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Discotic liquid crystals ferroelectricity

It was quickly recognized that chirality would play an important role in discotic liquid crystals, not only for the possibility of creating cholesteric and ferroelectric liquid crystals but also as a tool for studying the self-assembly of these molecules as a whole, both in solution and in the solid state. However, initial studies revealed that expression of chirality in discotic liquid crystals was not as straightforward as for liquid crystals derived from calamitic molecules. More recently, with the increase in interest in self-assembly and molecular recognition, considerably more attention has been directed to the study of chiral discotics and their assemblies in solution. The objective of this chapter is... [Pg.376]

To understand how chirality is expressed, it is important to first describe the different thermotropic mesophase assemblies which can be formed by chiral discotics. Even though expression of chirality has been observed in thermotropic mesophases, the chiral expression occurs in a rather uncontrolled manner, and systems which are suitable for applications, for example, easily switchable columns/ferroelectric discotic liquid crystals, consequently have not yet been developed. Hence, the assembly of discotics in solution has received considerable attention. Supramolecular assemblies of discotic molecules in solution are still in their infancy and have not yet found commercial application, but they are of fundamental importance since they allow a detailed and focused investigation of the specific interactions that are required to express chirality at higher levels of organization. As such, the fundamental knowledge acquired from supramolecular assemblies in solution might formulate the design criteria for thermotropic chiral discotic mesophases and provide the necessary tools for the creation of functional systems. [Pg.377]

In summary, the turnstile represents a new example of rotation in a molecular system. The fact that phenylacetylene macrocycles form discotic liquid crystals suggests the possibility that turnstiles might function as discotic ferroelectric liquid crystals [34]. A dipole appropriately incorporated on the spindle might allow for its own rotation to be controlled rapidly and reversibly by an external field. [Pg.27]

For example, a discotic ferroelectric liquid crystal was synthesized by introducing an asymmetric center in a discotic liquid crystal, which is a flat platelike molecule [34]. [Pg.247]

G. Ayton and G. N. Patey, Phys. Ref. Lett., 76, 239 (1996). Ferroelectric Order in Model Discotic Nematic Liquid Crystals. [Pg.289]

The subject of liquid crystals has now grown to become an exciting interdisciplinary field of research with important practical applications. This book presents a systematic and self-contained treatment of the physics of the different types of thermotropic liquid crystals - the three classical types, nematic, cholesteric and smectic, composed of rod-shaped molecules, and the newly discovered discotic type composed of disc-shaped molecules. The coverage includes a description of the structures of these four main types and their polymorphic modifications, their thermodynamical, optical and mechanical properties and their behaviour under external fields. The basic principles underlying the major applications of liquid crystals in display technology (for example, the twisted and supertwisted nematic devices, the surface stabilized ferroelectric device, etc.) and in thermography are also discussed. [Pg.461]

Perhaps one of the most important applications of chiral induction is in the area of liquid crystals. Upon addition of a wide range of appropriate chiral compounds, the achiral nematic, smectic C, and discotic phases are converted into the chiral cholesteric (or twisted nematic), the ferroelectric smectic C and the chiral discotic phases. As a first example, we take the induction of chirality in the columns of aromatic chromophores present in some liquid-crystalline polymers. " The polymers, achiral polyesters incorporating triphenylene moieties, display discotic mesophases, which upon doping with chiral electron acceptors based on tetranitro-9-fluorene, form chiral discotic phases in which the chirality is determined by the dopant. These conclusions were reached on the basis of CD spectra in which strong Cotton effects were observed. Interestingly, the chiral dopants were unable to dramatically influence the chiral winding of triphenylene polymers that already incorporated ste-reogenic centers. [Pg.247]

In conclusion, electric field effects in liquid crystals is a well-developed branch of condensed matter physics. The field behavior of nematic liquid crystals in the bulk is well understood. To a certain extent the same is true for the cholesteric mesophase, although the discovery of bistability phenomena and field effects in blue phases opened up new fundamental problems to be solved. Ferroelectric and antiferroelectric mesophases in chiral compounds are a subject of current study. The other ferroelectric substances, such as discotic and lyotropic chiral systems and some achiral (like polyphilic) meso-genes, should attract more attention in the near future. The same is true for a variety of polymer ferroelectric substances, including elastomers. [Pg.562]

Discotic and bowl-shaped molecules that form columnar phases, (a) Hexa-alkanoate [R=CH3-(CH2) -2C00-] of triphenylene (b) hexa-noyloxy-tribenzocyclononene, which forms a polar pyramidlc phase (c) l,2,5,6,8,9,12,13-octakis-((S)-2-heptyloxy) dlbenzo[e,l]pyrene, which has chiral therminal chains and forms tilted ferroelectric columnar liquid crystal. ... [Pg.13]


See other pages where Discotic liquid crystals ferroelectricity is mentioned: [Pg.446]    [Pg.667]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.62]    [Pg.886]    [Pg.487]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.700]    [Pg.390]    [Pg.11]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.392 , Pg.393 , Pg.394 , Pg.395 ]




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