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Off-lattice models both based on purely repulsive or attractive-repulsive Gay–Berne models allow us to simulate liquid crystal phases with some positional as well as orientational order. This chapter summarizes simulation results for anisotropic particles of elongated or discotic shape of the two types either pristine or decorated with charges, dipoles and quadrupoles. Beyond showing the effect of key molecular features (e.g. aspect ratios) on morphologies and phase diagrams, applications specific to liquid crystals, like the calculation of elastic constants and the simulation of a TN LCD, are reported. Tapered, bowlic and biaxial GB type single particle systems as well as more complex ones based of multi-particle mesogens (banana phases, polymers, elastomers) are discussed.
An introduction to the most important liquid crystal types and their physical properties and applications, that could also serve as a self-contained undergraduate course. Examples of the chemical structures of mesogens, i.e. molecules yielding the various liquid crystals phases, are given, providing a preliminary information needed for modelling and simulation.
Standing as the first unified textbook on the subject, Liquid Crystals and Their Computer Simulations provides a comprehensive and up-to-date treatment of liquid crystals and of their Monte Carlo and molecular dynamics computer simulations. Liquid crystals have a complex physical nature, and, therefore, computer simulations are a key element of research in this field. This modern text develops a uniform formalism for addressing various spectroscopic techniques and other experimental methods for studying phase transitions of liquid crystals, and emphasises the links between their molecular organisation and observable static and dynamic properties. Aided by the inclusion of a set of Appendices containing detailed mathematical background and derivations, this book is accessible to a broad and multidisciplinary audience. Primarily intended for graduate students and academic researchers, it is also an invaluable reference for industrial researchers working on the development of liquid crystal display technology.
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