Scientists Unlock the Mystery of Liquid Crystal AlignmentDecember 21, 2005The alignment of liquid crystals in devices such as lap-top computers and palm pilots makes the displays on these devices readable. For more than 30 years, scientists have worked to understand the exact mechanism responsible for liquid crystal alignment, to no avail - until now. A group of researchers at Kent State University, headed by Dr. Satyendra Kumar, professor of physics, have finally uncovered the mechanisms of liquid crystal alignment. The results of a Kent State study of a variety of glass substrates of the type used in liquid crystal displays (LCDs) revealed for the first time the way liquid crystals align. All substrates used in LCDs have anisotropic surface roughness. Such a surface is smooth along the grooves but rough in the perpendicular direction. When liquid crystal molecules in LCDs find themselves near such a surface, they orient parallel to the "smooth" direction. This is true of all surfaces, irrespective of the nature of the surface and the treatment method used to prepare it. In order to make LCDs work, companies have aligned liquid crystal molecules with the optic axis in liquid crystal displays. The most common method used requires glass plates coated with a polymer that are mechanically "rubbed" with a linen cloth. The surface becomes smooth along the rubbing direction and the LCD's optic axis aligns along the rubbing direction. Several methods other than rubbing also have been developed, including UV treatment and plasma exposure. The results show that even when the surface is untouched but exposed to polarized UV, it develops a structure that is anisotropic and rough. This research was performed over the past 10 years and appeared as a report in the prestigious journal Physical Review Letters. For more information, Kumar can be reached at 330-672-2566 or skumar@kent.edu Kent State University |
|||||||||||||||||||||
| Related Liquid Crystal Current Events and Liquid Crystal News Articles What scientists know about jewel beetle shimmer "Jewel beetles" are widely known for their glossy external skeletons that appear to change colors as the angle of view changes. University of Miami engineer designs stretchable electronics with a twist Jizhou Song, a professor in the University of Miami College of Engineering and his collaborators Professor John Rogers, at the University of Illinois and Professor Yonggang Huang, at Northwestern University have developed a new design for stretchable electronics that can be wrapped around complex shapes, without a reduction in electronic function. Potent greenhouse gas more prevalent in atmosphere than previously assumed A powerful greenhouse gas is at least four times more prevalent in the atmosphere than previously estimated, according to a team of researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego. Three-dimensional nanoimaging process provides detailed look at physical properties of liquid crystals Charles Rosenblatt, professor of physics and macromolecular science at Case Western Reserve University, and his research group have developed a method of 3D optical imaging of anisotropic fluids such liquid crystals, with volumetric resolution one thousand times smaller than existing techniques. Extreme nature helps scientists design nano materials Scientists are using designs in nature from extreme environments to overcome the challenges of producing materials on the nanometre scale. Flexi display technology is now Rigid television screens, bulky laptops and still image posters are to be a thing of the past as new research, published today, Thursday, 2 October, in the New Journal of Physics, heralds the beginning of a technological revolution for screen displays. Community-based behavior change management cuts neonatal mortality in half A community-based program that reinforces basic childbirth and newborn care practices can reduce a baby's risk of death within the first month of life by as much as 54 percent, according to a study in rural India led by researchers at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in collaboration with CSM Medical University in Lucknow, India. Toward plastic spin transistors University of Utah physicists successfully controlled an electrical current using the "spin" within electrons - a step toward building an organic "spin transistor": a plastic semiconductor switch for future ultrafast computers and electronics. Research helps understand factors that influence efficiency of organic-based devices Organic-based devices, such as organic light-emitting diodes, require a transparent conductive layer with a high work function, meaning it promotes injection of electron holes into an organic layer to produce more light. UC San Diego Physicists Reveal Secrets of Newest Form of Carbon Using one of the world's most powerful sources of man-made radiation, physicists from UC San Diego, Columbia University and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory have uncovered new secrets about the properties of graphene-a form of pure carbon that may one day replace the silicon in computers, televisions, mobile phones and other common electronic devices. More Liquid Crystal Current Events and Liquid Crystal News Articles |
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||