Literature DB >> 19777464

Chemically responsive gels prepared from microspheres dispersed in liquid crystals.

Santanu Kumar Pal1, Ankit Agarwal, Nicholas L Abbott.   

Abstract

Liquid-crystalline materials are a promising class of stimuli-responsive materials that have been demonstrated to undergo surface-induced orientational ordering transitions that can be highly sensitive and specific to chemical species. However, past studies demonstrating surface-induced transitions in liquid crystals (LCs) have employed thin films of low-molecular-weight LCs that are difficult to stabilize (due to dewetting of the LC on a surface). Here, it is reported that it is possible to prepare liquid-crystalline gels using a mixture of polystyrene microspheres and nematic LCs that undergo changes in orientational order, and thus optical appearance, in response to exposure to specific chemical compounds. These colloid-in-liquid-crystal (CLC) gels are mechanically stable and can be molded on chemically functionalized surfaces into thin films containing micrometer-sized LC-rich domains that span the two interfaces of the gels. In contrast to other reports of LC gels, where the presence of a polymeric or self-assembled small-molecule gelator network within a nematic LC frustrates ordering transitions from propagating through the gels over distances, it is demonstrated that thin films of CLC gels, when supported on chemically functionalized surfaces, do undergo easily visualized ordering transitions upon exposure to organophosphonate compounds. Because these optically responsive CLC gels are mechanically robust and can be molded, this class of composite LC material may be broadly useful for the design of chemically responsive LC devices.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19777464     DOI: 10.1002/smll.200900961

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Small        ISSN: 1613-6810            Impact factor:   13.281


  3 in total

Review 1.  Recent advances in colloidal and interfacial phenomena involving liquid crystals.

Authors:  Yiqun Bai; Nicholas L Abbott
Journal:  Langmuir       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 3.882

2.  Colloid-in-liquid crystal gels formed via spinodal decomposition.

Authors:  Emre Bukusoglu; Santanu Kumar Pal; Juan J de Pablo; Nicholas L Abbott
Journal:  Soft Matter       Date:  2014-03-14       Impact factor: 3.679

3.  Colloid-in-liquid crystal gels that respond to biomolecular interactions.

Authors:  Ankit Agarwal; Sumyra Sidiq; Shilpa Setia; Emre Bukusoglu; Juan J de Pablo; Santanu Kumar Pal; Nicholas L Abbott
Journal:  Small       Date:  2013-04-02       Impact factor: 13.281

  3 in total

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