Abstract

Light scattering by thin nematic liquid crystal films is considered. The confinement has two important consequences. First, fluctuations with wave vectors not equal to the difference between the wave vectors of the scattered and the incident light ray can contribute to the scattering. The distribution of fluctuation wave vectors relevant to the scattering is peaked around this difference and has a width inversely proportional to the film thickness. Second, only a discrete set of fluctuation wave vectors is allowed due to restrictions imposed by the boundary conditions. Consequently, the relaxation times of the different fluctuation modes depend on the film thickness. It appears that the relaxation time decreases due to the confinement. In the limit of vanishing thicknesses the relaxation time goes linearly to zero with the film thickness. The main conclusions are expected to hold qualitatively for other confined nematic systems, e.g., for nematics confined in porous media. \textcopyright{} 1996 The American Physical Society.

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