Nematic Liquid Crystals Flashcards
Define a DSC and draw a heating and cooling DSC for a liquid crystalline material. Label the key features and describe how they relate to the properties of a liquid crystal.
Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) measures the change in heat capacity of a material as a function of temperature.
What is the general shape of a nematic liquid crystal and what causes the properties they are known for?
They have an elongated, rod-like shape (calamatic) and will allign with the molecules around it in a specific direction, the n director. They can also be disk shaped (discotic) This gives the material different properties across the material than down the material. This includes electron flow and optical properties.
How do you measure molecular anisotropy?
The length/breadth ratio, b.
Describe the liquid crystal phases, naming the transition points. What temperatures can these occur over?
The crystal state has all the molecules rigid in the solid structure, unable to rotate. Crystal → Nematic phase is the melt point, Nematic → Crystal is the recrystallisation point.
In the nematic phase, the molecules have an average direction, in the n direction, but each molecule has a different direction. Long range orientational ordering, no positional ordering. The incoming light is scattered when coming across the molecules. Nematic ⇔ Liquid is the clearing point.
In the isotropic (same properties in all directions) liquid, the molecules have no average direction and are free to rotate and tumble.
The temperatures of the transitions only depend on the molecular structure and can be over a huge range.
Define birefringence and explain why it makes LCs opaque.
Birefringence is the property of a material to have two refractive indexs. This causes rotation of the planes of the light which causes the opaqueness of the material.
Compare the rotations of the nematic molecules.
The relaxation times of the end over end rotations are much longer (106 s) than the processions about the long axis (1011 s).
How is the range of angles of the molecules compared to the director shown? Give an equation and a typical values range.
The order parameter, S.
S = ½<3cos2(θ - 1)>
Where θ = angle made between the long axis of each molecule and the director. The <> brackets indicate this is averaged over a very large number of molecules.
S = 1 would indicate perfect order, S = 0 would indicate random allignment. Typical S values for LC are 0.4 < S < 0.7.
Sketch a graph to indicate how the order parameter depends on temperature. List ways in which it can be measured.
If the molecular parameters are known, a macroscopic property can be measured such as: diamagnetism, birefringence, NMR and Raman scattering.
Define and explain the cybotactic groups in the nematic phase.
Cybotactic groups are where there are regions of local order in a layer like form. These are known as smectic-A and C.
Smectic-A is where layers of the molecules form with the LC are perpendicular to the director.
Smectic-C is where director is not perpendicular to the layers, and locally the director appears to point in a different direction as the molecules are locally all alligned.
Describe the x-ray diffraction of LCs in different directions.
The longitudinal distance between molecules, d, is greater than the lateral distance, a, so the diffraction due to d is at a smaller angle and is more intense. The diffraction due to a is at a wider angle as the gaps are smaller. The bands are broad and weak due to the movement of the molecules.
Describe and give examples of the general structures of rod-like, nematic LC molecules.
Why would heteroatoms be added to the chain? What problems can they bring?
Composed of a series of rings (benzene, cyclohexane, pyrrole, thiophene, etc.), joined by linking groups (direct link, COO, CH2CH2, CH=CH, etc.) with small side groups on the ring (CN, F, Cl, Me, etc.).
At one end is a tail group which is normally an alkyl group or an alkoxy group. At the other end is a head group which is normally CN or F but can just be an alkyl chain.
Heteroatoms can add functionality and increase the rigidity but also attract ionic impurities.
How do alkyl chain lengths affect the mixing of a nematic LC?
The ratio of aromatic to aliphatic determines how well layers form in the structure. The layers form as the aromatic regions want to be with the other aromatic regions and vice versa for the aliphatic regions.
What is the quadropolar interaction and what effect does it have on the molecules?
The four dipoles formed when two molecules align with ends pointing in opposite directions. This means that their overall dipoles in the long axis (often influenced by the CN or F end group) are opposite and therefore attract. The attraction between the dipoles form new, perpendicular dipoles giving the four dipole structure.
This means molecules can form short lived dimers.
How are dipole moments, μ, measured for nematic LC molecules?
The dipole moments for each group are given and can be summed by using trig and the angle of the shape (exterior angle = 360/n).
For a simple LC with an alkyl or an alkoxy chain at the end, how does the carbon chain length affect the molecules phase transitions?
Alkyl: At short chain lengths the melting point of the crystal is very high due to the strong intermolecular interactions but these decrease very fast. At 5 carbons the nematic phase can form and both the clearing point and melting point increase at a similar rate, with a small range of the nematic phase temperatures.
Alkoxy: The trend for alkoxy end groups is similar, except the clearing point, while lower than the melting point, is much higher than the alkyl chain and maintains a higher temperature at longer chain lengths, even as the melting point decreases. This gives the nematic phase a much larger temperature range.