Abstract
We study bicomponent systems where one component represents a liquid crystalline (LC) phase, and the other component randomly perturbs the LC order. Such systems can serve as a testbed to systematically analyse the impact of qualitatively different types of random-type sources of perturbation on the orientational and/or translational order. This mini-review presents typical representatives of such systems, where orientational and translational order is probed in nematic and smectic A LCs, respectively. As a source of perturbation, we consider either different porous matrices (control-pore glass, aerogels) or aerosil nanoparticles, which can form in LCs' different fractal-like network organizations. In such complex systems, LC ordering fingerprints the interplay among LC elastic forces, interfacial forces, and randomness. The resulting LC behaviour could be characterised by either long-range, quasi long-range, or short-range order. We demonstrate under which conditions random-field-like phenomena or interfacial effects dominate. However, these effects are relatively strongly entangled in most experimental systems, andindividual impacts cannot be precisely identified.
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