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Original Articles

Fabrication of a Liquid Crystal Microlens Array Film with Oligothiophene-Doped Polymerizable Liquid Crystals

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Pages 298/[1768]-308/[1778] | Published online: 05 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Fabrication of a microlens array film was explored by means of photoinduced reorientation of dye-doped polymerizable liquid crystals (LCs). LC monomer/photoinitiator mixtures doped with a small amount of an oligothiophene derivative were irradiated with a 488-nm beam from an Ar+ laser. Then the sample cell was periodically moved. After these two processes were repeated for a few tens times, remaining photoinitiators were quenched by irradiation with UV light. Observation of the cells with a polarizing optical microscope revealed that the molecular alignment of LCs induced by the Ar+ laser beam remained unchanged after the beam was turned off and a microlens array with a square-lattice type was obtained. This indicates that formation of the microlens and photopolymerization of the LC monomers are brought about simultaneously in a small area. The fabricated microlens has polarization selectivity that reflects molecular alignment. The focal length of the microlens arrays could be changed by controlling the irradiation intensity. Furthermore, a freestanding film with microlens arrays was obtained by peeling from the sample cell.

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