Liquid Crystals. Iam-Choon Khoo

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Liquid Crystals - Iam-Choon Khoo страница 19

Liquid Crystals - Iam-Choon Khoo

Скачать книгу

Chen, C.‐W., Jau, H.‐C., Lee, C.‐H. et al. Temperature dependence of refractive index in blue phase liquid crystals. Optical Materials Express 3, 527–532 (2013), and earlier references on room‐temperature BPLC quoted therein.

      35 35. Kikuchi, H., Yokota, M., Hisakado, Y. et al. Polymer‐stabilized liquid crystal blue phases. Nature Materials 2002; 1(1): 64–68.

      36 36. Castles, F., Day, F.V., Morris, S.M., et al. Blue‐phase templated fabrication of three‐dimensional nanostructures for photonic applications. Nature Materials 2012; 11(7): 599–603.

      37 37. Lin, T.H., Li, Y., Wang, C.T., et al. Red, green and blue reflections enabled in an optically tunable self‐organized 3D cubic nanostructured thin film. Advanced Materials 2013; 25(36): 5050–5054.

      38 38. C.‐W. Chen, T. J. Bunning, I.‐C. Khoo et al. “Large three‐dimensional photonic crystals based on monocrystalline liquid crystal blue phases”. Nature Communications 8, 727 (2017).

      39 39. I. C. Khoo, “Nonlinear optics, active plasmonic and tunable metamaterials with liquid crystals,” Progress in Quantum Electronics 38 (2): 77–117 (2014) and references therein on nanostructures shown in Figure 1.23.

      40 40. Whinnery, J.R., C. Hu, and Y. S. Kwon. Liquid crystal waveguides for integrated optics. IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics QE13: 262 (1977).

      41 41. Giallorenzi, G., J. A. Weiss, and J. P. Sheridan. Light scattering from smectic liquid crystal waveguides. Journal of Applied Physics 47: 1820 (1976).

      42 42. H. Vach, C. T. Seaton, G. I. Stegeman et al. “Observation of intensity‐dependent guided waves,”. Optics Letters 9, 238 (1984).

      43 43. Graugnard, E., J. S. King, S. Jain, et al. “Electric field tuning of the Bragg peak in large‐pore TiO2 inverse shell opals,” Physical Review B 72: 233105 (2005).

      44 44. T. T. Larsen, A. Bjarklev, D. S. Hermann et al. “Optical devices based on liquid crystal photonic bandgap fibers,” Optics Express 11, 2589–2596 (2003).

      45 45. J. Ptasinski, I.‐C. Khoo, and Y. Fainman, “Enhanced optical tuning of modified‐geometry resonators clad in blue phase liquid crystals,” Optics Letters 39: 5435–5438 (2014).

      46 46. Hao, H., Ren, J., Chen, H. et al. “Tunable enhanced spontaneous emission in plasmonic waveguide cladded with liquid crystal and low‐index metamaterial,” Optics Express 25 (4) 3433–3444 (2017).

      47 47. S. Xiao, U. K. Chettiar, A. V. Kildishev, et al. “Tunable magnetic response of metamaterials,” Applied Physics Letters 95 (3): 033115 (2009).

      48 48. D. H. Werner, D. H. Kwon, I. C. Khoo, et al. “Liquid crystal clad near‐infrared metamaterials with tunable negative‐zero‐positive refractive indices,” Optics Express 15 (6): 3342–3347 (2007).

      49 49. Xu J, Yang R, Fan Y, et al. (2021). A review of tunable electromagnetic metamaterials with anisotropic liquid crystals. Frontiers in Physics 9: 633104, and references therein.

      50 50. I. C. Khoo, “Nonlinear organic liquid cored fiber array for all‐optical switching and sensor protection against short pulsed lasers,” IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics 14 (3): 946–951 (2008) and references therein.

      51 51. I. C. Khoo, K. L. Hong, S. Zhao, et al. “Blue‐phase liquid crystal cored optical fiber array with photonic bandgaps and nonlinear transmission properties,” Optics Express 21 (4): 4319–4327 (2013).

      52 52. C.‐W. Chen, H.‐C. Jau, C.‐T. Wang, et al. “Random lasing in blue phase liquid crystals,” Optics Express 20 (21): 23978–23984 (2012).

      2.1. BASIC CONCEPTS

      2.1.1. Introduction

      In the ordered phase, liquid crystals possess both crystalline and fluid properties. The theoretical framework for describing the crystalline properties of liquid crystals, termed elastic or continuum theory, is closer in form to that of solids and invokes similar classical mechanics terminology such as elastic constant, distortion energy, torque, free energies, etc. What makes liquid crystals unique is the fact that in such an ordered phase they also possess many fluidic properties similar to ordinary liquids. Nematic liquid crystals, for example, flow like liquids and thus require hydrodynamical theories for their complete description. These crystalline and flow properties of nematics are explained in further detail in the next chapter.

      In the disordered or isotropic phase, they behave like ordinary fluids of anisotropic molecules. They can thus be described by theories pertaining to anisotropic fluids. However, at the vicinity of the isotropic → nematic phase transition point, liquid crystals exhibit some highly correlated pre‐transitional effects such as enhanced but critically slowed response to external fields, owing to increased intermolecular correlations near the phase transition.

      In the following sections, we introduce some basic concepts and definitions, such as order parameter, short‐ and long‐range order, phase transition, and so on, which form the basis for describing the ordered and disordered phases of liquid crystals. Most of the discussions pertain to the exemplary nematic liquid crystals. Information on other phases may be found in later chapters and the references quoted therein.

      2.1.2. Scalar and Tensor Order Parameters

      The physics of liquid crystals is best described in terms of the so‐called order parameters [1, 2]. If we use the long axis of the molecule as a reference and denote it as ModifyingAbove k With ampersand c period circ semicolon, the microscopic scalar order parameter S is defined [1, 2] as follows:

      On the other hand, for molecules lacking such symmetry, or in cases where such rotational symmetry is “destroyed” by the presence of asymmetric dopants or intramolecular material interactions, a more general tensor order parameter Sij is needed. Sij is defined as

Скачать книгу