2004
DOI: 10.1080/02678290410001648705
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Influence of hydrogen bonding on phase abundance in ferroelectric liquid crystals

Abstract: The synthesis and characterization of five hydrogen-bonded ferroelectric liquid crystal complexes (HBFLCs) prepared from mesogenic p-n-alkoxy benzoic acids and non-mesogenic propionic/butyric acids with different chiral centres are reported. Complementary intermolecular hydrogen bonding is confirmed through IR study. HBFLCs are found to exhibit chiral nematic (N*), smectic C* (SmC*) and smectic G* (monotropic) phases in their cooling profiles during polarizing thermal microscopy and differential scanning calor… Show more

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Cited by 45 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This relaxation is identified [35] as Goldstone mode. The order of f r relevant to the GM in the present compounds are found to be comparable to that reported [36,22] in other FLCs and HBFLC compounds. It is further observed that GM relaxation is suppressed under different applied fields as depicted in figure 7, thus this experimental evidence conforms that GM is originated from the helix spread over the smectic layers of respective phase.…”
Section: Goldstone Modesupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…This relaxation is identified [35] as Goldstone mode. The order of f r relevant to the GM in the present compounds are found to be comparable to that reported [36,22] in other FLCs and HBFLC compounds. It is further observed that GM relaxation is suppressed under different applied fields as depicted in figure 7, thus this experimental evidence conforms that GM is originated from the helix spread over the smectic layers of respective phase.…”
Section: Goldstone Modesupporting
confidence: 73%
“…As reported [22] in HBFLC, Goldstone mode is observed at lower frequencies namely at around 950 Hz in LTA+11BA complex. The variation of the capacitance with corresponding dielectric loss at various temperature which are referred as Cole-Cole plots, in smectic C* for the LTA+11BA are shown in figure 6 and is interpreted as due to collective response originated due to the excitation of the coupled transverse dipole moment situated around the chiral centers over the layers in the form of polarization helix.…”
Section: Goldstone Modementioning
confidence: 48%
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“…The commercial viabilities and applicational aspects [8][9][10][11][12][13] made many of the research groups to work on these soft materials. Even though HBLC materials are known since 1960s [2], much work has been done on these complexes [3][4][5][6][7][14][15][16][17] only in this present epoch. Hydrogen bond, a non covalent interaction, enables various mesogenic and non mesogenic compounds to form complexes exhibiting rich phase polymorphism.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%