Abstract

When an external field is applied across a liquid-crystal cell, the twist and tilt distributions cannot be calculated analytically and must be extracted numerically. In the standard approach, the Euler-Lagrange equationsare derived from the minimization of the free energy of the system and then solved via finite-difference methods, often implemented in commercial software. These tools iterate from initial solutions that are compatible with the boundary conditions, providing limited to no flexibility for customization. Here we present a genetic algorithm that outputs fast and accurate solutions to the integral form of the equations. In our approach, the evolutionary routine is sequentially applied at each position within the bulk of the cell, thus overcoming the necessity of assuming trial solutions. The full range of twist angles from -90^{∘} to 90^{∘} is considered. In this way, the predictions of our routine strongly support the experimentally observed polarization transformations of light incident on different spatially varying twisted nematic liquid-crystal cells, patterned with different topologies on the two alignment layers.

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