nematic
English
Etymology
From Ancient Greek νήματος (nḗmatos), genitive of νῆμα (nêma, “thread”).
Adjective
nematic (comparative more nematic, superlative most nematic)
- (physics, chemistry, of certain liquid crystals) Whose molecules align in loose parallel lines.
Derived terms
- nematic phase
Translations
See also
Noun
nematic (plural nematics)
- A liquid crystal whose molecules align in loose parallel lines.
- 1984, L D Landau; L. P. Pitaevskii; A. M. Kosevich; E.M. Lifshitz, Theory of Elasticity, volume 7, page 147:
- It is easy to see, however, that the same coefficients in nematics determine the adiabatic deformations also.
- 1988, Masao Doi, The Theory of Polymer Dynamics, page 368:
- For low-molecular-weight nematics, it has been known that the constitutive equation of nematics is entirely different from that for isotropic liquids.
- 1996, Lev M. Blinov; Vladimir G. Chigrinov, Electrooptic Effects in Liquid Crystal Materials, page 274:
- Electrohydrodynamic instabilities in nematics could be classified according to the dependence of the threshold voltage (or field) on the physical parameters of the liquid crystal, cell geometry, field frequency, etc.
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