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Collins, ''Liquid Crystals''
Collins, ''Liquid Crystals''
Jones, ''Soft Condensed Matter''

Revision as of 20:25, 31 March 2009

Liquid crystals viewed under polarized light.

Brief Synopsis

History

  • Many scientists had already observed this phenomenon of liquid crystals prior to its "discovery", however the Austrian botanist Friedrich Reinitzer is more often then not given credit for its discovery.
Friedrich Reinitzer
  • Friedrich Reinitzer

Description

  • Phase of matter "between" solid and liquid
  • Cloudy liquid between solid and liquid phase.
    • Liquid Crystal flows and will take the shape of its container , however the cloudiness suggests it differs from liquids.
  • Solids possess both positional order (molecules are constrained to occupy certain positions) and orientational order (the manner in which the molecules are oriented with respect to one another ?only nearest neighbor?). When a solid melts to a liquid both types of order are completely lost. However, when a solid melts to a liquid crystal only the positional order is completely lost.
    • Molecules are free to move about as in a liquid, however they on average spend more time pointing along the direction of orientation.

Methods to Measure Orientational Order

  • The direction of orientation is shown by the director. Each molecule makes an angle with respect to the director. Measure the angle and average over all the molecules. The more orientational order present the closer the average angle will be to zero.
  • Measure the angles with respect to the director and then plug them into the function:

Now perfect oriental orientation will have an average of 1 and no orientational order will have an average of 0. The average of this function is called the order parameter.

    • Insert Chart Collings pg. 11
  • Can also take the average angle of one molecule over a certain time, instead of looking at different molecules. This only works under the assumption that all molecules undergo random motion. This assumption has never been contradicted experimentally.
  • Latent Heat shows that liquid crystal is closer to a liquid than it is to a solid.
  • Some molecules are more likely to form into a liquid crystal than others. There are 3 properties that make a molecule a good candidate to become liquid crystal(Collings pg.12):

(1) Elongated in shape

(2) Rigid in the center

(3) Flexible on the ends

  • Thermotropic : Order Determined by temperature
  • Lyotropic


Phases

  • Nematic: No positional order; long-ranger orientation order
  • Smectic: Positionally ordered along one direction
  • Chiral

Applications

  • Many common liquids are liquid crystals (i.e. soap)

Displays

  • Televisions

Thermometer

  • Mood Ring
Moodring.jpg

Future

Takaki: 3D Display

Electronic Paper

Sources

Chien, Liquid Crystal Materials, Devices, and Applications IX

Collins, Liquid Crystals

Jones, Soft Condensed Matter