Liquid Crystal Materials. Lyotropics Thermotropics amphiphilic molecules, polar and non-polar parts form liquid crystal phases over certain concentration.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Viscosity of Dilute Polymer Solutions
Advertisements

C11 Liquid Crystals (HL) C11.1 Identify molecules that are likely to show liquid-crystal properties, and explain their liquid-crystal behavior on a molecular.
Liquid Crystals & LCDs They’re all around you.
C6 Liquid Crystals.
Twisted and frustrated states of matter by John W. Goodby Proceedings A Volume 468(2142): June 8, 2012 ©2012 by The Royal Society.
LC Applications Behzad Pourabbas Polymer Eng. Department Sahand University of Technology Tabriz-Iran
Chiral liquid crystals-art and science Dr. M. Manickam School of Chemistry The University of Birmingham CHM3T1 Lecture-5.
Tine Porenta Mentor: prof. dr. Slobodan Žumer Januar 2010.
Lecture 16: Self Assembly of Amphiphiles. What did we cover in the last lecture? Aggregates will form when the free energy per molecule/particle inside.
Chromonic Liquid Crystals: A New Form of Soft Matter Peter J. Collings Department of Physics & Astronomy Swarthmore College Department of Physics, Williams.
DCMST May 23 rd, 2008 Liquid Crystals Gavin Lawes Wayne State University.
Liquid crystal Liquid crystals are substances that exhibit a phase of matter that has properties between those of a conventional liquid, and those of.
Temperature and Frequency Effects on the Dielectric Properties of the Nematic Liquid Crystal 8CB By Dr. Chandra Prayaga Ross Dickenson Josh Barbee.
Liquid Crystal Technology Overview ECE-E443 Kai Chung Wong.
CHAPTER 7: Dielectrics …
Intermolecular Forces. Intermolecular forces are weak, short-range attractive forces between atoms or molecules. Intermolecular forces ultimately derive.
Chapter 13 Set 2. Solute-Solvent Interaction Polar liquids tend to dissolve in polar solvents. Miscible liquids: mix in any proportions. Immiscible liquids:
Dielectric constants of Biological Materials. 1. Review 2. Dielectric Mixtures 3. Characteristics of Some Biological Materials 4. 1.
L IQUID C RYSTALS P AUL D UPIANO M ANDEEP S INGH.
The Science and Technology of Liquid Crystals Peter J. Collings Department of Physics & Astronomy Swarthmore College June 21, 2007 Return to "Recent Talks"
Lecture 3 The Debye theory. Gases and polar molecules in non-polar solvent. The reaction field of a non-polarizable point dipole The internal and the direction.
Review Design and Properties of Molecular Materials: Liquid Crystals
1 Example of PDLC architectural window. 2 Polymer Dispersed Liquid Crystal (PDLC)
Design and Properties of Molecular Materials: Liquid Crystals
Bronwyn Boos. C.6.1; describe the meaning of the term liquid crystals  Liquid crystals are fluids that have physical properties (electrical, optical.
Liquid Crystals.
Option C6- Liquid Crystals -Garrett Acker. C Describe the meaning of the term liquid crystals. Liquid crystals are fluids that have physical properties.
Chapter 2: Liquid Crystals States between crystalline and
Chapter 11 Liquids and Intermolecular Forces
Science Update Programme Liquid Crystals and Their Applications
Side Chain Liquid Crystalline Polymers Polymers with mesogens attached as side chains can exhibit liquid crystalline properties. The extent to which.
Refractive index dispersion and Drude model Optics, Eugene Hecht, Chpt. 3.
Intermolecular Forces Intermolecular forces are attractive forces between molecules. (Example: water molecule to water molecule) Intramolecular.
Liquid-Crystal Fabry-Perot filters
Liquid Crystals: Structure, Properties and Applications
Liquid Crystal Materials
1.1 The World of Liquid Crystal Department of Chemistry Yonsei University Moon-Gun Choi.
Chapter 11 Liquids and Intermolecular Forces
by Swetha L VV pura college, Bangalore
Two models for the description of light The corpuscular theory of light stating that light can be regarded as a stream of particles of discrete energy.
MICELLES Thermodynamically Stable Colloids (Chapter 4, pp in Shaw) In dilute solutions surfactants act as normal solutes. At well defined concentrations,
Ch 11 States of Matter and Intermolecular Forces.
Thermotropic LC’s – A Reminder. Lyotropic Liquid Crystals Molecules usually amphiphilic – hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts. How will these behave around.
C11 Liquid Crystals (HL) C11.1 Identify molecules that are likely to show liquid-crystal properties, and explain their liquid-crystal behavior on a molecular.
1 M.Sc. Project of Hanif Bayat Movahed The Phase Transitions of Semiflexible Hard Sphere Chain Liquids Supervisor: Prof. Don Sullivan.
Improving the Alignment and Application Properties of Liquid Crystals 改進軟物質 - 液晶材料 - 配向與應用性能 的新方法 Jung Y. Huang 黃中垚 Department of Photonics, Chiao Tung.
Molecular structure of calamitic LCs rigid ring systemsterminal groups bridging groups (+linking groups) terminal groups (+linking groups) phenyl biphenyl.
Intermolecular Forces and Liquids and Solids Chapter 11 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Grand Valley State University
Liquid Crystals: Introduction.
Engineering Chemistry Copyright  2011 Wiley India Pvt. Ltd. All rights reserved.
LIQUID CRYSTALS Introduction Introduction LC mesophases LCs in the bulk and in confined geometries optical properties of LCs fluctuations and light scattering.
Liquid crystals : The fourth state of matter Thierry Chuard, LLB, Universität Bern.
1 2.3 Lyotropic Main Chain Liquid Crystalline Polymers Formed by dissolution of amphiphilic polymer molecules in appropriate solvents. Factors affect the.
Cristiano De Michele Hierarchical propagation of chirality through reversible polymerization: the cholesteric phase of.
Electrostatic field in dielectric media When a material has no free charge carriers or very few charge carriers, it is known as dielectric. For example.
Liquid Crystals Thermotropic (temperature dependent)
Chapter 8 “Covalent Bonding” Part 3 Ball-and-stick model.
© 2009, Prentice-Hall, Inc. Chapter 11 Intermolecular Forces, Liquids, and Solids.
Liquid crystals : The fourth state of matter Thierry Chuard, Universität Bern.
Soft Condensed Matter Physics.
MVGR College of Engineering
Liquid Crystals: source of life and of technology
Polymer Liquid Crystals
Liquid Crystal Materials
Can Liquid Crystals / Polymers
Intermolecular Forces and
Paper introduction Yuna Kim
Large-screen Television Vision Technology
Introduction Although the LC mixtures composed of nematic or cholesteric liquid crystals (LCs) and azobenzene compounds have been comprehensively studied,
Presentation transcript:

Liquid Crystal Materials

Lyotropics Thermotropics amphiphilic molecules, polar and non-polar parts form liquid crystal phases over certain concentration ranges when mixed with a solvent molecules consisting of a rigid core and flexible tail(s) form liquid crystal phases over certain temperature ranges hydrophilic polar head hydrophobic non-polar tail flexible tail rigid core Broad Classification

The Lyotropic Phases micelle reverse micelle cross section

CN Chemist’s View Physicist’s Engineer’s View Shape Anisotropy Length > Width The molecule above (5CB) is ~2 nm × 0.5 nm The Thermotropic Liquid Crystal Molecule

Geometrical Structures of Mesogenic Molecules Low Molecular Weight High Molecular Weight (polymers) ( ) n n disk-like rod-like most practical applications

n Temperature Crystal Nematic LC Isotropic The Liquid Crystal Phase

The Nematic Director n n The local average axis of the long molecular axis director

n Temperature Smectic C Smectic A Nematic n z  n Other Liquid Crystal Phases

left-handed right-handed mirror images non-superimposable H-C-C-C-C-C C N H HHHH H HH H H H-C-C-C-C-C C N H H H CH 3 H H HH H H non-chiral chiral (RH) The methyl group on the 2nd carbon atom on the alkyl chain of the molecules extends out of the plane of the paper and the hydro- gen atom extends into the plane of the paper. Therefore the 2nd carbon can be thought of as a right or left handed coordinate system Chirality

CN pitch P CN Ordinary Nematic Chiral Nematic director n The Chiral Nematic

The Chiral Doped Nematic You can create a cholesteric material by doping a conventional nematic with a chiral dopant. For dilute solutions Chiral DopantHTP (  m) -1 S IS indicates left twist sense For a 10% doping of S-811

The Chiral Smectic C: Ferroelectrics   Eye- dipole moment  fin - chiral ferroelectric LC has a dipole moment perp- endicular to its long axis, and is chiral.

The Chiral Smectic: TGB Twisted Grain Boundary (TGB) A twisted grain boundary smectic A phase (frustrated) - TGBA*

O C R C O C R O O C O R O C O R O C O R O C O R Discotic Liquid Crystal example: R=OCOC 11 H 23

Columnar, columns of molecules in hexagonal lattice Nematic discotic phase n Discotics Liquid Crystals n

Polymer Liquid Crystals Combining the properties of liquid crystals and polymers Main Chain Side Chain mesogenic moieties are connected head-to-tail mesogenic moieties attached as side chains on the polymer backbone rigid semi-flexible

Polymer Liquid Crystals forming nematic liquid crystal phases n main-chain side-chain

O C-O-(CH 2 ) n -O R2R2 C-O O Example of Side-Chain Polymer LCs -(-CH 2 -C-) X - R1R1 Too slow for display applications (switching times ~ s Useful for other applications such as: Optical filters Optical memory Alignment layers for low molecular weight LCs Non-linear optic devices (optical computing)

 n The Order Parameter n no order perfect order perfect crystal isotropic fluid

Interactions between individual molecules are represented by a potential of average force From Statistical Mechanics (Self Consistency) Maier-Saupe Theory - Mean Field Approach { V : minimum} when phase is ordered (  - P 2 (cos  )) { V : V =0} when phase is disordered (  ) factor for intermolecular strength (  )  =(kT) -1  n  

Maier-Saupe Theory - Mean Field Approach Temperature Nematic Liquid Crystal Isotropic Fluid Order Parameter, S nn

Landau-de Gennes Theory a =   (T-T*),  , b, c, T*, L are phenomenological constants G is a surface interaction strength Order Parameter, S Temperature Good near NI transition surface Predicts order near surface

The Order Parameter: How does it affects display performance ? The order parameter, S, is proportional to a number of important parameters which dictate display performance. ParameterNomenclature  Elastic ConstantK ii S 2 Birefringence  n S Dielectric Anisotropy  S Magnetic Anisotropy  S Viscosity Anisotropy  S Example: Does the threshold switching voltage for a TN increase or decrease as the operating temperature increases. Scales as the square root of S therefore lowers with increasing temperature proportional to

Anisotropy: Dielectric Constant  Off-axis dipole moment, angle  with molecular axis N: number density h,f: reaction field, reaction cavity parameters S: order parameter  : anisotropy in polarizability  : molecular dipole moment k B : Boltzman constant T: Temperature For values of the angle  , the dipolar term is positive, and for values  , the dipolar term is negative, and may result in a materials with an overall - .

Anisotropy: Dielectric Constant E    E  positive negative all angles in the plane  to E are possible for the -  materials E

Anisotropy: Duel Frequency MLC-2048 (EM Industries), Duel Frequency Material Frequency (kHz) Dielectric Anisotropy (  ) low frequency,  >0 high frequency,  <0