Abstract

Organizing nanoparticles in a controlled way allows us to monitor their optical properties. It is particularly interesting to organize them on top of liquid crystal films to take advantage, in a second step, of the easy actuation of liquid crystals with external parameters such as temperature, electric fields, and so forth. We show that despite their fluidity, nematic and smectic films allow the formation of well-ordered hexagonal domains of gold spherical nanoparticles (AuNPs) at their surface, but we also show that both nematic films and AuNP domains impact each other. Using optical microscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and spectrophotometry, we compare nematic, polymer-stabilized nematic, and smectic films with AuNP domains made of NPs of diameter 6 nm. On the liquid crystal films, depressions are revealed below the AuNP domains, whereas the AuNP domains appear well-organized but with a hexagonal period shortened with respect to AuNP monolayers formed on hard substrates. We interpret these features by the anchoring tilt imposed by the AuNP domains on the liquid crystal molecules. The smectic-A layers characteristic of the nematic surface transform into smectic-C layers, which induce the formation of depression. The energy penalty associated with the local smectic-A/smectic-C transition induces the shortening of the AuNP domain period in order to decrease the AuNP domain surface. The observed large depth of the polymer-stabilized nematic depressions below AuNP domains may be explained either by an increased size of the polymer-stabilized smectic layers close to the surface or by an increased number of polymer-stabilized smectic liquid crystal smectic layers close to the surface with respect to pure nematic films.

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