Abstract

We compute the surface-induced morphology and the free-energy pathways as a cylindrical liquid crystalline filament with preferred homeotropic (orthogonal) interface orientation passes through a sequence of growing sinusoidal perturbations and breaks up into droplets. Liquid crystalline morphology is determined using a simulated annealing algorithm [R. K. Goyal and M. M. Denn, Phys. Rev. E, 75, 021704 (2007)] to minimize the Oseen-Frank free energy. A first-order morphological transition with a finite energy barrier is required when the perturbation amplitude exceeds a critical value, and it is possible that progress towards breakup will be kinetically trapped in a varicose cylindrical shape. This result may be related to the apparent kinetic trapping of dispersed nematic 4'-octyl-4-biphenylcarbonitrile in a gel state reported by Inn and Denn [J. Rheol., 49, 887 (2005)].

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