Abstract

Abstract Experimental data are presented for the unwinding of the helical cholesteric structure in the presence of an applied electric field. Homeotropic surface anchoring conditions are known to reduce the magnitude of the critical unwinding voltage which depends on helical pitch and cell thickness. The experiments are unique in that the pitch is varied continuously at constant cell thickness rather than changing thickness at constant pitch. This is accomplished by employing cholesteric mixtures in which the inverse pitch changes linearly with temperature in the nematic compensation region. A model introduced by Cladis and Klemen, and extended by Goossens, is used to explain the effect of surface anchoring in the absence of an applied field. The calculations are extended to include the effect of the field, and the theory predicts a universal critical voltage curve involving the product of cell thickness and inverse pitch which is verified by experiment.

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