Structural features of the hexagonal phase of phasmidic liquid crystals

Abstract
Eighteen compounds having the same molecular architecture, a rod-like aromatic core with four to six long aliphatic terminal groups, which all possess a hexagonal mesophase, have been studied by X-ray diffraction. From the lattice constants of these mesophases, we have deduced some information about the molecular organization. We discuss the curvature and the density of the interface between the aromatic and the paraffinic moieties, the orientational disorder and the packing of the rod-like central parts of the molecules. The occurrence of smectic, oblique or cubic mesophases in the same series underlines the similarities with lyotropic polymorphism and justifies a description of the molecular organization in terms of interfaces.