248 research outputs found

    Optical transmission in triple-film hetero-opals

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    Angle-resolved transmission of s-polarized light in triple-film hetero-opals has been investigated in the spectral range including high-order photonic band gaps, and compared to the transmission of its constituent single-film opals. The interfaces do not destroy the predominantly ballistic light propagation over the studied frequency and angular ranges, but heterostructuring leads to a smoothed angular distribution of intensity of the transmitted light and to the reconstruction of the transmission minima dispersion. The interface transmission function has been extracted by comparing the transmission of the hetero-opal and its components in order to demonstrate the difference. This deviation from the superposition principle was provisionally assigned to light refraction and reflection at the photonic crystal interfaces and to the mismatch between mode group velocities in hetero-opal components

    Co-flow microfluidic synthesis of liquid crystalline actuating Janus particles

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    A microfluidic synthesis of stimuli-responsive actuating Janus particles composed of a liquid crystalline elastomer (LCE) and a polymeric hydrogel is reported. , In this article the microfluidic synthesis and characterization of micrometer sized actuating Janus particles containing a liquid crystalline elastomer (LCE) is presented. On one side these Janus particles consist of a hydrophobic liquid crystalline part, featuring strong shape changes during the thermotropic phase transition, whereas the other side contains a hydrophilic polyacrylamide network. The synthesis is based upon the dispersion of two immiscible monomer mixtures in a continuously flowing silicone oil, using two glass capillaries side by side to form Janus microdroplets of different morphologies. Furthermore, the systematic adjustment of the morphology of the Janus particles as well as the optimization of the actuation properties is conducted by precise control and variation of the microfluidic parameters. The actuation properties of the particles are studied by polarized optical microscopy (POM), in which relative length changes up to 52% are investigated for the elongation of LCEs during the phase transition in rod-like Janus particles. Further wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) measurements verify the mesogen's orientation in a bipolar director field, which corresponds to the observed geometry of the Janus particle's shape changes

    Untwisting of a cholesteric elastomer by a mechanical field

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    A mechanical strain field applied to a monodomain cholesteric elastomer will unwind the helical director distribution. There is an analogy with the classical problem of an electric field applied to a cholesteric liquid crystal, but with important differences. Frank elasticity is of minor importance unless the gel is very weak. The interplay is between director anchoring to the rubber elastic matrix and the external mechanical field. Stretching perpendicular to the helix axis induces the uniform unwound state via the elimination of sharp, pinned twist walls above a critical strain. Unwinding through conical director states occurs when the elastomer is stretched along the helical axis.Comment: 4 pages, RevTeX 3 style, 3 EPS figure

    Stereo-selective swelling of imprinted cholesteric networks

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    Molecular chirality, and the chiral symmetry breaking of resulting macroscopic phases, can be topologically imprinted and manipulated by crosslinking and swelling of polymer networks. We present a new experimental approach to stereo-specific separation of chiral isomers by using a cholesteric elastomer in which a helical director distribution has been topological imprinted by crosslinking. This makes the material unusual in that is has a strong phase chirality, but no molecular chirality at all; we study the nature and parameters controlling the twist-untwist transition. Adding a racemic mixture to the imprinted network results in selective swelling by only the component of ``correct'' handedness. We investigate the capacity of demixing in a racemic environment, which depends on network parameters and the underlying nematic order

    Определение эффективности нейтронного детектора из пластического сцинтиллятора o100?200 мм

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    Рассчитывается и экспериментально проверяется эффективность детектора. к нейтронам сверхвысоких (десятки и сотни МэВ) энергий

    Electro-Mechanical Fredericks Effects in Nematic Gels

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    The solid nematic equivalent of the Fredericks transition is found to depend on a critical field rather than a critical voltage as in the classical case. This arises because director anchoring is principally to the solid rubbery matrix of the nematic gel rather than to the sample surfaces. Moreover, above the threshold field, we find a competition between quartic (soft) and conventional harmonic elasticity which dictates the director response. By including a small degree of initial director misorientation, the calculated field variation of optical anisotropy agrees well with the conoscopy measurements of Chang et al (Phys.Rev.E56, 595, 1997) of the electro-optical response of nematic gels.Comment: Latex (revtex style), 5 EPS figures, submitted to PRE, corrections to discussion of fig.3, cosmetic change

    Soft elasticity in biaxial smectic and smectic-C elastomers

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    Ideal (monodomain) smectic-AA elastomers crosslinked in the smectic-AA phase are simply uniaxial rubbers, provided deformations are small. From these materials smectic-CC elastomers are produced by a cooling through the smectic-AA to smectic-CC phase transition. At least in principle, biaxial smectic elastomers could also be produced via cooling from the smectic-AA to a biaxial smectic phase. These phase transitions, respectively from DhD_{\infty h} to C2hC_{2h} and from DhD_{\infty h} to D2hD_{2h} symmetry, spontaneously break the rotational symmetry in the smectic planes. We study the above transitions and the elasticity of the smectic-CC and biaxial phases in three different but related models: Landau-like phenomenological models as functions of the Cauchy--Saint-Laurent strain tensor for both the biaxial and the smectic-CC phases and a detailed model, including contributions from the elastic network, smectic layer compression, and smectic-CC tilt for the smectic-CC phase as a function of both strain and the cc-director. We show that the emergent phases exhibit soft elasticity characterized by the vanishing of certain elastic moduli. We analyze in some detail the role of spontaneous symmetry breaking as the origin of soft elasticity and we discuss different manifestations of softness like the absence of restoring forces under certain shears and extensional strains.Comment: 26 pages, 6 figure

    Colloidal Nanoplatelet/Conducting Polymer Hybrids: Excitonic and Material Properties

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    Here we present the first account of conductive polymer/colloidal nanoplatelet hybrids. For this, we developed DEH-PPV-based polymers with two different anchor groups (sulfide and amine) acting as surfactants for CdSe nanoplatelets, which are atomically flat semiconductor nanocrystals. Hybridization of the polymers with the nanoplatelets in the solution phase was observed to cause strong photoluminescence quenching in both materials. Through steady-state photoluminescence and excitation spectrum measurements, photoluminescence quenching was shown to result from dominant exciton dissociation through charge transfer at the polymer/nanoplatelet interfaces that possess a staggered (i.e., type II) band alignment. Importantly, we found out that sulfide-based anchors enable a stronger emission quenching than amine-based ones, suggesting that the sulfide anchors exhibit more efficient binding to the nanoplatelet surfaces. Also, shorter surfactants were found to be more effective for exciton dissociation as compared to the longer ones. In addition, we show that nanoplatelets are homogeneously distributed in the hybrid films owing to the functional polymers. These nanocomposites can be used as building blocks for hybrid optoelectronic devices, such as solar cells. © 2016 American Chemical Society

    Extraordinary Performance of Carbon-Coated Anatase TiO2 as Sodium-Ion Anode

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    The synthesis of in situ polymer-functionalized anatase TiO2 particles using an anchoring block copolymer with hydroxamate as coordinating species is reported, which yields nanoparticles (≈11 nm) in multigram scale. Thermal annealing converts the polymer brushes into a uniform and homogeneous carbon coating as proven by high resolution transmission electron microscopy and Raman spectroscopy. The strong impact of particle size as well as carbon coating on the electrochemical performance of anatase TiO2 is demonstrated. Downsizing the particles leads to higher reversible uptake/release of sodium cations per formula unit TiO2 (e.g., 0.72 eq. Na+ (11 nm) vs only 0.56 eq. Na+ (40 nm)) while the carbon coating improves rate performance. The combination of small particle size and homogeneous carbon coating allows for the excellent electrochemical performance of anatase TiO2 at high (134 mAh g−1 at 10 C (3.35 A g−1)) and low (≈227 mAh g−1 at 0.1 C) current rates, high cycling stability (full capacity retention between 2nd and 300th cycle at 1 C) and improved coulombic efficiency (≈99.8%)

    Symmetries and Elasticity of Nematic Gels

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    A nematic liquid-crystal gel is a macroscopically homogeneous elastic medium with the rotational symmetry of a nematic liquid crystal. In this paper, we develop a general approach to the study of these gels that incorporates all underlying symmetries. After reviewing traditional elasticity and clarifying the role of broken rotational symmetries in both the reference space of points in the undistorted medium and the target space into which these points are mapped, we explore the unusual properties of nematic gels from a number of perspectives. We show how symmetries of nematic gels formed via spontaneous symmetry breaking from an isotropic gel enforce soft elastic response characterized by the vanishing of a shear modulus and the vanishing of stress up to a critical value of strain along certain directions. We also study the phase transition from isotropic to nematic gels. In addition to being fully consistent with approaches to nematic gels based on rubber elasticity, our description has the important advantages of being independent of a microscopic model, of emphasizing and clarifying the role of broken symmetries in determining elastic response, and of permitting easy incorporation of spatial variations, thermal fluctuations, and gel heterogeneity, thereby allowing a full statistical-mechanical treatment of these novel materials.Comment: 21 pages, 4 eps figure
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