Paper
28 May 2004 From nanostructured liquid crystals to electro-optic devices and lasers
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Abstract
We have recently shown that bimesogenic liquid crystals exhibiting chiral nematic and smectic (SmA, SmA* or C*) phases have macroscopic electro-optic properties that make them very interesting for both display and non-display applications. Since materials have been synthesised where the optical effect observed could be due to scattering power, birefringence, dichroism, fluorescence and optical-nonlinearity (SHG and THG), and where the principle optical axis can be rotated in any direction through 90° in times of the order of microseconds at moderate fields, i.e., 1-10V per micron, then this suggests an exciting variety of new optoelectronic applications. In this paper we will describe nanoscopic design protocols, molecular templating effects and the molecular properties important for these systems. Specifically we will consider bimesogenic SmC* incorporating siloxane linking groups that exhibit either ferroelectric or anti-ferroelectric phases depending on the number of silicon atoms in the siloxane moiety using the same mesogens. The siloxane configuration leads to a molecular template effect observed on the macroscopic scale as synclinic or anticlinic phases. Unusually these materials have cone angles of up to and including 90º which makes them ideal for high contrast displays, phase elements, photonics transducers and lasers.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Harry J. Coles "From nanostructured liquid crystals to electro-optic devices and lasers", Proc. SPIE 5289, Liquid Crystal Materials, Devices, and Applications X and Projection Displays X, (28 May 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.532163
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KEYWORDS
Silicon

Polarization

Liquid crystals

Chemical species

Switching

Electro optics

Polymers

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