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Tilt SmA device

The thermally excited cone motion, sometimes called the spin mode (this is very similar to the spin wave motion in ferromag-nets), or the Goldstone mode, is characteristic of the nonchiral SmC phase as well as the chiral SmC phase, but is of special interest in the latter because in the chiral case it couples to an external electric field and can therefore be excited in a controlled way. This Goldstone mode is of course the one that is used for the switching mechanism in surface-stabilized ferroelectric liquid crystal devices. The tilt mode, often, especially in the SmA phase, called the soft mode (although hard to excite in comparison with the cone mode, it may soften at a transition), is very different in character, and it is convenient to separate the two motions as essentially independent of each other. Again, this mode is present in the nonchiral SmA phase but cannot be detected there by dielectric methods, because a coupling to an electric field requires the phase to be chiral. In the SmA phase this mode appears as the electroclinic effect. [Pg.1589]


See other pages where Tilt SmA device is mentioned: [Pg.970]    [Pg.1462]    [Pg.1495]    [Pg.2038]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.970]    [Pg.1462]    [Pg.1495]    [Pg.2038]    [Pg.482]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.104]    [Pg.788]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.482 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.482 ]




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