Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Liquid crystals scattering

Schaetzing R and Ulster J D 1979 Light scattering studies of liquid crystals Advances in Liquid Crystais vol4 (London Academic)... [Pg.2568]

Gleeson H F 1998 Brillouin scattering from liquid crystals Handbook of Liquid Crystais Voi 1. [Pg.2568]

Hamley I W, Garnett S, Luckhurst G R, Roskilly S J, Pedersen J S, Richardson R M and Seddon J M 1996 Orientational ordering in the nematic phase of a thermotropic liquid crystal A small angle neutron scattering study J. Chem. Phys. 104 10 046-54... [Pg.2568]

Liquid crystal polymers are also used in electrooptic displays. Side-chain polymers are quite suitable for this purpose, but usually involve much larger elastic and viscous constants, which slow the response of the device (33). The chiral smectic C phase is perhaps best suited for a polymer field effect device. The abiHty to attach dichroic or fluorescent dyes as a proportion of the side groups opens the door to appHcations not easily achieved with low molecular weight Hquid crystals. Polymers with smectic phases have also been used to create laser writable devices (30). The laser can address areas a few micrometers wide, changing a clear state to a strong scattering state or vice versa. Future uses of Hquid crystal polymers may include data storage devices. Polymers with nonlinear optical properties may also become important for device appHcations. [Pg.202]

Liquid crystalline solutions as such have not yet found any commercial uses, but highly orientated liquid crystal polymer films are used to store information. The liquid crystal melt is held between two conductive glass plates and the side chains are oriented by an electric field to produce a transparent film. The electric field is turned off and the information inscribed on to the film using a laser. The laser has the effect of heating selected areas of the film above the nematic-isotropic transition temperature. These areas thus become isotropic and scatter light when the film is viewed. Such images remain stable below the glass transition temperature of the polymer. [Pg.158]

Thermotropic cholesterics have several practical applications, some of which are very widespread. Most of the liquid crystal displays produced use either the twisted nematic (see Figure 7.3) or the supertwisted nematic electrooptical effects.6 The liquid crystal materials used in these cells contain a chiral component (effectively a cholesteric phase) which determines the twisting direction. Cholesteric LCs can also be used for storage displays utilizing the dynamic scattering mode.7 Short-pitch cholesterics with temperature-dependent selective reflection in the visible region show different colors at different temperatures and are used for popular digital thermometers.8... [Pg.428]

Brillouin scattering and its temperature dependence in a liquid crystal was reported by Nordland 238),... [Pg.49]

State of a liquid crystal that shows a strong scattering of light due to a turbulent flow resulting from an applied voltage greater than a particular critical value. [Pg.132]

It has recently been shown that organic photoconductor-liquid crystal sandwich cells can in theory act as dynamic scattering devices 164> and the technical possibilities ought to be tested. In this context, it should be noted that dyes can be used in two-layer photocondensers (consisting e.g. of phthalocyanine and a ferroelectric ceramic), which are very sensitive to light and have a response time of lO-4 to 10-3 Sec 165). [Pg.126]

Sensitized for blue-green or red light, photoconductive polyimides and liquid crystal mixtures of cyanobiphenyls and azoxybenzene have been used in spatial light modulators [255-261]. Modulation procedure was achieved by means of the electrically controlled birefringence, optical activity, cholesteric-nematic phase transition, dynamic scattering and light scattering in polymer-dispersed liquid crystals. [Pg.49]


See other pages where Liquid crystals scattering is mentioned: [Pg.2353]    [Pg.2353]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.2353]    [Pg.2353]    [Pg.314]    [Pg.349]    [Pg.241]    [Pg.682]    [Pg.2553]    [Pg.2564]    [Pg.2565]    [Pg.2565]    [Pg.191]    [Pg.299]    [Pg.267]    [Pg.436]    [Pg.668]    [Pg.534]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.110]    [Pg.112]    [Pg.331]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.669]    [Pg.211]    [Pg.394]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.450]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.97]    [Pg.1159]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.464 ]




SEARCH



Liquid scattering

© 2024 chempedia.info