Philip L. Taylor

Perkins Professor of Physics and Professor of Macromolecular Science 

B.Sc., King's College, University of London (1959) 

Ph.D., Cambridge University (1962) 

E-mail:  plt@po.cwru.edu

Theoretical Physics of Condensed Matter  

My research group works principally in the area of physics known as "soft condensed matter." This term refers to substances whose molecules can be made to move significant distances by the application of comparatively weak forces. This distinguishes them from metals and ceramics, in which the atoms are usually tightly bound to their lattice sites. Typical examples of soft condensed systems are polymers and liquid crystals. We work on the theory behind the rich and varied behavior shown by these fascinating materials.

Recently we have developed a new way of looking at the problem of phase transitions in polymers, and have produced some novel predictions for the properties of polyethylene. Some of our current work is related to the problem of instabilities in crystalline polymers and in solidifying mixtures. We are looking at the way a smooth mixture of two substances separates into bubbles of one material embedded in the other when the temperature is lowered or when polymerization occurs. We are studying this process by modeling the way in which monomer and liquid crystal molecules exchange places as they migrate to form clusters and networks. From these models we develop the equations that govern the final morphology of the system, and hence its optical properties.

Liquid crystals and polymers pose a particular challenge to the theoretical physicist, as they are inherently complicated systems. The most common approach to modeling the dynamics of liquid crystals involves deriving equations to describe the average of quantities like the orientations of the molecules. These averages are taken over volumes big enough to contain many molecules, but small compared to the size of an actual device. Even within this approximation, however, the solution of the equations is a challenging task. One approach taken in our group is to start with the microscopic picture, in which individual molecules of a liquid crystal or polymer are described in terms of their orientations and positions, and their corresponding velocities. We then take the equations that describe their motion as they interact with each other, and try to solve them -- sometimes analytically, but usually by computer simulation. From the statistical motions of the individual molecules one can build up a picture of the macroscopic behavior of the system as it would actually be observed. As always, the toughest task for the theoretical physicist working to predict the properties of matter is to define a model that is simple enough to solve, but sufficiently complex to reflect the real world.

Representative publications

 

"Exact Results for the Lower Critical Solution Temperature in an 
Asymmetric Model of an Interacting Binary Mixture,"
 J.-C. Lin and P. L. Taylor, Phys. Rev. Lett.  73, 2863 (1994)

"Devilšs Staircase, Critical Thickness, and Propagating Fingers
 in Antiferroelectric Liquid Crystals,"
 X.-Y. Wang and P. L. Taylor, Phys. Rev. Lett.  76, 640  (1996)

"Kinetic Theory and the Flory-Huggins Approximation,"
P. L. Taylor, Y.-K. Yu,  and  X. Y. Wang, J. Chem. Phys.   105, 1237  (1996)

"Kinetic Theory of Phase Separation Induced by Photopolymerization,"
X. Y. Wang, Y.-K. Yu, and P. L. Taylor  J. Appl. Phys.   80, 3285  (1996)

"Exponential Decay of Correlations in Strongly Disordered 2D Nematic Elastomers"
Y.-K. Yu,  P. L. Taylor, and E. M. Terentjev, Phys. Rev.  Lett.  81,  128  (1998)

"Collapse Dynamics of Liquid Bridges Investigated by Time-Varying Magnetic Levitation", M. P. Mahajan, M. Tsige, S. Zhang, J. I. D. Alexander, P. L. Taylor , and C. Rosenblatt, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 338 (2000)

"Fréedericksz Transition in an Anticlinic Liquid Crystal", S. Zhang, W. Bing, S. S. Keast, M. E. Neubert, P. L. Taylor, and C. Rosenblatt, Phys. Rev. Lett. 84, 4140 (2000)

"Simulation Study of the Glass Transition temperature in Poly(Methyl Methacrylate)", M. Tsige and P. L. Taylor, Phys. Rev. E 65, 021805 (2002)

"A Quantum Approach to Condensed Matter Physics", P. L. Taylor and O. G. Heinonen, (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2002), 424 pp.

"Randomness in Nanoscopic Liquid Crystal Droplets -- How Small is Too Small?", T. P. Doerr, D. Herman, H. Mathur and P. L. Taylor, Europhysics Letters 59, 398 (2002)

"Long-Range Interlayer Interactions in Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals", M. B. Hamaneh and P. L. Taylor, Phys. Rev. Lett. 93, 167801 (2004)

"Diffusion within a Layered, Graphite-Like, Spherical Electrode: Theoretical Aspects", P. B. Antohi, P. L. Taylor, and D. A. Scherson, Journal of the Electrochemical Society 152 A1495 (2005)

"Phase Sequences and Long-Range Interactions in Ferroelectric Liquid Crystals", M. B. Hamaneh and P. L. Taylor, Phys. Rev. E 72, 021706 (2005) A more complete list of publications is available here