5 research outputs found
Anchoring strength measurements of a lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal on rubbed polyimide surfaces
Directing Soft Matter in Water Using Electric Fields
Directing
the spatial organization of functional supramolecular
and polymeric materials at larger length scales is essential for many
biological and molecular optoelectronic applications. Although the
application of electrical fields is one of the most powerful approaches
to induce spatial control, it is rarely applied experimentally in
aqueous solutions, since the low susceptibility of soft and biological
materials requires the use of high fields, which leads to parasitic
heating and electrochemical degradation. In this work, we demonstrate
that we can apply electric fields when we use a mineral liquid crystal
as a responsive template. Besides aligning and positioning functional
soft matter, we show that the concentration of the liquid crystal
template controls the morphology of the assembly. As our setup is
very easy to operate and our approach lacks specific molecular interactions,
we believe it will be applicable for a wide range of (aqueous) materials
Directing Soft Matter in Water Using Electric Fields
Directing
the spatial organization of functional supramolecular
and polymeric materials at larger length scales is essential for many
biological and molecular optoelectronic applications. Although the
application of electrical fields is one of the most powerful approaches
to induce spatial control, it is rarely applied experimentally in
aqueous solutions, since the low susceptibility of soft and biological
materials requires the use of high fields, which leads to parasitic
heating and electrochemical degradation. In this work, we demonstrate
that we can apply electric fields when we use a mineral liquid crystal
as a responsive template. Besides aligning and positioning functional
soft matter, we show that the concentration of the liquid crystal
template controls the morphology of the assembly. As our setup is
very easy to operate and our approach lacks specific molecular interactions,
we believe it will be applicable for a wide range of (aqueous) materials
Solid–Liquid Interface Structure of Muscovite Mica in CsCl and RbBr Solutions
The solid−liquid interface formed by single terminated muscovite mica in contact with two different ionic solutions is analyzed using surface X-ray diffraction. Specular and nonspecular crystal truncation rods of freshly cleaved mica immersed in CsCl or RbBr aqueous solution were measured. The half monolayer of the surface potassium ions present after the cleavage is completely replaced by the positive ions (Cs or Rb) from the solution. These ions are located in the ditrigonal surface cavities with small outward relaxations with respect to the bulk potassium position. Wefind evidence for the presence of a partly ordered hydration shell around the surface Cs or Rbs ions and partly ordered negative ions in the solution. The lateral liquidordering induced by the crystalline surface vanishes at distances larger than 5 Å from the surface