Director fluctuations and nuclear-spin relaxation in lyotropic nematic liquid crystals

Bertil Halle, Per-Ola Quist, and István Furó
Phys. Rev. A 45, 3763 – Published 1 March 1992
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Abstract

Lyotropic nematic liquid crystals, like their thermotropic counterparts, exhibit collective reorientation modes known as director fluctuations. In this work we consider the effect of director fluctuations on the transverse spin relaxation of quadrupolar nuclei in uniaxial lyotropic nematic liquid crystals, reporting H2 (labeled surfactant) and Na23 (counterion) relaxation data from the calamitic (NC+) and discotic (ND) phases of the system sodium dodecyl sulphate-decanol-water. The transverse relaxation is found to be dominated by a large contribution to the secular zero-frequency spectral density from diffusion-modulated (counterion) or viscoelastic (surfactant) director fluctuations. The existing theory of nuclear-spin relaxation by director fluctuations is extended to include the effect of translational diffusion on the fourth-order director-fluctuation time correlation functions. In contrast to thermotropic nematics, the second-order director-fluctuation contribution to the nonsecular high-frequency spectral densities is negligible in lyotropic nematic liquid crystals at conventional magnetic fields. This is a consequence of the much longer short-wavelength cutoff in lyotropic liquid crystals. The large zero-frequency spectral density, however, allows us to deduce the viscoelastic properties of the nematic phases, obtaining effective elastic constants of 0.3–1.0 pN in the investigated temperature range. The nematic order parameter is found to be significantly influenced by collective modes as well as by local micelle reorientation. For the oblate micelles in the ND phase, the local modes are most important, whereas the reverse is true for the prolate micelles in the NC+ phase. In the surfactant case, the longest-wavelength-director-fluctuation modes are too slow to motionally average the nuclear-quadrupole coupling, resulting in a static broadening of the H2 satellites.

  • Received 28 October 1991

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevA.45.3763

©1992 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

Bertil Halle, Per-Ola Quist, and István Furó

  • Physical Chemistry 1, University of Lund, Chemical Center, P.O. Box 124, S-221 00 Lund, Sweden

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Vol. 45, Iss. 6 — March 1992

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