In this paper we describe our recent work on optical effects due to photoinduced molecular reorientation in a side chain liquid crystalline polymer, namely azopolymethacrylate (PMA4). We have studied several kinds of optical effects on space scales ranging from the nanoscopic to macroscopic. In particular, we have built a computer controlled microscope-based apparatus to study photoinduced effects down to the micron scale in thin and ultrathin (Langmuir Blodgett) films of our material. Furthermore we measured the morphology and the photoinduced surface deformation by Atomic Force Microscopy in the submicron scale.
INTRODUCTIONSide chain liquid crystalline polymers (LCP) based on the presence in the side chain of the azobenzene moiety have been the subject of intense study in recent years [1]. Of particular interest have been the optical effects due to the photoinduced cis-trans isomerization of the azobenzene. These effects have been studied due to their potential for optical writing applications and more specifically for entirely-optical high-density memories [2]. This class of materials features a rich and complex phenomenology, which makes them very interesting also from a fundamental point of view. Their dynamics is the result of the complex interplay between several types of interactions and processes: the mesogenic potential, the conformational main chain transitions, the glass transition, the molecular trans-cis isomerization [3]. The relative weight of such processes, and the coupling between side chain and main chain dynamics, depend of course not only on temperature, but it can be also externally influenced by optical pumping with light of the appropriate wavelength, polarization and intensity [4]. Moreover, when dealing with ultrathin films, coupling interactions between substrate (imposing a planar ordering to the polymeric main chain) and PLC become relevant. This gives rise-via a purely geometric effect-to an increased stability of the glassy phase upon heating [5], and correspondingly to an increase of the typical times characterising the back-to-equilibrium relaxation process This is of relevance also for the stability of the information optically written onto such thin films of azo-polymer. The combined action of the cis-trans photoisomerization and the nematic potential lead to collective molecular reorientation, hence to very high sensitivity of the sample to the optical writing beam. However it is not clear-and the subject of current investigationhow the nematic potential determines the collective character (and hence the length scale) of the molecular reorientation, on which the minimum addressable area depends, and hence the maximum information density possibly stored per surface unit. Although the basic microscopic mechanism for the production of optically oriented molecular