In physics, tensor is an orientational order parameter that describes uniaxial and biaxial nematic liquid crystals and vanishes in the isotropic liquid phase.[1] The tensor is a second-order, traceless, symmetric tensor and is defined by[2][3][4]

where and are scalar order parameters, are the two directors of the nematic phase and is the temperature; in uniaxial liquid crystals, . The components of the tensor are

The states with directors and are physically equivalent and similarly the states with directors and are physically equivalent.

The tensor can always be diagonalized,

The following are the invariants of the tensor

the first-order invariant is trivial here. It can be shown that The measure of biaxiality of the liquid crystal is commonly measured through the parameter

Uniaxial nematics

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In uniaxial nematic liquid crystals,   and therefore the   tensor reduces to

 

The scalar order parameter is defined as follows. If   represents the angle between the axis of a nematic molecular and the director axis  , then[2]

 

where   denotes the ensemble average of the orientational angles calculated with respect to the distribution function   and   is the solid angle. The distribution function must necessarily satisfy the condition   since the directors   and   are physically equivalent.

The range for   is given by  , with   representing the perfect alignment of all molecules along the director and   representing the complete random alignment (isotropic) of all molecules with respect to the director; the   case indicates that all molecules are aligned perpendicular to the director axis although such nematics are rare or hard to synthesize.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ De Gennes, P. G. (1969). Phenomenology of short-range-order effects in the isotropic phase of nematic materials. Physics Letters A, 30 (8), 454-455.
  2. ^ a b De Gennes, P. G., & Prost, J. (1993). The physics of liquid crystals (No. 83). Oxford university press.
  3. ^ Mottram, N. J., & Newton, C. J. (2014). Introduction to Q-tensor theory. arXiv preprint arXiv:1409.3542.
  4. ^ Kleman, M., & Lavrentovich, O. D. (Eds.). (2003). Soft matter physics: an introduction. New York, NY: Springer New York.