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Characterisation of Aqueous Solutions, Liquid Crystals and Solid State of Non-ionic Polymers in Association with Amphiphiles and DrugsRidell, Annika January 2003 (has links)
<p>Cellulose ethers and polyethylene glycols are used in drug formulations as water swelling or water soluble matrices. Polar lipids, for example monoglycerides, and surfactants can be used to solubilise hydrophobic or amphiphilic drugs and to formulate potential drug delivery vehicles such as emulsions, liposomes and cubic phases. In this thesis mixtures of these excipients are characterised in various environments, from dilute aqueous solutions to solid dispersions. Special focus has been on the understanding of the associating processes involved.</p><p>Detailed understanding of the association of cellulose ethers, of varying hydrophobicity, and amphiphilic substances is presented. The hydrophobicity of the polymer was found to have an impact on the interaction scheme. The amphiphiles were found to bind at lower amphiphile concentrations to a more hydrophobic polymer thus influencing both micro- and macroscopic structure of the aggregates. </p><p>The choice of counterion to the amphiphile has a small but significant effect on the interaction and the structure of the aggregates. Also amphiphilic drug molecules can interact with nonionic polymers in a similar way as surfactants in aqueous solution. Due to the higher cmc of the drug ibuprofen the interaction is largely influenced by the ionic strength of the solution. The type of amphiphile also influences the cooperativity of the amphiphile-polymer binding.</p><p>In more concentrated systems liquid crystals are formed into which the polymer interact with the amphiphiles. Both cubic and sponge phases were found with relatively large polymers interacting with polar lipids. These phases were found to swell and shrink mainly controlled by the amount of polymer inside them. Also membrane interacting substances added to the sponge phase could influence the size of the water channels in the phase. </p><p>In water free systems polymers and polar lipids were found to interact as well as forming solid dispersions. The behaviour of the phase separation between polymer and lipid depended on the concentration of the dispersed phase. The polar lipid was found to be distributed in the lamellar part of the semicrystalline polymer influencing the polymer folding.</p>
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Exploration of liquid crystal polymer packaging techniques for rf wireless systemsPatterson, Chad E. 03 July 2012 (has links)
In the past decade, there has been an increased interest in low-cost, low-power, high data rate wireless systems for both commercial and defense applications. Some of these include air defense systems, remote sensing radars, and communication systems that are used for unmanned aerial vehicles, ground vehicles, and even the individual consumer. All of these applications require state-of-the-art technologies to push the limits on several design factors such as functionality, weight, size, conformity, and performance while remaining cost effective. There are several potential solutions to accomplish these objectives and a highly pursued path is through the utilization of advanced integrated system platforms with high frequency, versatile, multilayered materials.
This work intends to explore advanced 3-D integration for state-of the art components in wireless systems using LCP multilayer organic platforms. Several packaging techniques are discussed that utilize the inherent benefits of this material. Wire bond, via interconnect, and flip-chip packages are implemented at RF and millimeter-wave (mm-wave) frequencies to explore the benefits of each in terms of convenience, reliability, cost, and performance. These techniques are then utilized for the demonstration of bulk acoustic waveguide (BAW) filter applications and for the realization of highly integrated phased-array antenna systems.
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A Study of the Structure and Dynamics of Smectic 8CB Under Mesoscale ConfinementBenson, James January 2012 (has links)
The structure and dynamics of the smectic-A liquid crystal 8CB (4 cyano-4 octylbiphenyl) when sheared and confined to mesoscale gaps (with crossed cylindrical geometry and mica confining surfaces) were studied using a Surface Forces Apparatus (SFA). Triangular shear patterns with frequencies of 0.01, 0.1, 1.0 and 10 Hz, and amplitudes of 62.5 nm, 625 nm and 6.25 m were applied to samples at gap sizes of 0.5 and 5.0 m. The study was performed at room temperature (20.5C) and at two higher temperatures (22C and 27C). In order to minimize the thermal fluctuations within the test chamber and hence to allow for the rapid re-initialization of test runs, the SFA was modified to allow for quick, precise and remote control of the confining surfaces. The procedure maximized the number of tests that could be undertaken with a single pair of surfaces so that a single gap geometry could be maintained for the duration of the test run. In order to run the SFA remotely, scripts written with a commercial software package, LabVIEW, were used to control of the SFA components, its FECO-monitoring camera and all its peripheral electronic equipment as well. Samples were agitated to disrupt any shear-induced liquid crystal domain alignment from previous testing following each shear test, and methodologies were developed to ascertain the extent of confinement quickly and remotely following agitation. Separate methods were developed for gap sizes at each extreme of the mesoscale regime, where the transition from bulklike structure and dynamics to nano-confinement occurs (between 1 and 10 microns for smectic-A 8CB).
The results revealed that the greater amplitude-gap aspect ratio and surface-to-domain contact associated with smaller gaps facilitated reorientation of the domains in the shear direction. Evidence was also presented of domains at the higher end or outside of the mesoscale regime that, while straining and accreting, were unable to reorient and thereby led to an overall increase of viscoelastic response. The effective viscosity was found to obey a simple power law with respect to shear rate, , and the flow behaviour indices, n, slightly in excess of unity indicate shear thickening occurs with large enough shear amplitude, and that the viscosity reached a plateau near unity over shear rates of 0.005 to 500 s-1 within the mesoscale regime. Different K and n values were observed depending on the shear amplitude used.
Unlike bulk smectic 8CB, whose domains do not align well in the shear direction with large shear-strain amplitude, at mesoscale levels of confinement large amplitude shearing (up to 12.5 shear strain amplitude) was found to be very effective at aligning domains. In general domain reorientation is found to be much more rapid within the mesoscale regime than has been reported in bulk. Aggressive shearing was found to result in a complete drop in viscoelastic response within seconds, while gentler shearing is found to produce a very gradual increase that persists for more than six hours, with individual shear periods exhibiting frequent and significant deviations from the expected smooth shear path that may be a product of discrete domain reorientations.
From these findings, certain traits of the smectic 8CB domain structures under mesoscale confinement were deduced, including how they respond to shear depending on the level of confinement, and how their reorientation due to shear varies not only with shear rate but also independently with shear amplitude. An equation describing the viscosity change as a function of both shear rate and shear amplitude is proposed. The shear amplitude dependence introduces the notion of shearing beyond the proposed smectic 8CB “viscoelastic limit”, which was shown to exhibit behaviour in accordance with Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS) techniques developed for Fourier Transform rheology. The findings provided an understanding of the behavioural changes that occur as one reduces the level of confinement of smectic materials from bulk to nanoconfinement.
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Characterization and Design of Liquid Crystal Polymer (LCP) Based Multilayer RF Components and PackagesThompson, Dane C. 11 April 2006 (has links)
This thesis discusses the investigation and utilization of a new promising thin-film material, liquid crystal polymer (LCP), for microwave and millimeter-wave (mm-wave [>30 GHz]) components and packages. The contribution of this research is in the determination of LCP's electrical and mechanical properties as they pertain to use in radio frequency (RF) systems up to mm-wave frequencies, and in evaluating LCP as a low-cost substrate and packaging material alternative to the hermetic materials traditionally desired for microwave circuits at frequencies above a few gigahertz (GHz).
A study of LCP's mm-wave material properties was performed. Resonant circuit structures were designed to find the dielectric constant and loss tangent from 2-110 GHz under both ambient and elevated temperature conditions. Several unique processes were developed for the realization of novel multilayer LCP-based RF circuits. These processes include thermocompression bonding with tight temperature control (within a few degrees Celsius), precise multilayer alignment and patterning, and LCP laser processing with three different types of lasers. A proof-of-concept design that resulted from this research was a dual-frequency dual-polarization antenna array operating at 14 and 35 GHz.
Device characterization such as mechanical flexibility testing of antennas and seal testing of packages were also performed. A low-loss interconnect was developed for laser-machined system-level thin-film LCP packages. These packages were designed for and measured with both RF micro-electromechanical (MEM) switches and monolithic microwave integrated circuits (MMICs). These research findings have shown LCP to
be a material with uniquely attractive properties/capabilities for vertically integrated, compact multilayer LCP circuits and modules.
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Colloidal gold nanorods, iridescent beetles and breath figure templated assembly of ordered array of pores in polymer filmsSharma, Vivek 05 November 2008 (has links)
Water drops that nucleate and grow over an evaporating polymer solution exposed to a current of moist air remain noncoalescent and self-assemble into close packed arrays. The hexagonally close packed, nearly monodisperse drops, eventually evaporate away, leaving a polymer film, with ordered array of pores. Meanwhile, typical breath figures or dew that form when moist air contacts cold surfaces involve coalescence-assisted growth of highly polydisperse, disordered array of water drops.
This dissertation provides the first quantitative attempt aimed at the elucidation of the mechanism of the breath figure templated assembly of the ordered arrays of pores in polymer films. The creation and evolution of a population of close packed drops occur in response to the heat and mass fluxes involved in water droplet condensation and solvent evaporation. The dynamics of drop nucleation, growth, noncoalescence and self-assembly are modeled by accounting for various transport and thermodynamic processes. The theoretical results for the rate and extent of evaporative cooling and growth are compared with experiments. Further, the dissertation describes a rich array of experimental observations about water droplet growth, noncoalescence, assembly and drying that have not been reported in the published literature so far. The theoretical framework developed in this study allows one to rationalize and predict the structure and size of pores formed in different polymer-solvent systems under given air flow conditions.
While the ordered arrays of water drops present an example of dynamics, growth and assembly of spherical particles, the study on colloidal gold nanorods focuses on the behavior of rodlike particles. A comprehensive set of theoretical arguments based on the shape dependent hydrodynamics of rods were developed and used for centrifugation-assisted separation of rodlike particles from nanospheres that are typical byproducts of seed mediated growth of nanorods. Since the efficiency of shape separation is assessed using UV-Vis-NIR spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), the present dissertation elucidates the shape dependent parameters that affect the optical response and phase behavior of colloidal gold nanorods. The drying of a drop of colloidal gold nanorods on glass slides creates coffee ring like deposits near the contact line, which is preceded by the formation of a liquid crystalline phase. The assemblies of rods on TEM grids are shown to be the result of equilibrium and non-equilibrium processes, and the ordered phases are compared with two dimensional liquid crystals.
The methodology of pattern characterization developed in this dissertation is then used to analyze the structure of the exocuticle of iridescent beetle Chrysina gloriosa. The patterns were characterized using Voronoi analysis and the effect of curvature on the fractions on hexagonal order of tiles was determined. Further, these patterns were found to be analogous to the focal conic domains formed spontaneously on the free surface of a cholesteric liquid crystal.
In summary, the dissertation provides the crucial understanding required for the widespread use of breath figure templated assembly as a method for manufacturing porous films, that requires only a drop of polymer solution (dilute) and a whiff of breath! Further, the dissertation establishes the physical basis and methodology for separating and characterizing colloidal gold nanorods. The dissertation also suggests the basis for the formation and structure of tiles that decorate the exoskeleton of an iridescent beetle Chrysina gloriosa.
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Characterisation of Aqueous Solutions, Liquid Crystals and Solid State of Non-ionic Polymers in Association with Amphiphiles and DrugsRidell, Annika January 2003 (has links)
Cellulose ethers and polyethylene glycols are used in drug formulations as water swelling or water soluble matrices. Polar lipids, for example monoglycerides, and surfactants can be used to solubilise hydrophobic or amphiphilic drugs and to formulate potential drug delivery vehicles such as emulsions, liposomes and cubic phases. In this thesis mixtures of these excipients are characterised in various environments, from dilute aqueous solutions to solid dispersions. Special focus has been on the understanding of the associating processes involved. Detailed understanding of the association of cellulose ethers, of varying hydrophobicity, and amphiphilic substances is presented. The hydrophobicity of the polymer was found to have an impact on the interaction scheme. The amphiphiles were found to bind at lower amphiphile concentrations to a more hydrophobic polymer thus influencing both micro- and macroscopic structure of the aggregates. The choice of counterion to the amphiphile has a small but significant effect on the interaction and the structure of the aggregates. Also amphiphilic drug molecules can interact with nonionic polymers in a similar way as surfactants in aqueous solution. Due to the higher cmc of the drug ibuprofen the interaction is largely influenced by the ionic strength of the solution. The type of amphiphile also influences the cooperativity of the amphiphile-polymer binding. In more concentrated systems liquid crystals are formed into which the polymer interact with the amphiphiles. Both cubic and sponge phases were found with relatively large polymers interacting with polar lipids. These phases were found to swell and shrink mainly controlled by the amount of polymer inside them. Also membrane interacting substances added to the sponge phase could influence the size of the water channels in the phase. In water free systems polymers and polar lipids were found to interact as well as forming solid dispersions. The behaviour of the phase separation between polymer and lipid depended on the concentration of the dispersed phase. The polar lipid was found to be distributed in the lamellar part of the semicrystalline polymer influencing the polymer folding.
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Propriétés supramoléculaires des cations diimidazolium disubstitués : des complexes d’inclusion en solution aux interactions à l’état cristallin et cristal liquideNoujeim, Nadim 08 1900 (has links)
Les sels d’imidazolium ont un rôle important dans certaines protéines et acides nucléiques et ont été utilisés à de nombreuses reprises dans des assemblages supramoléculaires en raison de leurs propriétés uniques. Les sels de diimidazolium dérivés sont toutefois moins connus. Ils ont pour l’instant uniquement été utilisés comme des précurseurs de carbènes N-hétérocycliques. Ils sont donc à la base de plusieurs catalyseurs utilisés pour des réactions de couplage croisés mais leurs propriétés sont toutefois méconnues dans le cadre de la chimie supramoléculaire. Cette classe de composés a nottament attiré notre attention en raison de la facilité de modification de leurs propriétés physico-chimiques par modification de leur structure chimique. L’objectif général des travaux présentés dans cette thèse est l’étude des propriétés supramoléculaires des sels de diimidazolium disubstitués en solution (aqueuse ou organique), ainsi qu’en phase solide ou cristal-liquide. L’influence de l’espaceur entre les deux noyaux imidazolium ainsi que l’influence des substituants latéraux et des contre-ions a été étudiée.
Dans un premier temps, les propriétés de complexation des sels de diimidazolium à des macrocycles sont étudiées. Les sels bromure sont étudiés en solution aqueuse avec plusieurs cyclodextrines et le cucurbit[7]uril, et les sels hexafluorophosphate sont étudiés en solution organique pour leur complexation avec l’éther couronne DB24C8 et un calix[4]arène. Cette nouvelle classe de composés a montré de très bonnes propriétés de complexation à ces différents macrocycles en solution et a également permis de contrôler différents assemblages supramoléculaires à l’interface air-eau.
Dans un deuxième temps, l’étude des sels de phénylènediimidazolium a permis de modifier les propriétés de complexation en solution pour obtenir la formation de complexes multiples avec le cucurbit[7]util en solution aqueuse. Cette même famille de composés a également permis la formation de cristaux liquides ioniques lorsque les substituants sont des chaînes alkyles plus longues.
La résolution de plusieurs structures cristallines de différents sels de diimidazolium a finalement permis de comprendre la nature des interactions intermoléculaires à l’état cristallin. La recherche présentée dans cette thèse a donc permis une étude détaillée des propriétés supramoléculaires des sels de diimidazolium dans tous les états de la matière qui leur sont accessibles. / Imidazolium salts play an important role in different proteins and nucleic acids and have been used many times in supramolecular assemblies due to their unique properties. Diimidazolium salts derived from imidazolium salts are less known. To date, they have only been used as precursors for N-heterocyclic carbenes, which are used to catalyze various cross-coupling reactions. Their properties are not well known in supramolecular chemistry. This class of compounds attracted our attention because of the ease of tuning their properties by modifying their chemical structure. The main goal of the research presented in this thesis was to study the supramolecular properties of disubstituted diimidazolium salts in solution (aqueous or organic solution), in the solid state and in the liquid-crystalline state. The role of the spacer between the two imidazolium moieties, of the sidechains and of the counterions was studied.
Firstly, the complexation between diimidazolium salts and various macrocycles was studied. Bromide salts were studied in aqueous solution with cyclodextrins and cucurbit[7]uril, while hexafluorophosphate salts were studied in organic solution with a DB24C8 crown ether and a calix[4]arene. This novel class of compounds showed very promising complexation properties with these macrocycles in solution and also allowed us to control the formation of various supramolecular assemblies at the air-water interface.
Secondly, phenylenediimidazolium salts were studied and allowed the modification of the complexation properties in aqueous solution. Multiple complexes can be formed simultaneously with cucurbit[7]uril in aqueous solution. The same class of compounds also has the ability to yield ionic liquid crystals when the alkyl sidechains are long.
The resolution of the crystalline structures of some synthesized diimidazolium salts allowed us to understand the nature of the intermolecular interactions in the solid state. The research presented in this thesis is a complete study of the supramolecular properties of diimidazolium salts in every accessible state of matter.
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A Study of the Structure and Dynamics of Smectic 8CB Under Mesoscale ConfinementBenson, James January 2012 (has links)
The structure and dynamics of the smectic-A liquid crystal 8CB (4 cyano-4 octylbiphenyl) when sheared and confined to mesoscale gaps (with crossed cylindrical geometry and mica confining surfaces) were studied using a Surface Forces Apparatus (SFA). Triangular shear patterns with frequencies of 0.01, 0.1, 1.0 and 10 Hz, and amplitudes of 62.5 nm, 625 nm and 6.25 m were applied to samples at gap sizes of 0.5 and 5.0 m. The study was performed at room temperature (20.5C) and at two higher temperatures (22C and 27C). In order to minimize the thermal fluctuations within the test chamber and hence to allow for the rapid re-initialization of test runs, the SFA was modified to allow for quick, precise and remote control of the confining surfaces. The procedure maximized the number of tests that could be undertaken with a single pair of surfaces so that a single gap geometry could be maintained for the duration of the test run. In order to run the SFA remotely, scripts written with a commercial software package, LabVIEW, were used to control of the SFA components, its FECO-monitoring camera and all its peripheral electronic equipment as well. Samples were agitated to disrupt any shear-induced liquid crystal domain alignment from previous testing following each shear test, and methodologies were developed to ascertain the extent of confinement quickly and remotely following agitation. Separate methods were developed for gap sizes at each extreme of the mesoscale regime, where the transition from bulklike structure and dynamics to nano-confinement occurs (between 1 and 10 microns for smectic-A 8CB).
The results revealed that the greater amplitude-gap aspect ratio and surface-to-domain contact associated with smaller gaps facilitated reorientation of the domains in the shear direction. Evidence was also presented of domains at the higher end or outside of the mesoscale regime that, while straining and accreting, were unable to reorient and thereby led to an overall increase of viscoelastic response. The effective viscosity was found to obey a simple power law with respect to shear rate, , and the flow behaviour indices, n, slightly in excess of unity indicate shear thickening occurs with large enough shear amplitude, and that the viscosity reached a plateau near unity over shear rates of 0.005 to 500 s-1 within the mesoscale regime. Different K and n values were observed depending on the shear amplitude used.
Unlike bulk smectic 8CB, whose domains do not align well in the shear direction with large shear-strain amplitude, at mesoscale levels of confinement large amplitude shearing (up to 12.5 shear strain amplitude) was found to be very effective at aligning domains. In general domain reorientation is found to be much more rapid within the mesoscale regime than has been reported in bulk. Aggressive shearing was found to result in a complete drop in viscoelastic response within seconds, while gentler shearing is found to produce a very gradual increase that persists for more than six hours, with individual shear periods exhibiting frequent and significant deviations from the expected smooth shear path that may be a product of discrete domain reorientations.
From these findings, certain traits of the smectic 8CB domain structures under mesoscale confinement were deduced, including how they respond to shear depending on the level of confinement, and how their reorientation due to shear varies not only with shear rate but also independently with shear amplitude. An equation describing the viscosity change as a function of both shear rate and shear amplitude is proposed. The shear amplitude dependence introduces the notion of shearing beyond the proposed smectic 8CB “viscoelastic limit”, which was shown to exhibit behaviour in accordance with Large Amplitude Oscillatory Shear (LAOS) techniques developed for Fourier Transform rheology. The findings provided an understanding of the behavioural changes that occur as one reduces the level of confinement of smectic materials from bulk to nanoconfinement.
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Αλληλεπιδράσεις επιφανειο-δραστικοποιημένων νανοσωματιδίων CdSe σε χειρόμορφο υγροκρυσταλλικό περιβάλλον / Interactions of surface-functionalized CdSe nanoparticles in chiral liquid-crystalline environmentΚαραταΐρη, Ευαγγελία (Εύα) 06 December 2013 (has links)
Η διασπορά κβαντικών τελειών ως πυρήνων αταξίας σε οργανωμένα συστήματα, έχει προσελκύσει επιστημονικό ενδιαφέρον και ερευνητικές δραστηριότητες, τόσο στο πεδίο της φυσικής στερεάς κατάστασης, όσο και σε αυτό της επιστήμης των υλικών. Δεν είναι σπάνια η διαπίστωση ότι υβριδικά συστήματα που προκύπτουν από συνδυασμούς όπως αυτός των υγρών κρυστάλλων και των νανοσωματιδίων, παρουσιάζουν αξιοσημείωτες και συχνά αναπάντεχες νέες ιδιότητες. Το θέμα της παρούσας διδακτορικής διατριβή κινείται σε δύο άξονες: το σχεδιασμό και την χημική σύνθεση κβαντικών τελειών επιφανειακά κατεργασμένων, για ελεγχόμενη αλληλεπίδραση με υγρούς κρυστάλλους, και τη μελέτη των φυσικών ιδιοτήτων των σύνθετων νανοδομημένων υγροκρυσταλλικών συστημάτων, που σχηματίζονται με διασπορά των νανοσωματιδίων αυτών σε χειρόμορφους θερμοτροπικούς υγρούς κρυστάλλους.
Στο πρώτο μέρος της διατριβής παρουσιάζεται η χημική σύνθεση και επιφανειακή τροποποίηση κβαντικών τελειών CdSe, με υδρόφοβες επιφανειοδραστικές ομάδες τρι– οκτυλοφωσφίνης (TOP)/ελαϊκής αμίνης (ΟΑ), TOP/οκταδεκυλαμίνης, ΤOP/δωδεκυλα-μίνης, TOP/οκτυλαμίνης και τριφαινυλφωσφίνης/τριφαινυλαμίνης. Ο χαρακτηρισμός της δομής και των οπτικών ιδιοτήτων των νανοσωματιδίων έγινε με περίθλαση σκόνης ακτίνων Χ, φασματοσκοπία υπεριώδους–ορατού και φασματοσκοπία υπερύθρου, ενώ για τη διερεύνηση της μορφολογίας τους και τον προσδιορισμό των διαστάσεών τους, χρησιμοποιήθηκε ηλεκτρονική μικροσκοπία διέλευσης. Οι χημικές συνθέσεις, βασισμένες στην θερμολυτική διάσπαση οργανομεταλλικών ενώσεων, οδήγησαν σε επιτυχημένη παραγωγή σφαιρικών νανοσωματιδίων, μέσης διαμέτρου 3–4 nm, με στενή κατανομή μεγεθών και καλή διαλυτότητα σε οργανικούς διαλύτες.
Στη συνέχεια μελετήθηκαν οι επιπτώσεις από τη διασπορά των νανοσωματιδίων CdSe με TOP και OA, με μέση διάμετρο 3.2 nm στη θερμοδυναμική και μοριακή οργάνωση χειρόμορφων υγρών κρυστάλλων, με τις τεχνικές της θερμιδομετρίας εναλλασσόμενης θερμικής εισόδου και με περίθλαση σκόνης ακτίνων Χ. Το ενδιαφέρον επικεντρώθηκε στη θερμοκρασιακή περιοχή των Μπλε φάσεων και στη μετάπτωση φάσης SmA–SmC*. Οι Μπλε φάσεις παρόλο που παρουσιάζουν εξέχουσες ιδιότητες για καινοτόμες εφαρμογές στη βιομηχανία οθονών και αισθητήρων, ωστόσο, είναι σταθερές σε πολύ στενά θερμοκρασιακά εύρη, μεταξύ Ισοτροπικής και Χειρόμορφης Νηματικής φάσης, γεγονός που δεν ευνοεί τη χρήση τους. Οι πειραματικές μετρήσεις αποκάλυψαν νέα φαινόμενα, όπως τη σταθεροποίηση της θερμοκρασιακής περιοχής της Μπλε φάσης ΙΙΙ (BPIII) σε μεγάλο θερμοκρασιακό εύρος, σε σχέση με τον αμιγή υγρό κρύσταλλο, και τη μετατόπιση των θερμοκρασιών μετάπτωσης σε μικρότερες τιμές. Η θεωρητική μελέτη που πραγματοποιήθηκε καταδεικνύει ισχυρή αλληλεπίδραση των νανοσωματιδίων με τις σειρές πλεγματικών ατελειών του υγρού κρυστάλλου. Παράλληλα τα αποτελέσματα φανερώνουν ότι ο χαρακτήρας Μέσου Πεδίου–Landau της μετάπτωσης SmA–SmC*, για το ίδιο σύστημα, δεν αλλοιώνεται. Η αλληλεπίδραση των κβαντικών τελειών CdSe με επιφανειακή δραστικοποίηση ΟΑ και TOP με χειρόμορφους υγρούς κρυστάλλους, παρέχει δυνατότητες και δημιουργεί σημαντικές προϋποθέσεις για νέες τεχνολογικές εφαρμογές και επιστημονικές εξελίξεις. / One dimensional semiconductor structures are intriguing materials for both fundamental research and industrial applications. On the other hand the long-range nature of the orientational order of liquid crystals is responsible for many fascinating optical, electromechanical and critical properties of these materials. Hybridization of these two fields may lead to novel materials with unusual optical and physical properties that are of considerable importance for technological applications as well as for basic physics studies on phase transitions and critical phenomena. In this context, complex soft materials were formulated that result from the dispersion of surface functionalized quantum dots in thermotropic chiral LCs. Special attention was paid to the synthesis and properties of the nanocrystals and to the dispersion state, as well as to the thermal and structural study of the composite materials.
In the first part of this Thesis a chemical approach for the synthesis of semiconducting quantum dots is presented. The method, based on the thermolytic decomposition of organometallic compounds, leads to the production of spherical nanocrystalline particles highly soluble in organic media, with an average diameter of 3.2 nm, capped with a variety of amine and phosphine molecules. The as-synthesized nanoparticles were characterized by means of powder X-ray diffraction, ultraviolet–visible spectroscopy, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and transition electron microscopy.
The second part of the Thesis is concentrated on the effects upon the Blue phases and smectic-A to chiral smectic-C* phase transition of the liquid crystal CE8, arising from the dispersion of CdSe quantum dots, surface-treated with oleylamine and trioctylphosphine. For this purpose, ac calorimetry and X-ray scattering studies have been carried out. Liquid– crystalline blue phases exhibit exceptional properties for applications in the display and sensor industry. However, in single component systems, they are stable only for a very narrow temperature range between the isotropic and the chiral nematic phase, a feature that severely hinders their applicability. The systematic high-resolution calorimetric studies revealed that Blue phase III is effectively stabilized in a wide temperature range by mixing surface-functionalized nanoparticles with chiral liquid crystals. The calorimetric measurements also revealed substantial downshifts of the transition temperature. Theoretical arguments show that the aggregation of nanoparticles at disclination lines is responsible for the observed effects. Furthermore, it was found that at the SmA–SmC* phase transition, as a function of increasing nanoparticle concentration, the heat capacity anomalies display an extended-mean-field to mean-field–like crossover behavior, while the temperature dependence of the tilt angle remains bulk-like with no occurrence of pretransitional effects. The interaction of CdSe quantum dots with the cores of disclination lines gains further support, as bound disclination lines are expected to affect smectic–smectic phase transitions in a very limited manner.
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Textures à la surface libre de cristaux liquides smectiques : étude en géométrie films librement suspendus et sur substrats structurés / Textures at the free surface of smectic liquid crystals : investigations in free standing films and on patterned solid substratesSelmi, Mayada 03 July 2018 (has links)
Ces travaux concernent l’étude expérimentale des textures se développant dans les ménisques de films smectiques de cristaux liquides thermotropes. Ces fluides complexes nous servent de système modèle pour l’étude des couplages élasto-capillaires qui se manifestent dans certaines conditions par des déformations périodiques de l’interface cristal liquide-air. Dans un premier temps, à partir de l’étude détaillée de la topographie de l’interface par une méthode interférométrique, nous caractérisons les différents types de structures, puis, identifions les principaux paramètres impliqués dans le processus d'apparition des défauts dans le ménisque de films libres suspendus. Ces résultats nous servent de base pour discuter des mécanismes physiques qui génèrent les différents types de défauts observés. Nous regardons en particulier, comment la diminution d’épaisseur de couche associée à une transition de phase va induire une instabilité mécanique responsable de l’apparition des ondulations de l’interface. Dans un deuxième temps, afin d’aller plus loin dans la compréhension des mécanismes, nous avons utilisé des films minces de cristaux liquides déposés sur des substrats solides microstructurés par des plots fabriqués par des techniques photolitographiques. Une telle géométrie permet de générer un ménisque autour de chaque plot et surtout de faire varier un plus grand nombre de paramètres comme par exemple l’ancrage sur le substrat via un traitement chimique de surface. L’ensemble de nos résultats apportent un éclairage nouveau sur la caractérisation et la compréhension des déformations spécifiques aux ménisques de fluides complexes. / The present work is an experimental study of the textures that appear in the meniscus of free standing smectic films with thermotropic liquid crystals. These complex fluids serve as model systems to investigate elasto-capillary phenomena which, under certain conditions, manifest themselves through periodic deformations of the liquid crystalair interface. In the first part of the thesis, we focus our attention on meniscus structures whose interfacial topographies are thoroughly characterized thanks to an in-house optical interferometry technique. Our study allows us to identify the main parameters involved in the development of meniscus structures and to discuss the physical mechanisms that are likely to be responsible for their formation. In particular, we show how a phase transition-induced layer shrinkage triggers a mechanical instability leading to interfacial undulations of the smectic free surface. In the second part of the manuscript, we address the case of thin liquid crystal films deposited on solid patterned solid substrates. The latter consist of regular arrays of microposts fabricated through photolithographic techniques. Such a geometry allows a meniscus to be formed around each micropost and makes it possible to examine the influence of other parameters such as the anchoring conditions on the solid substrate. The results gathered so far are able to shed some light on the characterization and the understanding of the specific deformations and textures that appear in the menisci of complex fluids.
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