Liquid Crystals: Electro-Optical Modes and Applications
Book chapter, 2015

Ferroelectric liquid crystals are particular because they have vector properties: There is a local polarization P everywhere in the volume. This leads to an electrooptic effect that depends on the sign of the applied field E.For a polarization to appear, the structure has to be chiral, and the common representative for this kind ofmaterial is smectic C*, the chiral form of smectic C. Antiferroelectric liquid crystals also have a local polarization, but this polarization is already cancelled on the molecular level as the P vectors of adjacent smecticlayers are antiparallel to each other. While the smectic C* phase is not ferroelectric per se, it may, togetherwith surfaces, form a ferroelectric structure. This led to the first manufactured bistable liquid-crystal displays,demonstrating several attractive electrooptic properties like in-plane switching, broad viewing angle, andhigh speed. Several nematic devices have been elaborated in the last decade that feature one or several of theseproperties. Their principles will be explained after the presentation of the ferroelectric and antiferroelectricdevices. Finally, some nondisplay applications will be discussed.

Author

Sven Lagerwall

Chalmers University of Technology

Per Rudquist

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Electronics Material and Systems

David S. Hermann

Encyclopedia of Optical and Photonic Engineering Second Edition

1451-1464
9781351247177 (ISBN)

Subject Categories

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1081/E-EOE2-120014869

More information

Latest update

8/29/2023