Effect of surface treatment on molecular reorientation of polymer-stabilized liquid crystals doped with oligothiophene

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Abstract

Irradiation of dye-doped liquid crystals (LCs) with linearly polarized light leads to molecular reorientation, which manifests functional properties for various nonlinear optical (NLO) applications. Material designs with lower light intensity thresholds for molecular reorientation have been explored, and nematic LCs have been one of the most attractive choices because of the high NLO properties. Here we present a different approach to reduce light intensity for reorientation by modifying a substrate surface that controls initial molecular orientation in polymer-stabilized nematic LCs doped with oligothiophene. The surface of the glass substrate was treated with various concentrations of a silane coupler. Water contact angle measurement and analysis of samples using polarized optical microscopy revealed that surface anchoring in the initial state decreased as the silane coupler concentration decreased. The threshold intensity was successfully reduced by 30% simply by optimizing the silane coupler concentration. This finding clearly indicates that weak surface anchoring is key to the reduction of light intensity for molecular reorientation.

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Usui, K., Katayama, E., Wang, J., Hisano, K., Akamatsu, N., & Shishido, A. (2017). Effect of surface treatment on molecular reorientation of polymer-stabilized liquid crystals doped with oligothiophene. Polymer Journal, 49(1), 209–214. https://doi.org/10.1038/pj.2016.102

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