A new, practical approach to a variety of highly electrooptically active polymers for device development is described. It involves the use of a new thermally cross-linkable, hyperbranched oligomer containing nonlinear optical (NLO) chromophores as a macromolecular dopant in a common host polymer. A series of NLO polymeric blends were readily formulated and showed large and stable electrooptic (EO) coefficients (up to 65 pm/V). In comparison with previously studied linear NLO polyimides and guest-host polymers doped with molecular chromophores and even linear NLO analogous oligomers, this new approach offers clear advantages for device development in terms of improved poling efficiency, larger EO coefficients, good temporal stability, and versatile material formulation.
We report the design, synthesis, and characterization of a series of mesogen-jacketed liquid crystalline polymers with bent-core liquid crystals (BCLCs). For the first time, BCLC mesogens were directly side-attached to the polymer backbone and bent-core mesogen-jacketed liquid crystalline polymers (BMJLCPs) were achieved. Both three-ring and five-ring mesogens were employed. The n-alkoxy substituent lengths for the three-ring and five-ring BMJLCPs were controlled as n ) 1-5 and n ) 6-16, respectively. Various characterization techniques such as differential scanning calorimetry, wide-angle X-ray diffraction, and polarized light microscopy were used to study their mesomorphic phase behavior. The monomers of five-ring BMJLCPs with relatively long tails showed mesophase behavior. Columnar liquid crystalline phase was observed in both three-ring and five-ring BMJLCPs. Columnar rectangular (Φ R ) phase was observed in the three-ring system. In the five-ring BMJLCPs, relatively short-tail homologues possess Φ R phase, while columnar hexagonal phase was observed in the longtail samples. The differences in the phase structures were attributed to the "softness" of the macromolecular BMJLCP column surface.
This paper reports two important results with cross-linked precipitation polymerization. (1) Acetonitrile, a substance harmful to human health, is the most commonly used solvent for the synthesis of cross-linked polymeric microspheres by precipitation polymerization. Here, the much safer acetic acid replaced acetonitrile as a solvent in the precipitation polymerization of monodisperse cross-linked poly(divinylbenzene) (PDVB-55) microspheres. Pumpkin-like particles and microspheres were obtained. XPS results displayed a significant amount of double bonds on the surface of the particles. The effect of monomer content, temperature, and initiator amount on the formed particles were studied. For a DVB loading below 1 vol % at 70 degrees C, monodisperse microspheres with smooth surfaces and narrow diameters were successfully obtained. With a DVB loading of 2 vol % and by observing the shapes of particles obtained with three different temperature(60, 70, and 80 degrees C), we found that more spherical particles were obtained at higher temperatures and pumpkin-like particles were obtained at lower temperatures. No significant differences in morphology or the coefficient of variation (CV) of the particles were obtained for different initiator loadings, whereas the particle diameters could be increased with increased initiator concentrations. (2) In order to obtain a better understanding of the formation mechanism of these particles, time-dependent experiments, for the first time, were conducted in a hydrophobic monomer system. By tracing the whole polymerization process, some important results were found. First, with the polymerization time at 70 degrees C, the particle diameters were found to increase from 800 nm to 3.0 microm, the CV displayed a decrease, and the amount of spheres and the spherical evenness of the particle surfaces improved. Second, by quantitatively calculating the particle number from the yields and diameters data, it is found that starting from 3.1% yield or two hours reaction time the total amount of particles in the system is almost a constant (about 9.6 x 10 (8)/L), which means that no homocoagulation occurred and no new particles were generated after nucleation, and there is a linear relation between cubic diameters and yields. These two results give us a distinct impression that particle growth almost comes from capturing of newly formed oligomers. Based on the above results, a scheme for the particle formation is proposed, which shows that that pumpkin-like particles are caused by a prolonged nucleation including the homocoagulation of primary nuclei. The growth of the particles includes two modes, an in situ surface polymerization of monomer and the adsorption of PDVB-55 oligomers. The differences between results in acetonitrile and in acetic acid (higher yields, smaller size, not spherical but pumpkin-like particles in acetic acid) were due to the lower solubilizability of acetic acid which is the so-called proton-containing solvent with the hydrogen bonding structure.
Organic solids and polymers that absorb in the near-infrared (NIR) region (1000-2000 nm) represent a class of emerging materials and show a great potential for use in photonics and telecommunications. The radical anions of stacked aromatic imides, fused phorphyrin arrays, polythiophenes, sandwich-type lanthanide bisphthalocyanines, semiquinones, and mixed-valence dinuclear metal complexes are a few known examples of NIR-absorbing organic materials. Most of these NIR-absorbing materials are also electrochemically active or electrochromic (EC). This brief review covers several types of NIR-absorbing organic materials and discusses their potentials for applications in EC variable optical attenuators (VOAs).
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.