Simply knotted

Silica microspheres in liquid crystals offer the possibility of creating every knot conceivable.

August 18, 2011

Knots can now be tied systematically in the microscopic world. A team of scientists led by Uroš Tkalec from the Jožef Stefan Institute in Ljubljana (Slovenia), who has been working at the Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization in Göttingen (Germany) since September 2010, has now found a way to create every imaginable knot inside a liquid crystal. Starting points of the new method are tiny silica microspheres confined in thin liquid crystal layers. Surrounding these microspheres, a net of fine lines is formed where the molecular orientation of the liquid crystal is altered. The researchers discovered a method to twist and link these lines in such a manner as to create every knot imaginable.

Knots are ubiquitous: We encounter them in woven materials, in the numerous sailors’ knots, and in constantly entangled electric cables and extension cords. When putting on their shoes, even small children learn to master their first knots – long before they can read and write. Even our DNA can be complicatedly knotted. From a mathematical point of view, knots that seem completely different at first sight can belong to the same class. The essential criterion is that one knot can be transformed into another by means of simple deformations. The most simple example is a rubber band. Topologically speaking, every shape you can create from it without cutting open the loop and joining it back together is equivalent to the initial rubber band. A completely different knot, for example, is the trefoil knot (see figure 1). This knot cannot easily be tied from an intact rubber band. Furthermore, several interlocked loops can constitute even more complex structures.

Despite this tidy mathematical system organizing the general jumble of knots, one question remains: Can every conceivable knot be implemented in a microscopic, physical system? In his most recent study Uroš Tkalec found such a system, in which complex knots can be created systematically: silica microspheres within an only slightly thicker nematic liquid crystal film confined between two glass plates. Such liquid crystals also pose the basis of common LCD displays.

"The glass plates were treated in such a manner as to force the liquid crystalline molecules to align parallel to the surface", explains Tkalec. A single silica microsphere entering the layer changes the surrounding alignment substantially: around the sphere a ring-shaped region forms in which no preferred direction can be discerned. Scientists refer to such disruptions in the molecular order as defect lines. Since the defect ring surrounding a microsphere reflects light differently than the rest of the liquid crystal, it can be easily detected. "It looks as if every microsphere were surrounded by its own ring – similar to the planet Saturn", explains Tkalec (see figure 2, left). These Saturn’s rings are oriented perpendicularly to the average orientation of molecules between the glass plates. If several microspheres are confined to such thin nematic layers, they can be moved together and arranged in lines by using a laser, much like using a pair of tweezers. The rings then join to form more complex, entangled lines surrounding the aligned spheres.

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