A Self-Quenched Defect Glass in a Colloid-Nematic Liquid Crystal Composite

Colloidal particles immersed in liquid crystals frustrate orientational order. This generates defect lines known as disclinations. At the core of these defects, the orientational order drops sharply. We have discovered a class of soft solids, with shear moduli up to 104 pascals, containing high concentrations of colloidal particles (volume fraction
 )  directly dispersed into a nematic liquid crystal. Confocal microscopy  and computer simulations show that the mechanical                         strength derives from a percolated network of  defect lines entangled with the particles in three dimensions. Such a  “self-quenched                         glass” of defect lines and particles can be  considered a self-organized analog of the “vortex glass” state in type  II superconductors.
)  directly dispersed into a nematic liquid crystal. Confocal microscopy  and computer simulations show that the mechanical                         strength derives from a percolated network of  defect lines entangled with the particles in three dimensions. Such a  “self-quenched                         glass” of defect lines and particles can be  considered a self-organized analog of the “vortex glass” state in type  II superconductors.
 
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