Abstract
A series of liquid crystalline polymers has been synthesized in which fluorinated or semi-fluorinated mesogenic moieties are used as side groups linked to a polysiloxane backbone. Clear-cut differences in the structure of the smectic A phase are evidenced between fluorinated polymers and their classical non-fluorinated homologues. In a comparative analysis, we discuss the relevance of the steric hindrance of perfluorinated sequences and of the microsegregation of the backbone in response to these modifications as related to the fluorine content in the side group and to the proportion of mesogenic groups.