The underlying physical phenomena behind the increased reflection/diffraction efficiency of holographically formed polymer-dispersed liquid crystal gratings formed from blended oligomers are investigated. Using parameters determined by in situ diffraction measurements during grating formation, a phenomenological diffusion model shows that a composition modulation in the polymer network results in blended oligomer systems. Scanning electron microscope studies reveal polymer morphologies consistent with this hypothesis.
A significant improvement in the dynamic response time of the in-plane switching nematic liquid crystal mode, useful in flat-panel display applications, is achieved through polymer stabilization. This improvement is achieved by introducing a low-density, stabilizing polymer network that causes the nematic director to favor the zero-field orientation at the expense of transmission and slightly higher drive voltages. We present a simple model that treats the polymer network as an effective field in the general framework of elastic continuum theory.
We report a holographic polymer-dispersed liquid crystal cell whose reflection peak can be tuned as a function of applied voltage. Electro-optic results are presented which are in excellent agreement with our model based on coupled wave theory.
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