| Literature DB >> 28144524 |
Volodymyr Tkachenko1, Antigone Marino1, Eva Otón2, Noureddine Bennis3, Josè Manuel Otón2.
Abstract
Control of liquid crystal (LC) orientation using a proper SiO2 alignment layer is essential for the optimization of vertically aligned nematic (VAN) displays. With this aim, we studied the optical anisotropy of thin SiO2 films by generalized ellipsometry as a function of deposition angle. The columnar SiO2 structure orientation measured by a noninvasive ellipsometry technique is reported for the first time, and its morphology influence on the LC alignment is demonstrated for large deposition angles.Entities:
Keywords: anisotropy; ellipsometry; liquid crystal alignment; morphology; thin film
Year: 2016 PMID: 28144524 PMCID: PMC5238683 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.7.167
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1Incidence of the probe beam on the sample and the laboratory (x',y',z') and the sample (x,y,z) coordinate systems.
Figure 2Porosity of SiO2 films vs angle of deposition (filled squares). Also shown are corrected data from [16] (empty circles) and the curve simulated in [17]. The inset shows FESEM top-view images of SiO2 samples for α = 80° and α = 86°.
Figure 3The anisotropic refractive index (nonfilled symbols) of porous SiO2 at λ = 532 nm vs angle of deposition. Also shown is the isotropic refractive index from [16] (filled circles).
Figure 4SiO2 column tilt vs the SiO2 deposition angle. The experimental data from [15] and the curves simulated according to the "tangent rule" [10] and "cosine rule" [11] are shown for comparison.
Figure 5LC pretilt vs the SiO2 deposition angle. The experimental data from [2] and [3] are shown for comparison.