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  2. Liquid crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_crystal

    Liquid crystal color transitions are used on many aquarium and pool thermometers as well as on thermometers for infants or baths. [84] Other liquid crystal materials change color when stretched or stressed. Thus, liquid crystal sheets are often used in industry to look for hot spots, map heat flow, measure stress distribution patterns, and so on.

  3. Acta Crystallographica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acta_Crystallographica

    Acta Crystallographica was established in conjunction with the foundation of the International Union of Crystallography in 1948. Both were established to maintain an international forum for crystallography after the Second World War had led to a loss of international subscription to, and the eventual nine-year closure of, the main pre-war crystallography journal, Zeitschrift für ...

  4. N. V. Madhusudana - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N._V._Madhusudana

    These investigations assisted in a wider understanding of antiferroelectric correlations, electro hydrodynamical instabilities and molecular mechanism of liquid crystals. [6] His studies have been documented by way of a number of articles [ 8 ] and the online article repository of Indian Academy of Sciences has listed 160 of them. [ 9 ]

  5. Photoalignment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photoalignment

    Photoalignment is a technique for orienting liquid crystals to desired alignment by exposure to polarized light and a photo reactive alignment chemical. [1] It is usually performed by exposing the alignment chemical ('command surface') to polarized light with desired orientation which then aligns the liquid crystal cells or domains to the exposed orientation.

  6. Colloidal crystal - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colloidal_crystal

    A colloidal crystal is an ordered array of colloidal particles and fine grained materials analogous to a standard crystal whose repeating subunits are atoms or molecules. [1] A natural example of this phenomenon can be found in the gem opal , where spheres of silica assume a close-packed locally periodic structure under moderate compression .

  7. Crystallographic database - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallographic_database

    A crystallographic database is a database specifically designed to store information about the structure of molecules and crystals.Crystals are solids having, in all three dimensions of space, a regularly repeating arrangement of atoms, ions, or molecules.

  8. Crystallization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallization

    Some ways by which crystals form are precipitating from a solution, freezing, or more rarely deposition directly from a gas. Attributes of the resulting crystal depend largely on factors such as temperature, air pressure, cooling rate, and in the case of liquid crystals, time of fluid evaporation. Crystallization occurs in two major steps.

  9. Columnar phase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columnar_phase

    The columnar phase is a class of mesophases in which molecules assemble into cylindrical structures to act as mesogens.Originally, these kinds of liquid crystals were called discotic liquid crystals or bowlic liquid crystals [1] because the columnar structures are composed of flat-shaped discotic or bowl-shaped molecules stacked one-dimensionally.