Germanium liquid crystals |
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Authors: | William N. Thurmes Kundalika M. More Michael R. Meadows Matthew B. O'Neill Rohini T. Vohra Michael D. Wand |
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Affiliation: | 1. Displaytech Inc. , 2602 Clover Basin Drive, Longmont, CO, 80503, USA wthurmes@micron.com;3. Displaytech Inc. , 2602 Clover Basin Drive, Longmont, CO, 80503, USA;4. LC Vision , 4150 Darley Avenue, Suite 10, Boulder, CO, 80305, USA |
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Abstract: | Liquid-crystalline compounds containing germanium atoms were synthesised and assessed for liquid-crystalline properties. These new compounds generally possess smectic C phases, and many also possess nematic, smectic A and higher order smectic phases. The germanium-containing liquid crystals were incorporated into smectic C mixtures. These mixtures tend to exhibit little change in smectic C*?layer thickness over temperature. This characteristic is associated with de Vries smectic A materials, but measurements show that, although they have high smectic C stability, the materials' smectic cone angles are small. Measurement of smectic cone angle versus temperature of an exemplar material and its analogues containing carbon and silicon in place of the germanium, all show small cone angles which fall smoothly and extrapolate to zero as the smectic C*?to smectic A transition is approached. These measurements largely explain the observed small layer changes and establish that the materials are not first-order de Vries materials. They must be located elsewhere along the de Vries-orthogonal continuum of smectic A phases. |
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Keywords: | germanium de Vries conventional FLC low tilt high smectic C stability phase map |
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