| Literature DB >> 31947917 |
Xiaowen Hu1,2, Weijie Zeng1,2, Xinmin Zhang1,2, Kai Wang3, Xiaoling Liao1,2, Xinshuai Jiang2, Xiao-Fang Jiang2, Mingliang Jin2, Lingling Shui2, Guofu Zhou1,2,4.
Abstract
An IR reflector based on polymer-stabilized cholesteric liquid crystal (PSCLC) can selectively tune IR light reflection for smart window application. Broadening the reflection bandwidth to block more IR heat radiation requires the expansion of the pitch distribution in the PSCLC. Traditional attempts using ex situ direct current (DC) bias upon an already polymerized PSCLC reflector usually require a sustaining potential difference holding the pitch gradient of the reflector. Removing the DC bias will lead to a reflect bandwidth comeback. Here, we have developed an in situ DC curing strategy to realize an irreversible reflect bandwidth broadening. Briefly, a DC bias was used to drive the redistribution of impurity cations, which can be captured by the ester group of oligomers, during the photopolymerization. During the slow polymerization process, such trapped cations will drag the oligomers towards the cathode and compress the pitch length near the cathode before the oligomers form the long polymer chain. Consequently, a frozen pitch gradient by such an in-situ-electric-field-assisted dynamic ion-dragging effect leads to the formation of a pitch gradient along the electrical field direction. After removing the DC bias, the as-cured polymer is observed to have frozen such a gradient pitch feature without recoverable change. As a result, the PSCLC reflector exhibits steady bandwidth broadening of 480 nm in the IR region, which provides the potential for saving energy as a smart window.Entities:
Keywords: cholesteric liquid crystal; direct current (DC) bias; infrared reflector; polymer photocuring; reflection band broadening
Year: 2020 PMID: 31947917 PMCID: PMC7023619 DOI: 10.3390/polym12010096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1The molecular structures of RM82, S811, and Irgacure-651.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of pitch length modulation in CLC cell under (a) ex situ electric field and (b) in situ electric field. Legend: ITO, indium tin oxide; PVA, polyvinyl alcohol.
Figure 3(a) Transmission spectra of polymer-stabilized cholesteric liquid crystal (PSCLC) cells treated with different in situ electric fields; (b) reflection bandwidth of the PSCLC cells versus in situ direct current (DC) electric field; (c) polarizing light microscope (POM) images of the PSCLC cells treated with different in situ electric fields.
Figure 4Transmittance spectra of a CLC cell without either monomers (a) or photo-polymerization (b) under different DC bias treatments; reflection bandwidth of the CLC cell without either monomers (c) or photo-polymerization (d) under different DC biases. Legend: w/o, without.
Figure 5(a) Reflection bandwidth of the cell with different initiator concentrations treated with an in situ electric field; (b) reflection bandwidth of the cell without an in situ DC electric field as a function of different initiator concentrations; (c) impedance spectra of the cells with different photo-initiator concentrations; (d) reflection bandwidth of PSCLC cells with different thicknesses treated with an in situ DC electric field.
Figure 6(a) Transmittance spectra of PSCLC cell under different ex situ DC electric fields. A PSCLC cell treated with an in situ DC electric field of 2.4 V/µm was chosen for the application of an ex situ DC electric field. (b) Reflection bandwidth of the cell under different ex situ DC electric fields.