percent the same time last year, according to the Pew study. Meanwhile, ranks of people age 16 or older turning to pages of printed books fell to 67 per ... read more


TECH SPACE
Boosting Galactan Sugars Could Boost Biofuel Production

Discovery May Pave Way to Genetically Enhanced Biofuel Crops

NC State Study Offers Insight Into Converting Wood to Bio-Oil

Can Algae-Derived Oils Support Large-Scale, Low-Cost Biofuels Production?

TECH SPACE
Smart SPHERES Fly High Aboard the International Space Station

DARPA developing robotic mule

Flexing fingers for micro-robotics: Berkeley Lab scientists create a powerful, microscale actuator

Head-mounted cameras could help robots understand social interactions

TECH SPACE
British offshore wind farm near completion

China's wind towers face U.S. tariffs

Offshore wind power: AREVA and STX France ally their expertise

US confirms duties on 1towers from China, Vietnam

TECH SPACE
ChargePoint and DBT USA to Showcase Joint Electric Vehicle Charging Station Innovation

Toyota in $1.1 bn deal with US owners over recalls

Toyota reaches $1.1 bn deal with US owners over recalls

Toyota ups 2012 sales forecast to 9.7 mn vehicles

TECH SPACE
Taiwan plans oil, gas exploration in South China Sea

China backs Cambodia's first oil refinery

Iraqi Kurdistan oil exports slashed in payment row

Russia unveils $25 bn oil link to Pacific

TECH SPACE
Toshiba to sell 16 percent stake in Westinghouse: report

Japan's new govt to review zero-nuclear policy

Iran denies Russian women paid to cover up in nuclear plant

Asian bids 'closer' to winning Turkey nuclear plant project

TECH SPACE
French power company head target of financial probe: source

Definition of sustainable organic biogas reached

Indian washermen spin out decades-old tradition

National Grid Creates Big Questions for Transmission Industry

TECH SPACE
World's smelliest and largest flower blooms in Brazil

Amazon deforestation brings loss of microbial communities

Deforestation in the Amazon equals net losses of diversity for microbial communities

Death of hemlock trees yields new life for hardwood trees, but at what cost to the ecosystem?




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement