Scattering-free liquid crystal polymer-dispersed liquid crystal polymer (LCPDLC) films are fabricated by combining a room temperature polymerizable liquid crystal (LC) monomer with a mesogenic photosensitive LC. The morphological and photosensitive properties of the system are analysed with polarized optical microscopy and high resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy. A two-phase morphology comprised of oriented fibril-like polymeric structures interwoven with nanoscale domains of phase separated LC exists. The nanoscale of the structures enables an absence of scattering which allows imaging through the LCPDLC sample without optical distortion. The use of a mesogenic monomer enables much smaller phase separated domains as compared to nonmesogenic systems. All-optical experiments show that the transmitted intensity, measured through parallel polarizers, can be modulated by the low power density radiation (31 mW/cm2) of a suitable wavelength (532 nm). The reversible and repeatable transmission change is due to the photoinduced trans-cis photoisomerization process. The birefringence variation (0.01) obtained by optically pumping the LCPDLC films allow their use as an alloptical phase modulator

Light-addressable liquid crystal polymer dispersed liquid crystal / De Sio, Luciano; Ouskova, E.; Lloyd, P.; Vergara, R.; Tabiryan, N.; Bunning, T. J.. - In: OPTICAL MATERIALS EXPRESS. - ISSN 2159-3930. - 7:5(2017), pp. 1581-1588. [10.1364/OME.7.001581]

Light-addressable liquid crystal polymer dispersed liquid crystal

De Sio, Luciano;
2017

Abstract

Scattering-free liquid crystal polymer-dispersed liquid crystal polymer (LCPDLC) films are fabricated by combining a room temperature polymerizable liquid crystal (LC) monomer with a mesogenic photosensitive LC. The morphological and photosensitive properties of the system are analysed with polarized optical microscopy and high resolution scanning and transmission electron microscopy. A two-phase morphology comprised of oriented fibril-like polymeric structures interwoven with nanoscale domains of phase separated LC exists. The nanoscale of the structures enables an absence of scattering which allows imaging through the LCPDLC sample without optical distortion. The use of a mesogenic monomer enables much smaller phase separated domains as compared to nonmesogenic systems. All-optical experiments show that the transmitted intensity, measured through parallel polarizers, can be modulated by the low power density radiation (31 mW/cm2) of a suitable wavelength (532 nm). The reversible and repeatable transmission change is due to the photoinduced trans-cis photoisomerization process. The birefringence variation (0.01) obtained by optically pumping the LCPDLC films allow their use as an alloptical phase modulator
2017
high resolution transmission electron microscopy; light sensitive materials; liquid crystal displays; liquid crystals; liquids; monomers; nanotechnology; phase modulation; photosensitivity; polymer films; scanning electron microscopy; transmission electron microscopy; high resolution scanning; mesogenic monomer; optical distortion; photosensitive properties; polarized optical microscopy; polymeric structures; transmitted intensities; two phase morphology; liquid crystal polymers
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Light-addressable liquid crystal polymer dispersed liquid crystal / De Sio, Luciano; Ouskova, E.; Lloyd, P.; Vergara, R.; Tabiryan, N.; Bunning, T. J.. - In: OPTICAL MATERIALS EXPRESS. - ISSN 2159-3930. - 7:5(2017), pp. 1581-1588. [10.1364/OME.7.001581]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1014382
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