Interaction of light and ac electric fields with a nematic liquid crystal (NLC) doped with nanosized second-generation carbosilane codendrimers containing terminal azobenzene fragments has been studied. A first-order Freedericksz transition in the linearly polarized light, accompanied by an intrinsic bistability in a wide region, was observed. An additional ac electric field decreases the light-induced Freedericksz transition threshold and narrows the bistability region. Light illumination transforms the second-order electric-field-induced Freedericksz transition to a first-order one. The width of the bistability region increases with the light wave intensity. The theory of the interaction of light and ac electric fields with the dendrimer-doped NLCs is developed taking into account an additional (with respect to the undoped nematic host) dependence of the optical torque on the angle between the director and the light field.
Light-induced director orientation of polymeric liquid-crystalline systems was investigated. The materials under study were composed of a nematic liquid-crystalline polymer (NLCP) and a small amount (0.05-0.5 wt.%) of conformationally active (azobenzene) or stable (anthraquinone) dye impurity. Light action on the homogeneously aligned polymer films above glass transition temperature leads to the director reorientation and, consequently, to a change in the extraordinary refractive index. The effect is associated with the dye molecule excitation and related change of intermolecular forces. In the case of NLCP with conformationally active dye dopant, an extremely high orientational optical response was detected (nonlinear coefficient is n_{2}∼0.1cm^{2}/W). In contrast, the efficiency of orientational light action on NLCP with conformationally stable dye dopant is of the same order of magnitude as that of dye-doped low-molar-mass liquid crystals. At the normal light incidence on the NLCP doped with azo-dye, the threshold director orientation is observed which is similar to the Fréedericksz transition under the action of magnetic and electric fields. The obtained high-orientational optical response of NLCP caused by azo-dye dopant in combination with the possibility of the recording of deformed structure in the glassy state, typical for polymer compounds, reveals new opportunities in photonics applications.
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