| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1811468 | Physica B: Condensed Matter | 2010 | 8 Pages | 
Abstract
												A comprehensive study on a liquid crystal formed by mixing two non-mesogens, viz., cholesterol and cetyl alcohol has been carried out. Polarized microscopic observations confirmed that the mixture exhibits smectic A phase below 48.2 °C. The mechanism possible for the formation of ordered liquid crystal phase when two non-mesogens are mixed is discussed. Density measured using a precision density meter was found to drop drastically in the vicinity of isotropic to smectic A transition temperature. The density fluctuations at the transition are discussed on the basis of: (i) the long wavelength limit of the structure factor and (ii) the critical exponent evaluated using modified Landau-de Gennes theory. The ultrasound velocity, determined using the interferometer method, drops drastically near the smectic A-isotropic transition temperature. The temperature-dependent data of density and ultrasound velocity enabled the evaluation of the adiabatic compressibility and acoustic impedance. The specific heat at constant pressure measured using differential scanning calorimetry shows a large increase in the vicinity of the phase transition. A correlation of thermodynamic functions to thermo-elastic properties was established through thermodynamic route. This relationship, along with experimentally measured quantities forms the basis for the thermo-physical characterization of the mixture. This facilitated the evaluation of specific heat at constant volume, the ratio of specific heats, the isothermal compressibility and the Grüneisen parameter across the smectic A-isotropic phase transition.
											Keywords
												
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													Physical Sciences and Engineering
													Physics and Astronomy
													Condensed Matter Physics
												
											Authors
												A.K. George, R.N. Singh, S. Arafin, C. Carboni, S.H. Al Harthi, 
											