The high-speed response of ferroelectric liquid crystals (FLCs) is advantageous for optical devices such as an electrically controlled lens. We have investigated the molecular alignment structure of FLC in a wide-gap cell for application to the lens. As a result, it has been found that a zigzag defect-free FLC medium can be obtained by utilizing alignment films, which possess a smooth surface and give rise to the defect-free situation in a narrow-gap cell, and by cooling from the nematic to the smectic phase at a low rate of <1 C/min. However, the transformation of the smectic layer structure has been observed under an electric field, particularly under a very low electric field in the wide-gap cell. We have attempted to suppress this transformation, which considerably degrades the optical performance of FLC, by the polymer stabilization technique. #
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