Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 10 de 10
Filter
Add more filters










Publication year range
1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 120(46): e2311957120, 2023 Nov 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37931109

ABSTRACT

Focal conic domains are defects characteristic of layered liquid crystal phases. Their association can build flowers where petals are the ellipses of the Dupin cyclides involved in these defects. We report here the observation of focal conic flowers in cholesteric droplets sessile on a glass surface and surrounded by glycerol. The observation of the droplets in different directions helps to solve the three dimensional architecture of the flower. The effects of the droplet size and of the pitch value are also reported.

2.
Polymers (Basel) ; 14(19)2022 Oct 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36236192

ABSTRACT

Modern biomedical technologies predict the application of materials and devices that not only can comply effectively with specific requirements, but also enable remote control of their functions. One of the most prospective materials for these advanced biomedical applications are materials based on temperature-responsive polymer brush coatings (TRPBCs). In this review, methods for the fabrication and characterization of TRPBCs are summarized, and possibilities for their application, as well as the advantages and disadvantages of the TRPBCs, are presented in detail. Special attention is paid to the mechanisms of thermo-responsibility of the TRPBCs. Applications of TRPBCs for temperature-switchable bacteria killing, temperature-controlled protein adsorption, cell culture, and temperature-controlled adhesion/detachment of cells and tissues are considered. The specific criteria required for the desired biomedical applications of TRPBCs are presented and discussed.

3.
Soft Matter ; 18(38): 7258-7268, 2022 Oct 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35975722

ABSTRACT

Nuclei of ordered materials emerging from the isotropic state usually show a shape topologically equivalent to a sphere; the well-known examples are crystals and nematic liquid crystal droplets. In this work, we explore experimentally and theoretically the toroidal in shape nuclei of columnar lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals coexisting with the isotropic phase. The geometry of these toroids depends strongly on concentrations of the disodium cromoglycate (DSCG) and the crowding agent, polyethylene glycol (PEG). High concentrations of DSCG and PEG result in thick toroids with small central holes, while low concentrations yield thin toroids with wide holes. The multitude of the observed shapes is explained by the balance of bending elasticity and anisotropic interfacial tension.

4.
Soft Matter ; 14(6): 1016-1025, 2018 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29327760

ABSTRACT

The composition, thickness and properties of poly(4-vinylpyridine-co-oligo(ethylene glycol)ethyl ether methacrylate246) [P(4VP-co-OEGMA246)] copolymer grafted brush coatings attached to glass were studied in the dry and swollen states using ellipsometry. These measured data are in good agreement with predicted (estimated) changes in the amount of water, refractive index and thickness of the grafted copolymer brush coatings on swelling. For POEGMA brushes the thickness of the coatings on swelling at 20 °C can be more than double, in contrast to P4VP where those changes are insignificant. The presence of 4VP units in the structure of the P(4VP-co-OEGMA246) copolymer grafted brushes significantly decreases the hydration degree even for coatings with very low concentrations of 4VP units.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 9(5): 4750-4757, 2017 Feb 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28078885

ABSTRACT

A new interface engineering method is demonstrated for the preparation of an efficient white organic light-emitting diode (WOLED) by embedding an ultrathin layer of the novel ambipolar red emissive compound 4,4-difluoro-2,6-di(4-hexylthiopen-2-yl)-1,3,5,7,8-pentamethyl-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (bThBODIPY) in the exciplex formation region. The compound shows a hole and electron mobility of 3.3 × 10-4 and 2 × 10-4 cm2 V-1 s-1, respectively, at electric fields higher than 5.3 × 105 V cm-1. The resulting WOLED exhibited a maximum luminance of 6579 cd m-2 with CIE 1931 color coordinates (0.39; 0.35). The bThBODIPY dye is also demonstrated to be an effective laser dye for a cholesteric liquid crystal (ChLC) laser. New construction of the ChLC laser, by which a flat capillary with an optically isotropic dye solution is sandwiched between two dye-free ChLC cells, provides photonic lasing at a wavelength well matched with that of a dye-doped planar ChLC cell.

6.
Langmuir ; 32(42): 11029-11038, 2016 Oct 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27689751

ABSTRACT

Novel alignment coating with temperature-tuned anchoring for nematic liquid crystals (NLCs) was successfully fabricated in three step process, involving polymerization of poly(cholesteryl methacrylate) (PChMa) from oligoproxide grafted to the glass surface premodified with 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane. Molecular composition, thickness, wettability of the PChMa coating and its alignment action for a NLC were examined with time of flight-secondary ion mass spectrometry, ellipsometry, contact angle measurements, polarization optical microscopy and commercially produced PolScope technique allowing for mapping of the optic axis and optical retardance within the microscope field view. We find that the PChMa coating provides a specific monotonous increase (decrease) in the tilt angle of the NLC director with respect to the substrates normal upon heating (cooling) referred to as anchoring tuning.

7.
Soft Matter ; 10(34): 6571-81, 2014 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25043812

ABSTRACT

Using dynamic light scattering, we study orientational fluctuation modes in the nematic phase of a self-assembled lyotropic chromonic liquid crystal (LCLC) disodium cromoglycate and measure the Frank elastic moduli and viscosity coefficients. The elastic moduli of splay (K1) and bend (K3) are in the order of 10 pN while the twist modulus (K2) is an order of magnitude smaller. The splay constant K1 and the ratio K1/K3 both increase substantially as the temperature T decreases, which we attribute to the elongation of the chromonic aggregates at lower temperatures. The bend viscosity is comparable to that of thermotropic liquid crystals, while the splay and twist viscosities are several orders of magnitude larger. The temperature dependence of bend viscosity is weak. The splay and twist viscosities change exponentially with the temperature. In addition to the director modes, the fluctuation spectrum reveals an additional mode that is attributed to diffusion of structural defects in the column-like aggregates.

8.
Materials (Basel) ; 4(2): 390-416, 2011 Feb 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28879997

ABSTRACT

In modern transformation optics, one explores metamaterials with properties that vary from point to point in space and time, suitable for application in devices such as an "optical invisibility cloak" and an "optical black hole". We propose an approach to construct spatially varying and switchable metamaterials that are based on colloidal dispersions of metal nano-rods (NRs) in dielectric fluids, in which dielectrophoretic forces, originating in the electric field gradients, create spatially varying configurations of aligned NRs. The electric field controls orientation and concentration of NRs and thus modulates the optical properties of the medium. Using gold (Au) NRs dispersed in toluene, we demonstrate electrically induced change in refractive index on the order of 0.1.

9.
Phys Rev E Stat Nonlin Soft Matter Phys ; 82(3 Pt 1): 031704, 2010 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21230088

ABSTRACT

There are two categories of helical line defects in Sm-A phases: screw dislocations of small Burgers vectors and double helices (DHs), whose macroscopic configuration constitutes a mode of splitting of screw dislocations of giant Burgers vectors. Their counterparts in Sm-A∗'s (Sm-A's with chiral molecules) show a number of differences with the former and are investigated theoretically on the basis of recent observations [C. Meyer, Liq. Cryst. 37, 1047 (2010)]. The first part of the paper is a short review of the main features of helical defects in Sm-A's proper. In Sm-A∗'s, small Burgers vector screw dislocations with the same chirality as the high-temperature N∗ phase are favored over the opposite ones, a result that is related to the defect core singularity. This is also true for the macroscopic DH∗ s for a more subtle reason; we advance that the DH∗ nucleation at the N∗→Sm-A∗ transition stems from a peculiar texture of the cybotactic groups, akin in the ideal case to a set of two twisted χ disclinations in the N∗ phase, linked by a stacking fault of continuous disclinations. This stacking fault vanishes in the Sm-A∗ phase, and one recovers a DH∗ much similar to a DH but with the appropriate chirality. Cases that differ from ideality are described: they involve small Burgers vector screw dislocations and can be evoked to explain the numerous observed distorted double helices (the Darboux condition is not obeyed) and twisted ribbons. The case when the N∗→Sm-A∗ transition is type II (presence of a twist grain boundary phase in between) is briefly discussed.

10.
J Phys Chem B ; 112(51): 16307-19, 2008 Dec 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19368025

ABSTRACT

Lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs) are formed by molecules with ionic groups at the periphery that associate into stacks through noncovalent self-assembly while in water. The very existence of the nematic (N) phase in the typical LCLC, the dye Sunset Yellow (SSY) is a puzzle, as the correlation length associated with the stacking, as measured in the X-ray experiments, is too short to explain the orientational order by the Onsager model. We propose that the aggregates can be more complex than simple rods and contain "stacking faults" such as junctions with a shift of neighboring molecules, 3-fold junctions, etc. We study how ionic additives, such as salts of different valency and pH-altering agents, alter the N phase of SSY purified by recrystallization. The additives induce two general trends: (a) stabilization of the N phase, caused by the mono and divalent salts (such as NaCl), and evidenced by the increase of the N-to-I transition temperature and the correlation length; (b) suppression of the N phase manifested in the decrease of the N-to-I transition temperature and in separation of the N phase into a more densely packed N phase or the columnar (C) phase, coexisting with a less condensed I phase. The scenario (b) can be triggered by simply increasing pH (adding NaOH). The effects produced by tetravalent spermine fall mostly into the category (b), but the detail depends on whether this additive is in its salt form or a free base form. The base form causes changes through changes in pH and possible excluded volume effects whereas the salt form might disrupt the structure of SSY aggregates.

SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...