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Introduction to Liquid Crystals

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Title: Introduction to Liquid Crystals


1
Introduction to Liquid Crystals
  • Chang-Kui Duan

2
Contents
  • 0. History of LC and LCD
  • Fundamentals
  • Molecular structure and Chemical Composition
  • Electronic Properties
  • Lyotropic, Polymeric, and Thermotropic Liquid
    Crystals
  • Mixtures and Composites
  • Liquid Crystal Cells and Sample Preparation

3
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation
Timeline
  • 1888-1899
  • 1888, Austrian Botanist Freidrich Reinitzer
    discovers liquid crystals
  • 1897,German scientist Karl Braun invents the
    cathode ray tube (CRT)

4
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation Timeline
  • 1900-1970
  • 1958, The first paper research about LCD in the
    U.S. wrote by Dr. Glenn Brown
  • 1963, Richard Williams and George Heilmeier
    suggested using liquid crystal materials for
    display

5
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation Timeline
  • 1900-1970
  • 1967, James Fergason discovered the "twisted
    nematic" LCD. He produced the first practical
    displays
  • 1968, RCA group had a display based on the
    dynamic scattering mode (DSM) of liquid crystals

6
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation Timeline
  • 1970-1980
  • 1972,International Liquid Crystal Company
    (ILIXCO) produced the first modern LCD watch
    using Fergason Ideal
  • 1973, ,Sharp produced the first portable
    calculator, using a DSM LCD screen
  • 1979, Walter Spear and Peter LeComber made the
    first color display using lightweight thin film
    transfer (TFT) LCD

7
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation Timeline
  • 1980- 2000
  • 1985, Seiko-Epson unveiled the first commercial
    LCD color TV set, which had a 2 inch view
  • 1992, Sharp developed a multimedia-compatible
    16.5 inch color TFT LCD, that was the world's
    first LCD ViewCam

8
Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs) Innovation Timeline
  • 2000- Present
  • 2004, Philips demonstrated a 20? 3-D LCD at CeBIT
    in Hannover
  • 2005, Samsung Developed World's Largest (82")
    Full HDTV TFT-LCD

9
Other LCD application LCD Projector
10
Digital Light Processing (DLP) Projector
11
Fundamentals
  • States of Matter
  • What is Liquid Crystal?
  • Classification

12
States of Matter
Solid Liquid crystal fourth state of
matter Liquid Gas
Images MacDonald, R. Liquid Crystals -
Fascinating State of Matter or "Soft is
beautiful". Accessed 7-2006
13
What is a Liquid Crystal?
Liquid Crystal a stable phase of matter
characterized by anisotropic properties without
the existence of a 3-dimensional crystal lattice
generally lying between the solid and isotropic
(liquid) phase.
14
Isotropic
Liquids and gases (uniform properties in all
directions).
vs.Anisotropic
Liquid Crystals have orientational order
15
Liquid Crystal Model
16
Classifications
  • Lyotropic, Polymeric, and Thermotropic Liquid
    Crystals
  • Nematic, cholesteric, smectic, and ferroelectric.
  • Small molecular, polymer

17
2. Molecular structure and Chemical Composition
  • A side chain R, two or more aromatic rings A and
    A, connected by linkage groups X and Y, and at
    the other end connected to a terminal group R.

18
Examples
N-(4- Methoxybenzylidene)-4-butylaniline (MBBA)
molecule
19
(No Transcript)
20
Consequence
  • All the physical and optical properties of liquid
    crystals are governed by the properties of these
    constituent groups and how they are chemically
    synthesized together Dielectric constants,
    elastic constants, viscosities, absorption
    spectra, transition temperatures, existence of
    mesophases, anisotropies, and optical
    nonlinearities
  • Molecules are quite large and anisotropic,
    practically impossible to treat all the possible
    variations in the molecular architecture and the
    resulting changes in the physical properties.
  • Some generally applicable observations on the
    dependence of the physical properties on the
    molecular constituents.

21
Chemical stability
  • Depends on the central linkage group
  • Schiff-base unstable
  • Ester, azo, and azoxy stable, but are also quite
    susceptible to moisture, temperature change, and
    ultraviolet (UV) radiation.
  • Compounds without a central linkage group are
    among the most stable liquid crystals ever
    synthesized.
  • Other compounds such as pyrimide and
    phenylcyclohexane are also quite stable.

22
3. Electronic Properties
  • Decided by they constituent molecules
  • Energy level structures rather complex
  • Theories are still not sufficiently precise in
    relating the molecular structures and the liquid
    crystal responses.
  • Limit here to stating some of the
    well-established results, mainly from molecular
    theory and experimental observations.

23
energy levels or orbitals of aromatic rings
24
Characteristic
  • Very Absorptive in UV ( lt 200 nm)
  • Quite transparent in Vis and IR (0.4-5 ?m)
  • Far IR (gt9 ?m), very absorptive due to
    rovibrational transitions

25
4. Lyotropic, Polymeric, and Thermotropic Liquid
Crystals
  • Lyotropic Liquid Crystals are obtained when an
    appropriate concentration of a material is
    dissolved in some solvent Ex Soap Are of
    interest in biological studies.
  • Polymeric Liquid Crystals are basically the
    polymer versions of the monomers
  • Refer to the 1.3.1 and 1.3.2

26
Thermotropic Liquid Crystals
  • Most widely used and extensively studied Liquid
    Crystals
  • There are 3 basic phases Nematics,
    Cholesterics, and Smectics

27
Liquid Crystal Phases
Nematic, Smectic Cholesteric Anisotrpic
substances may go through one or several Liquid
Crystal Phases
28
Nematic and Cholesteric
Namatic Cholesteric
29
Smectic-A and Smectic-C
30
Smectic C (ferroelectric) and unwounded Smectic
C
31
4. Mixtures and Composites
  • temperature ranges for pure liquid crystals are
    quite limited.
  • Industrial applications employ mostly mixtures,
    composites, or doped liquid crystals with
    tailor-made physical and optical properties.
  • The optical properties, dielectric anisotropies,
    and viscosities are very different from those of
    the individual mixture constituents.
  • Creating mixtures is an art, guided of course by
    some scientific principles.

32
Mixtures
33
Dye-Doped Liquid Crystals
  • Modification of their well-known linear, and more
    recently observed nonlinear, optical properties

34
Polymer-Dispersed Liquid Crystals
  • See textbook 1.4.3

35
5. Liquid Crystal Cells and Sample Preparation
  • The alignment of the liquid crystal axis in cells
    is essentially controlled by the cell walls,
    whose surfaces are treated in a variety of ways
    to achieve various director axis alignments.
  • Bulk Thin Film
  • Liquid Crystal Optical Slab Waveguide, Fiber, and
    Nanostructured Photonic Crystals

36
Bulk Thin Film
For procedure to prepare, see 1.5.1
37
  • Liquid Crystal Optical Slab Waveguide, Fiber, and
    Nanostructured Photonic Crystals
  • 1.5.2 for details

38
Order Parameter, Phase Transition,and Free
Energies
  • The contents of next chapter!
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