Surface alignment bistability of nematic liquid crystals by orientationally frustrated surface patterns

We demonstrate a robust in-plane bistability of liquid-crystal surface alignment based on tailored submicrometer-sized surface domains imposing a frustrated alignment. By a nanorubbing technique utilizing the atomic force microscope, we prepared an orientational checkerboard pattern on polyimide layer, consisting of square unit domains on which the alignment is locally constrained to be planar yet orthogonal between the neighboring domains. Due to the four-fold rotational symmetry of the pattern, the two diagonal axes of the square domain become equally stable directions for the macroscopic liquid crystal alignment. The alignment could be switched between these two states by an in-plane electric field above a certain threshold, determined by the local azimuthal anchoring.