Mechanically generated surface chirality at the nanoscale

A substrate coated with an achiral polyimide alignment layer was scribed bidirectionally with the stylus of an atomic force microscope to create an easy axis for liquid crystal orientation. The resulting noncentrosymmetric topography resulted in a chiral surface that manifests itself at the molecula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2010-06, Vol.104 (25), p.257801-257801, Article 257801
Hauptverfasser: Ferjani, Sameh, Choi, Yoonseuk, Pendery, Joel, Petschek, Rolfe G, Rosenblatt, Charles
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container_title Physical review letters
container_volume 104
creator Ferjani, Sameh
Choi, Yoonseuk
Pendery, Joel
Petschek, Rolfe G
Rosenblatt, Charles
description A substrate coated with an achiral polyimide alignment layer was scribed bidirectionally with the stylus of an atomic force microscope to create an easy axis for liquid crystal orientation. The resulting noncentrosymmetric topography resulted in a chiral surface that manifests itself at the molecular level. To show this unambiguously, a planar-aligned negative dielectric aniostropy achiral nematic liquid crystal was placed in contact with the surface and subjected to an electric field E. The nematic director was found to undergo an azimuthal rotation approximately linear in E. This so-called "surface electroclinic effect" is a signature of surface chirality and was not observed when the polyimide was treated for a centrosymmetric topography, and therefore was nonchiral.
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title Mechanically generated surface chirality at the nanoscale
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