3 research outputs found
Gaining Control through Frustration: Two-Fold Approach for Liquid Crystal Three-Dimensional Command Layers
The alignment of Liquid Crystal (LC) molecules, essential
for their
applications in optical devices such as displays, is usually controlled
by functionalizing their confining surfaces by either patterning or
by specific surfactants that induce either parallel or perpendicular
molecular arrangement. Inducing a bistable alignment, such as in the
new zenithal bistable displays, offers new opportunities in terms
of new functionalities and lower energy consumption but a full understanding
of such bistable alignment appears still complicated. Here we present
a simple phenomenological model that includes surface topography and
chemistry. The predicted orientational transitions and bistable states
are in excellent agreement with experiments, thus making this a proper
tool to design multistable 3D command layers