Presentation + Paper
23 September 2016 Direct evidence of the molecular interaction propagation in the phase transition of liquid crystals
Kenji Katayama, Takahiro Sato, Shota Kuwahara
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The molecular interaction sometimes propagates in a collective manner, reaching for a long distance on the order of millimeters. Such interactions have been well known in the field of strongly-correlated electron systems in a beautiful crystal interleaved by donor and acceptor layers, induced by photo-stimulus. The other examples can be found in liquid crystals (LCs), which could be found in many places in nature such as bio-membrane. Different from crystals, LCs features “softness”, which enables it to be a curved structure such as a cell. In LCs, even a small molecular change would trigger the overall structural change by the propagation of the molecular interaction. Here we will show, for the first time, how long and how fast the molecular interaction propagates in LCs. The patterned phase transition was induced in a LC, causing the phase transition propagation in a controlled way and the propagation was measured with an time-resolved optical technique, called the transient grating. A LC sample doped with azobenzene was put into a thermally controlled LC cell. A grating pattern of a pulse light with 355 nm was impinged to the LC cell, and the light was absorbed by the dyes, releasing heat or photomechanical motion. We could observe the fringe spacing dependence on the phase transition response, which indicates that phase transition was delayed as the fringe spacing due to the delay by the phase transition propagation. This is the first direct evidence of the molecular interaction propagation of the LC molecules.
Conference Presentation
© (2016) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kenji Katayama, Takahiro Sato, and Shota Kuwahara "Direct evidence of the molecular interaction propagation in the phase transition of liquid crystals", Proc. SPIE 9940, Liquid Crystals XX, 99400W (23 September 2016); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2235852
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KEYWORDS
Liquid crystals

Molecular interactions

Refractive index

Temperature metrology

Molecules

Polarization

Crystals

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