Abstract

ABSTRACT Certain nematic liquid crystals, for example, those formed by banana-shaped molecules, can exhibit a low-temperature twist-bend nematic (Ntb) phase. Upon addition of chiral dopants, a chiral version of the twist-bend phase (N*tb) can be observed below the conventional chiral nematic (N*) phase, while under electric field the N* phase is transformed into a specific state known as ‘oblique helicoidal cholesteric’. In this work, we have studied the well-known Ntb-forming system CB7CB:CB6OCB with addition of 5CB and chiral dopants (ChDs) using optical microscopy, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and measurements of temperature-dependent optical transmission using optical microscopy. Effects of 5CB and different chiral dopants (of steroid or non-steroid nature) upon thermal stability of Ntb phase were analysed, and selective reflection in the visible range could be observed in the N* phase with a sufficiently high ChD content. As a peculiar feature, sharp unwinding of the cholesteric helix was observed at lower temperatures when approaching the N*tb phase, which appears to be similar to the helix unwinding close to the smectic-A transition.

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