3 research outputs found

    Photo-Reversible Liquid Crystal Alignment using Azobenzene-Based Self-Assembled Monolayers: Comparison of the Bare Monolayer and Liquid Crystal Reorientation Dynamics

    No full text
    Photosensitive surfaces treated to have in-plane structural anisotropy by illumination with polarized light can be used to orient liquid crystals (LCs). Here we report a detailed study of the dynamic behavior of this process at both short and long times, comparing the ordering induced in the bare active surface with that of the LC in contact with the surface using a high-sensitivity polarimeter that enables detailed characterization of the anisotropy of the active surface. The experiments were carried out using self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) made from dimethylaminoazobenzene covalently bonded to a glass surface through a triethoxysilane terminus. This surface gives planar alignment of the liquid crystal director with an azimuthal orientation that can be controlled by the polarization of actinic light. We find a remarkable long-term collective interaction between the orientationally ordered SAM and the director field of the LC: while an azobenzene based SAM in contact with an isotropic gas or liquid relaxes to an azimuthally isotropic state in the absence of light due to thermal fluctuations, an orientationally written SAM in contact with LC in the absence of light can maintain the LC director twist permanently, that is, the SAM is capable of providing azimuthal anchoring to the LC even in the presence of a torque about the surface normal. We find that the short-time, transient LC reorientation is limited by the weak azimuthal anchoring strength of the SAM and by the LC viscosity

    Photo-Reversible Liquid Crystal Alignment using Azobenzene-Based Self-Assembled Monolayers: Comparison of the Bare Monolayer and Liquid Crystal Reorientation Dynamics

    No full text
    Photosensitive surfaces treated to have in-plane structural anisotropy by illumination with polarized light can be used to orient liquid crystals (LCs). Here we report a detailed study of the dynamic behavior of this process at both short and long times, comparing the ordering induced in the bare active surface with that of the LC in contact with the surface using a high-sensitivity polarimeter that enables detailed characterization of the anisotropy of the active surface. The experiments were carried out using self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) made from dimethylaminoazobenzene covalently bonded to a glass surface through a triethoxysilane terminus. This surface gives planar alignment of the liquid crystal director with an azimuthal orientation that can be controlled by the polarization of actinic light. We find a remarkable long-term collective interaction between the orientationally ordered SAM and the director field of the LC: while an azobenzene based SAM in contact with an isotropic gas or liquid relaxes to an azimuthally isotropic state in the absence of light due to thermal fluctuations, an orientationally written SAM in contact with LC in the absence of light can maintain the LC director twist permanently, that is, the SAM is capable of providing azimuthal anchoring to the LC even in the presence of a torque about the surface normal. We find that the short-time, transient LC reorientation is limited by the weak azimuthal anchoring strength of the SAM and by the LC viscosity

    Effect of Concentration on the Photo-Orientation and Relaxation Dynamics of Self-Assembled Monolayers of Mixtures of an Azobenzene-Based Triethoxysilane with Octyltriethoxysilane

    No full text
    Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) were prepared from solutions with different proportions of a photoactive, azobenzene-based, silanized derivative of disperse red one (dDR1), and octyltriethoxysilane (OTE), a shorter, nonphotoactive molecule. The in-plane photoinduced orientational ordering of the resulting two component monolayers was monitored via precision measurement of in-plane birefringence using a dedicated high-extinction polarimeter. Measurements of contact angle, absorption, and birefringence show that introduction of OTE into the dDR1 deposition solution produces a continuous reduction of the surface density of dDR1 in the SAM, enabling the study of photowriting and relaxation dynamics in monolayers ranging from 100% dDR1 to samples where the dDR1 coverage is about 35%. The orientational dynamics depend strongly on the areal density of dDR1. As the fractional area of dDR1 is reduced, the rates of photowriting, photoerasing, and thermal relaxation increase, and the local orientational confinement of the molecules becomes more heterogeneous
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