1 research outputs found
Evidence of Cybotactic Order in the Nematic Phase of a Main-Chain Liquid Crystal Polymer with Bent-Core Repeat Unit
We report the synthesis and structural
characterization of a main-chain
liquid crystal polymer constituted by a 1,2,4-oxadiazole-based bent-core
repeat unit. For the first time, a liquid crystal polymer made of
bent mesogenic units is demonstrated to exhibit cybotactic order in
the nematic phase. Coupled with the chain-bond constraints, cybotaxis
results in maximized molecular correlations that make this material
of great potential in the search for the elusive biaxial and ferroelectric
nematic phases. Indeed, repolarization current measurements in the
nematic phase hint at a ferroelectric-like switching response (upon
application of an electric field of only 1.0 V μm<sup>–1</sup>) that, albeit to be definitely confirmed by complementary techniques,
is strongly supported by the comparative repolarization current measurements
in the nematic and isotropic phases. Finally, the weak tendency of
this polymer to crystallize makes it possible to supercool the cybotactic
nematic phase down to room temperature, thus, paving the way for a
glassy phase in which the biaxial (and possibly polar) order is frozen
at room temperature