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1.
Luminescence ; 38(7): 811-833, 2023 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35347826

ABSTRACT

The application of liquid crystal (LC) materials has undergone a modern-day renaissance from its classical use in electronics industry as display devices to new-fangled techniques for optically detecting biological and chemical analytes. This review article deals with the emergence of LC materials as invaluable material for their use as label-free sensing elements in the development of optical, electro-optical and electrochemical biosensors. The property of LC molecules to change their orientation on perturbation by any external stimuli or on interaction with bioanalytes or chemical species has been utilized by many researches for the fabrication of high sensitive LC-biosensors. In this review article we categorized LC-biosensor based on biomolecular reaction mechanism viz. enzymatic, nucleotides and immunoreaction in conjunction with operating principle at different LC interface namely LC-solid, LC-aqueous and LC-droplets. Based on bimolecular reaction mechanism, the application of LC has been delineated with recent progress made in designing of LC-interface for the detection of bio and chemical analytes of proteins, virus, bacteria, clinically relevant compounds, heavy metal ions and environmental pollutants. The review briefly describes the experimental set-ups, sensitivity, specificity, limit of detection and linear range of various viable and conspicuous LC-based biosensor platforms with associated advantages and disadvantages therein.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , Liquid Crystals , Metals, Heavy , Liquid Crystals/chemistry , Ions
2.
Phys Rev E ; 102(3-1): 032703, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33075967

ABSTRACT

Memory effect in weakly aligned surface stabilized ferroelectric liquid crystal (SSFLC) material has been investigated by electro-optical and dielectric spectroscopy in three configurations of alignment: antiparallel, 90^{∘} twisted, and unaligned planar samples. It has been observed that two types of molecular dynamics exist in antiparallel rubbed cell in which memory effect is observed for longer duration than in other samples. One dielectric relaxation process is near the surface of the electrode and a second is in the bulk of the SSFLC. Both the molecular dynamics contribute in the switching process and affect the memory phenomenon in surface stabilized geometries. However, a single dielectric process is observed in twisted geometry in which the sample is showing shorter memory effect than in antiparallel and this is compared with unaligned samples also having cell thickness less than the pitch value of FLC. In an unaligned sample, a single dielectric process is observed and the smaple does not show memory effect at all. The investigation is significant to understand the anomalies occurring in memory observations in various geometries.

3.
Phys Rev E ; 97(6-1): 062707, 2018 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30011562

ABSTRACT

An anomalous dielectric relaxation process, called the partially unwound helical mode (p-UHM), is a collective dielectric process apart from the well known Goldstone and soft mode process; it is studied in the smectic C^{*} (Sm-C^{*}) phase and at the transition temperature of the Sm-C^{*}-Sm-A^{*} phase in the ferroelectric liquid crystal (FLC) material. To avoid the surface effect, a thick cell of 40 µm thickness was prepared with highly rubbed surfaces of the ITO substrates. It has been observed that the dielectric properties in Sm-C^{*} and at the T_{c} temperature are dominated by the p-UHM process which is dependent on an applied oscillating field in the Sm-C^{*} phase. The probing ac and dc bias field dependences of all these collective dielectric processes have been reported in the Sm-C^{*} and Sm-A^{*} phases of FLC materials.

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