May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc. 1 Liquid Crystalline Elastomers as Artificial Muscles P.E. Cladis Advanced Liquid Crystal Tech. Summit, NJ 07902-1314
Jan 17, 2016
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
1
Liquid Crystalline Elastomers as Artificial Muscles
P.E. Cladis
Advanced Liquid Crystal Tech.
Summit, NJ 07902-1314
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
2
Stress-Strain in Smectic A SLCEs
Strasbourg ILCC 1998 – Nicole Assfalg
Alumni from Heino Finkelmann's Group
See also: Liquid crystalline elastomers as artificial muscles
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
3
Spontaneous Shape Change: Sample Preparation
P.E. Cladis: Phase Transitions in Liquid Crystalline Elastomers:A Fundamental Aspect of LCEs as Artificial Muscles in Interactive Dynamics of Convection and Solidification, P. Erhard, D.S. Riley and P.H. Steen (eds), Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht (2001) p. 123.
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
4
Spontaneous Shape Change: Result
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
5
Goal
1998 Symposium on Artificial Muscles and Liquid
Crystalline Elastomers Partially supported by NSF DMR 9871475
http://alct.com/fps/index.htm
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
6
First works
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
7
Graduation
First Results: Thin samples
Kyushu University 2001
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
8
Swelling Dynamics: Samples
PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
Swelling dynamics of liquid crystal elastomers swollen with low molecular
weight liquid crystals Yusril Yusuf,* Y. Ono, Y. Sumisaki,
P. E. Cladis†, H. R. Brand, H.Finkelmann,Shoichi Kai‡
Sample 5CB & MBBA swelling agent
Monomer and Polydomain LCEsFrom Heino Finkelmann’s Lab
150m thick, 1x0.5mm2
Viewed in Polarizing Microscope
Swollen Nematic LSCE
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
9
MONO1
Dimension || n does not change!PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
10
MONO2 and POLY
PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
11
Picture
PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
12
Swelling Dynamics
POLY:
5CB ~8min
MBBA ~6min
MONO:
5CB ~16min
MBBA ~30min
Inverse swelling ratio
PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
13
Swelling Temperature Dependence
Temperature dependence
None for Dry POLY
Lots for MONO and Swollen POLY
PR E 69, 021710 (2004)
MO
NO
1P
OL
Y
Dry
swollen
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
14
Electric Field
Yusuf et al. PRE 71, 061702 (2005)
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
15
Voltage Dependence
Yusuf et al. Low-voltage-driven electromechanical effects of
swollen liquid-crystal elastomers ...
Threshold about 1.5V independent of sample thickness – typical for LMWLCs
Better reorientation, larger shape change – cf Slide 8
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
16
Temperature Dependence
Yusuf et al. PR E June 2005
MONO1 – maximum depends on sample thickness,
here about 20mMONO2 –
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
17
Characteristic Times,
Yusuf et al. PR E June 2005
Switch on Switch off
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
18
Voltage Dependence of 1/
Yusuf et al. PR E June 2005
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
19
Voltage Summary
Yusuf et al. PR E June 2005
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
20
Acknowledgements
We thank the IMA for the opportunity to present these results.
Yusril Yusuf,* Y. Ono, Y. Sumisaki, Jong-Hoon Huh, H. R. Brand, H.Finkelmann, Shoichi Kai‡
Nicole Assfalg
PEC thanks the Japan Society for the Promotion of Sciences for a Research Prize enabling this research.
May 24, 2005 Advanced Liquid Crystal Technologies, Inc.
21
Kyushu 3/2001