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Electro-optics and material properties of oblique helicoidal cholesteric tested at oblique incidence of light

ORAL

Abstract

Unique electro-optics of the oblique helicoidal cholesteric (ChOH) stem from its heliconical director structure with a pitch and a cone angle that are both dependent on the applied electric field [1]. The field preserves the single harmonic nature of the director modulation and tunes ChOH pitch in a broad spectral range as demonstrated previously for the normal incidence of light [2]. In this work, we explore electro-optics of the ChOH for an oblique incidence of light. Full pitch periodicity produces first order diffraction with wide bandwidth and total reflection at large angles of the oblique incidence. Diffraction at the half-pitch periodicity shows red and blue shifted spectra for the beams polarized in the plane of incidence and along the perpendicular direction, respectively. The cone angle, as well as other material properties such as off-field cholesteric pitch, a critical field of unwinding the ChOH structure, and dispersion of refractive indices are all measured by exploring the diffraction spectra. Unique material properties revealed by the diffraction from the ChOH are attractive for applications such as electrically tunable band-pass filters, mirrors, and beam-steering devices. The work is supported by NSF grant ECCS-1906104.

Publication: ​​​​​​​[1] J. Xiang, S. V. Shiyanovskii, C. T. Imrie, and O. D. Lavrentovich, Phys. Rev. Lett. 112, 217801 (2014)<br>[2] J. Xiang, Y. Li, Q. Li, D. A. Paterson, J. M. D. Storey, C. T. Imrie, and O. D. Lavrentovich, Adv. Mater. 27, 3014 (2015)

Presenters

  • Olena S Iadlovska

    Kent State University

Authors

  • Olena S Iadlovska

    Kent State University

  • Kamal Thapa

    Kent State University

  • Mateusz Mrukiewicz

    Institute of Applied Physics, Military University of Technology, 00-908 Warsaw, Poland

  • Hari K Bisoyi

    Kent State University

  • Daniel A Patterson

    Department of Chemistry, School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3UE Scotland, UK

  • Ewan Cruickshank

    Department of Chemistry, School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3UE Scotland, UK

  • Grant Strachan

    Department of Chemistry, School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3UE Scotland, UK

  • John M Storey

    Department of Chemistry, School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3UE Scotland, UK

  • Corrie T Imrie

    Department of Chemistry, School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen, AB24 3UE Scotland, UK

  • Quan Li

    Kent State University

  • Sergij V Shiyanovskii

    Kent State University

  • O D Lavrentovich

    Kent State University