How Far Can We Push the Rigid Oligomers/Polymers toward Ferroelectric Nematic Liquid Crystals?

Jinxing Li, Runli Xia, Hao Xu, Jidan Yang, Xinxin Zhang, Junichi Kougo, Huanyu Lei, Shuqi Dai, Houbing Huang, Guangzu Zhang, Fangjie Cen, Yuanbin Jiang, Satoshi Aya*, Mingjun Huang*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

50 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The emerging ferroelectric nematic (NF) liquid crystal is a novel 3D-ordered liquid exhibiting macroscopic electric polarization. The combination of the ultrahigh dielectric constant, strong nonlinear optical signal, and high sensitivity to the electric field makes NF materials promising for the development of advanced liquid crystal electroopic devices. Previously, all studies focused on the rod-shaped small molecules with limited length (l) range and dipole moment (μ) values. Here, through the precision synthesis, we extend the aromatic rod-shaped mesogen to oligomer/polymer (repeat unit up to 12 with monodisperse molecular-weight dispersion) and increase the μ value over 30 Debye (D). The NF phase has a widespread existence far beyond our expectation and could be observed in all the oligomer/polymer length range. Notably, the NF phase experiences a nontrivial evolution pathway with the traditional apolar nematic phase completely suppressed, i.e., the NF phase nucleates directly from the isotropic liquid phase. The discovery of thte ferroelectric packing of oligomer/polymer rods not only offers the concept of extending the NF state to oligomers/polymers but also provides some previously overlooked insights in oxybenzoate-based liquid crystal polymer materials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)17857-17861
Number of pages5
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume143
Issue number42
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 27 Oct 2021

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'How Far Can We Push the Rigid Oligomers/Polymers toward Ferroelectric Nematic Liquid Crystals?'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this