skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Engineering the anchoring behavior of nematic liquid crystals on a solid surface by varying the density of liquid crystalline polymer brushes

Journal Article · · Soft Matter
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1039/c8sm00991k· OSTI ID:1557668

Controlling the orientation of liquid crystal (LC) molecules towards contacting surfaces is a crucial requirement for the development of LC displays and passive electro-optical devices. Up to now, research has been focused on photo-responses of a LC azobenzene polymer system to obtain either planar or homeotropic orientation of LCs. It remains a challenge, however, to tune the polar angle of LC molecules on the solid surface and gain more insights about the polymer chain conformation extending in LC medium. Here, we deposit a liquid crystalline side chain polymer brush, poly(6-(4-methoxy-azobenzene-4'-oxy)hexyl methacrylate) (PMMAZO), onto the solid surface with film thickness varying between ~3 nm and 13 nm; therefore, the grafting density of the brush layer ranges from 0.0219 to 0.0924 chains per nm2. When LCs are confined in hybrid cells with a top surface eliciting uniform homeotropic anchoring and a bottom surface covered by the PMMAZO brush, the out-of-plane polar angle of 4-pentyl-4'-cyanobiphenyl (5CB) on the brush layer gradually changes from ~0° to ~62° by simply increasing the grafting brush density. The surface forces apparatus (SFA) measurement is used to determine 5CB as a good solvent for the PMMAZO brush and understand the relationship between the chain conformation in 5CB and the anchoring behavior of LC molecules on the polymer brush layer. Here, for high grafting density, the polymer chain in 5CB extends significantly away from the substrate, making the side chain mesogens on average almost parallel to the substrate; for the low-density case, the main chain extends in the narrow region around the surface for aligning the mesogens perpendicular to the substrate.

Research Organization:
Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), Argonne, IL (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES) (SC-22). Materials Sciences & Engineering Division; USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
AC02-06CH11357
OSTI ID:
1557668
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1462445
Journal Information:
Soft Matter, Vol. 14, Issue 37; ISSN 1744-683X
Publisher:
Royal Society of ChemistryCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 18 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (31)

Photoinduced In-Plane Motions of Azobenzene Mesogens Affected by the Flexibility of Underlying Amorphous Chains journal September 2013
Inducing Planar Orientation in Side-Chain Liquid-Crystalline Polymer Systems via Interfacial Control journal January 2016
Orientations of Liquid Crystals in Contact with Surfaces that Present Continuous Gradients of Chemical Functionality journal May 2006
Effect of confinement on electric field induced orientation of a nematic liquid crystal journal January 2014
Conformations of Polymers Attached to an Interface journal September 1980
Homogeneously Aligned Liquid-Crystal Polymer Brushes journal June 2000
Mixed Alkylsilane Functionalized Surfaces for Simultaneous Wetting and Homeotropic Anchoring of Liquid Crystals journal October 2011
Introduction to Optical Methods for Characterizing Liquid Crystals at Interfaces journal February 2013
Phase diagrams of phenyl benzoate side group liquid crystal polymers and similar low molecular mass liquid crystals journal January 1999
Meso- and Microscopic Motions in Photoresponsive Liquid Crystalline Polymer Films journal December 2013
Polyelectrolyte brushes studied by surface forces measurement journal July 2010
Anchoring of a Nematic Liquid Crystal on a Wettability Gradient journal November 2006
Polyelectrolyte Brush Layers Studied by Surface Forces Measurement:  Dependence on pH and Salt Concentrations and Scaling journal May 2002
Surface forces between monolayers of anchored poly(methacrylic acid) journal September 1992
Homeotropic alignment on surface-initiated liquid crystalline polymer brushes journal January 2005
Polymer Brushes with Liquid Crystalline Side Chains journal September 1999
Liquid-crystalline polymers in good nematic solvents: free chains, mushrooms, and brushes journal August 1993
Forces in nematic liquid crystals constrained to the nanometer scale under hybrid anchoring conditions journal April 2005
Liquid-crystalline polymers in nematic solvents: confinement and field effects journal April 1993
Azo-Containing Polymer Brushes: Photoalignment and Application as Command Surfaces journal May 2009
Preparation of stable silica surfaces for surface forces measurement journal September 2017
Photoresponsive Carbohydrate-based Giant Surfactants: Automatic Vertical Alignment of Nematic Liquid Crystal for the Remote-Controllable Optical Device journal March 2015
Unique Molecular Orientation in a Smectic Liquid Crystalline Polymer Film Attained by Surface-Initiated Graft Polymerization journal April 2007
Anchoring of Nematic Liquid Crystals on Self-Assembled Monolayers Formed from Alkanethiols on Semitransparent Films of Gold journal November 1995
Directed self-assembly of nematic liquid crystals on chemically patterned surfaces: morphological states and transitions journal January 2016
Observing the Mushroom-to-Brush Transition for Kinesin Proteins journal November 2013
Theory of the Collapse-Stretching Transition of a Polymer Brush in a Mixed Solvent journal September 1994
Synthesis and characterization of spin-labelled and spin-probed side-chain liquid crystal polymers journal July 1996
Polar and Azimuthal Alignment of a Nematic Liquid Crystal by Alkylsilane Self-Assembled Monolayers: Effects of Chain-Length and Mechanical Rubbing journal September 2008
Liquid Crystalline Brushes: An Anchoring Transition journal February 1993
Phase diagrams of phenyl benzoate side group liquid crystal polymers and similar low molecular mass liquid crystals journal November 1999

Cited By (1)