Liquid crystal device employing graphene as the planar-alignment agent and electrode
11131898 · 2021-09-28
Assignee
Inventors
- Rajratan Basu (Annapolis, MD, US)
- Daniel Kinnamon (Annapolis, MD, US)
- Christopher M. Spillmann (Annandale, VA, US)
- Jakub Kolacz (Washington, DC, US)
- Jesse A. Frantz (Washington, DC, US)
- Jason D. Myers (Alexandria, VA, US)
Cpc classification
G02F1/1418
PHYSICS
G02F1/13439
PHYSICS
G02F1/133753
PHYSICS
G02F1/1337
PHYSICS
International classification
G02F1/1337
PHYSICS
G02F1/135
PHYSICS
Abstract
A graphene and liquid crystal device comprising a substrate, a layer of graphene on the substrate, and a layer of liquid crystal on the layer of graphene. A graphene and liquid crystal device wherein the layer of graphene is an alignment layer and an electrode for a liquid crystal device.
Claims
1. A graphene and liquid crystal device consisting of: a substrate; a layer of graphene on the substrate; a layer of liquid crystal on the layer of graphene; and π-π electron stacking; wherein the molecules of the layer of liquid crystal and the layer of graphene are aligned; wherein alignment of the liquid crystals is controlled by a voltage applied wherein the layer of graphene serves as an electrode; further comprising a uniform planar aligned state of the molecules of the layer of liquid crystal; and wherein the layer of graphene is an alignment layer and an electrode for a liquid crystal device; wherein the graphene and liquid crystal device is heated; wherein the graphene and liquid crystal device is cooled; wherein the layer of liquid crystals comprised liquid crystals in the isotropic phase before the step of heating the graphene and liquid crystal device, wherein the layer of liquid crystals comprised liquid crystals in the nematic phase after the step of cooling the graphene and liquid crystal device; and wherein the affinity of phenyl rings with one another comprises π-π stacking and drives alignment of the layer of liquid crystal molecules and the layer of graphene.
2. The graphene and liquid crystal device of claim 1 further comprising a second layer of graphene on the layer of liquid crystal; and wherein the liquid crystal is a ferroelectric liquid crystal in the smectic-A or smectic-C phase.
3. The graphene and liquid crystal device of claim 1 wherein the layer of graphene is an electrode for switching the orientation of the layer of liquid crystal and wherein the liquid crystal comprises a ferroelectric; and wherein the layer of liquid crystal comprises a single molecular component or mixtures of components with a liquid crystal phase comprising a nematic, cholesteric, smectic or discotic phase.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The following description and drawings set forth certain illustrative implementations of the disclosure in detail, which are indicative of several exemplary ways in which the various principles of the disclosure may be carried out. The illustrated examples, however, are not exhaustive of the many possible embodiments of the disclosure. Other objects, advantages and novel features of the disclosure will be set forth in the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) This disclosure teaches methods for achieving alignment of liquid crystal (LC) using graphene layers, teaches concurrent creation of alignment layers and electrodes using graphene for controlled reorientation of LC by an electric field, and teaches a new product comprising graphene layers as both alignment layers and electrodes.
(9) We demonstrate the first use of graphene being concurrently used as the electrode and the alignment layer.
(10) This innovation is unique because LC between two graphene sheets forms a natural electro-optic device. LC molecules can stabilize themselves on the honeycomb pattern of graphene or carbon nanotubes, employing the π-π electron stacking with a binding energy of −2 eV.
(11) This replacement effectively reduces the thickness of all the alignment layers and electrodes from 10-100s of nm to about 1 nm.
(12) The reduction in path length has the potential to achieve higher optical throughput and access a wider spectral range for electro-optic applications.
(13) The stacking of benzene on graphene also enhances orientational order. This order enhancement coupled with the relatively large anchoring strength that results from π-π stacking of the LC on the graphene honeycomb means lower thermal scattering losses from the LC, which make it more practical for NIR-vis-UV light in waveguide architectures.
Example 1
(14) Nematic Alignment on Graphene
(15) In one embodiment of the invention, shown in shown in
(16) Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) grown monolayer graphene film on a copper foil was first obtained from Graphene Supermarket, Inc. The graphene film on copper was continuous, with irregular holes and cracks. In addition, the graphene film was polycrystalline (i.e. the presence of grains with different crystallographic orientation).
(17) A small droplet of the LC in the isotropic phase was first placed on the graphene film. The LC droplet was then blown away gently by a dust blower, which left a thin LC layer at the graphene surface. The LC-coated graphene on copper substrate was then heated up in the isotropic phase to get rid of any residual order from the coating process and then slowly cooled down to the nematic phase.
(18) The alignment of the LC on the graphene film was studied by reflected Cross Polarized Light Microscopy (XPLM) and the results are presented in
(19) In LC, a dark state is observed when the nematic director {circumflex over (n)} is parallel to the polarizer (or to the crossed analyzer). The bright state appears when {circumflex over (n)} is at 45° with respect to the polarizer (or crossed analyzer). It is worth mentioning that the bare monolayer graphene film on copper foil appears completely dark.
(20) After coating a thin LC layer on the graphene film, different crystallographic graphene domains with grain boundaries are clearly visible in the XPLM images shown in
(21) The π-π stacking interaction is schematically illustrated in
(22) These results suggest that the LC on graphene can achieve a uniform planar aligned state, which can transit from dark to bright when rotated 45°.
(23) This uniform planar aligned state is induced by the strong π-π electron stacking.
Example 2
(24) Smectic Alignment on Graphene
(25) In a second prototype, ferroelectric LCs in the smectic-A* and smectic-C* were used as the liquid crystal. The monolayer graphene film was first grown by CVD processing onto a copper foil, then transferred onto glass. The glass substrate with graphene film was first placed on a hot plate at 110° C. A small droplet of ferroelectric liquid crystal (FLC) MX40636 (LC Vision, LLC, cooling phase sequence: Iso−97° C.-N*−82° C.-smectic-A*−76° C.-smectic-C*−−10° C. crystal) in the isotropic phase was placed on the graphene film. The LC droplet (in the isotropic phase) was then blown away gently by a dust blower, which left a thin LC layer in the isotropic phase at the graphene surface.
(26) The LC-coated graphene on glass substrate was then slowly cooled down to the smectic-A* and then to the smectic-C* phase, respectively. The FLC MX40636-coated graphene film on glass substrate was then studied using XPLM.
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Example 3
(29) LC-Graphene Electro-Optic Device
(30) In another embodiment, shown in
(31) Two glass substrates with monolayer graphene film were used to prepare a cell (the monolayer graphene film was first grown by CVD processing onto a copper foil, then transferred onto glass). The glass substrates with graphene were placed together to make a cell with an average thickness of 12 μm. The graphene-based LC cell was then filled with the LC mixture E7.
(32) The planar alignment of the LC in the cell was studied using XPLM (
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Example 4
(34) LC-Graphene Cladded Waveguide
(35) In another embodiment, shown in
(36) This invention demonstrates the utility of graphene as a LC alignment layer.
(37) The invention demonstrates that a monolayer of graphene can replace both the electrode and alignment layer in LC devices.
(38) The invention enables a reduced path length through absorbing and scattering layers, extending the use of LC devices into spectral bands that were previously not feasible due to absorption and scattering of alignment layers and electrodes. These spectral bands may include, but are not limited to ultraviolet, visible, near-, short-wave, mid-wave and long-wave infrared.
(39) This graphene alignment layer/electrode can be used for any LC-based electro-optic device including, but not limited to displays, polarization gratings, tunable filters, refractive optical waveguides.
(40) The single conductive/alignment layer is not necessarily limited to graphene, but includes any other two-dimensional material with electrically conductive properties and a propensity to align LC materials and mixtures.
(41) The single conductive/alignment layer, such as graphene, may be chemically modified directly to promote uniaxial LC alignment on the surface.
(42) Uniaxial alignment of LC on graphene may be promoted by adding an additional photoalignment step, whereby polarized light is used to absorb or chemically bond LC-compatible molecules to the graphene surface.
(43) Uniaxial alignment of LC on graphene may be promoted by non-surface means including, but not limited to flow alignment, photo-orientation and slow cooling from the isotropic phase.
(44) Other embodiments include but at not limited to the LC layer comprised of a single molecular component or mixtures of components with a liquid crystal phase, including but not limited to nematic, cholesteric, smectic and discotic phases.
(45) The LC may possess a positive or negative dielectric anisotropy and a permanent molecular dipole to facilitate molecular switching in response to an applied voltage
(46) Furthermore, the graphene can be multi-layered and the device substrate may be rigid or flexible.
(47) With this invention, the graphene can be a liquid crystal alignment layer. The graphene can be an electrode for switching the orientation of a liquid crystal.
(48) Taught herein is simultaneous demonstration of graphene as both an alignment layer and electrode. The embodiments taught herein reduce the gap between electrodes, and reduce voltage amplitudes.
(49) A reduced path length (carbon atom-thick) allows for reduced absorption and scattering contributions over a wide spectral range. The examples taught herein are compatible with alignment of different LC phases (i.e. nematic, smetic).
(50) These embodiments open the utility of LC-based electro-optic devices beyond limited spectral bandwidth of current alignment layers (i.e. polyimide) and electrodes (i.e. indium tin oxide, ITO).
(51) Here, graphene provides a means to both align LC and apply a voltage in devices with a single carbon atom-thick layer.
(52) The examples herein demonstrate the ability to minimize the number of layers in the device, simplify the fabrication process, have reduced optical path length and optimize the transmission.
(53) Still furthermore, the examples demonstrate lower applied voltages and greater resistance to device degradation.
(54) The above examples are merely illustrative of several possible embodiments of various aspects of the present disclosure, wherein equivalent alterations and/or modifications will occur to others skilled in the art upon reading and understanding this specification and the annexed drawings. In addition, although a particular feature of the disclosure may have been illustrated and/or described with respect to only one of several implementations, such feature may be combined with one or more other features of the other implementations as may be desired and advantageous for any given or particular application. Also, to the extent that the terms “including”, “includes”, “having”, “has”, “with”, or variants thereof are used in the detailed description and/or in the claims, such terms are intended to be inclusive in a manner similar to the term “comprising”.