Confinement-Induced Fabrication of Liquid Crystalline Polymeric Fibers

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Abstract

In aqueous media, liquid crystalline droplets typically form spherical shapes in order to minimize surface energy. Recently, non-spherical geometry has been reported using molecular self-assembly of surfactant-stabilized liquid crystalline oligomers, resulting in branched and randomly oriented filamentous networks. In this study, we report a polymerization of liquid crystalline polymeric fibers within a micro-mold. When liquid crystal oligomers are polymerized in freely suspended aqueous media, curvilinear and randomly networked filaments are obtained. When reactive liquid crystalline monomers are oligomerized in a micro-channel, however, highly aligned linear fibers are polymerized. Within a top-down microfabricated mold, a bottom-up molecular assembly was successfully achieved in a controlled manner by micro-confinement, suggesting a unique opportunity for the programming architecture of materials via a hybrid approach.

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Kim, J. G., Lee, J. G., & Wie, J. J. (2022). Confinement-Induced Fabrication of Liquid Crystalline Polymeric Fibers. Molecules, 27(17). https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules27175639

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