Langmuir, Vol.27, No.1, 116-125, 2011
Tactoids of Plate-Like Particles: Size, Shape, and Director Field
We studied; by means of polarized light microscopy, the shape and director field of nematic tactoids as a function of their size in dispersions of colloidal gibbsite platelets in polar and apolar solvents. Because of the homeotropic anchoring of the platelets to the interface, we found large tactoids to be spherical with a radial director field, whereas small tactoids turn out to have an oblate shape and a homogeneous director field, in accordance with theoretical predictions. The transition from a radial to a homogeneous director field seems to proceed via two different routes depending in our case on the solvent. In one route, the what presumably is a hedgehog point defect in the center of the tactoid transforms into a ring defect with a radius that presumably goes to infinity with decreasing drop size. In the other route, the hedgehog defect is displaced from the center to the edge of the tactoid, where it becomes virtual again going to infinity with decreasing drop size. Furthermore, quantitative analysis of the tactoid properties provides us with useful information on the ratio of the splay elastic constant and the anchoring strength and the ratio of the anchoring strength and the surface tension.