| Literature DB >> 28230153 |
Wanshu Zhang1, Lanying Zhang2,3, Xiao Liang2,3, Jiumei Xiao1, Li Yu2,3, Fasheng Li4, Hui Cao1, Kexuan Li5, Zhou Yang1, Huai Yang1,2,3.
Abstract
High-performance and cost-effective laser protection system is of crucial importance for the rapid advance of lasers in military and civilian fields leading to severe damages of human eyes and sensitive optical devices. However, it is crucially hindered by the angle-dependent protective effect and the complex preparation process. Here we demonstrate that angle-independence, good processibility, wavelength tunability, high optical density and good visibility can be effectuated simultaneously, by embedding dichroic anthraquinone dyes in a cholesteric liquid crystal matrix. More significantly, unconventional two-dimensional parabolic protection behavior is reported for the first time that in stark contrast to the existing protection systems, the overall parabolic protection behavior enables protective effect to increase with incident angles, hence providing omnibearing high-performance protection. The protective effect is controllable by dye concentration, LC cell thickness and CLC reflection efficiency, and the system can be made flexible enabling applications in flexible and even wearable protection devices. This research creates a promising avenue for the high-performance and cost-effective laser protection, and may foster the development of optical applications such as solar concentrators, car explosion-proof membrane, smart windows and polarizers.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28230153 PMCID: PMC5322380 DOI: 10.1038/srep42955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Experimental setup, schematic digram and chemical structures of AQ dyes used in this study.
(a) Schematic experimental setup of the laser protection measurement; (b–d) Enlarged illustrations of the molecular arrangements with the polar plots of OD versus θ for samples of (b) CLCs, (c) Dichroic dyes, (d) Dichroic dye-doped CLCs; (e) The chemical structures of the doped dichroic dyes D1, D2 and the contrastive dye DC.
Figure 2Laser protection measurements, UV-vis spectra and photographs for D1 series.
(a–f) Three-dimensional figures of OD measurements as a function of θ and Ein (Power density of 3.18 × 10−3 J/cm2) of (a–c) D1 series and (d–f) DC series. (a,d) CLC reflection samples. (b,e) Dye absorption samples. (c,f) Dye-doped CLC samples. (g) The UV-Vis spectra of the three samples of D1 series. (h) The digital photograph of the D1-doped CLC sample in LC cell (left) and flexible films (right). The LC cells are 20 μm thick. All the figures are the results removing the influence of empty LC cells (Supplementary Fig. S11).
Figure 3Influence factors on OD values.
(a) ODs of D1 and D2 absorption with different concentrations in nematic LCs HNG726200-100 measured at normal angle. (b) ODs of CLC reflection in LC cells of different thicknesses measured at normal angle. (c) Polar plot of OD as a function of θ for the dye-doped double-handed CLC samples of D1 and D2 by washout/refill method.