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Invited Article

Graphene and liquid crystal mediated interactions

, &
Pages 2375-2390 | Received 21 Apr 2016, Published online: 20 Jun 2016
 

ABSTRACT

The two-dimensional graphene-honeycomb structure can interact with the liquid crystal’s (LC) benzene rings through π–π electron stacking. This LC–graphene interaction gives rise to a number of interesting physical and optical phenomena in the LC. In this paper, we present a combination of a review and original research of the exploration of novel themes of LC ordering at the nanoscale graphene surface and its macroscopic effects on the LC’s nematic and smectic phases. We show that monolayer graphene films impose planar alignment on the LC, creating pseudo-nematic domains (PNDs) at the surface of graphene. In a graphene-nematic suspension, these PNDs enhance the orientational order parameter, exhibiting a giant enhancement in the dielectric anisotropy of the LC. These anisotropic domains interact with the external electric field, resulting in a non-zero dielectric anisotropy in the isotropic phase as well. We also show that graphene flakes in an LC reduce the free ion concentration in the nematic media by an ion-trapping process. The reduction of mobile ions in the LC is found to have subsequent impacts on the LC’s rotational viscosity, allowing the nematic director to respond quicker on switching the electric field on and off. In a ferroelectric LC (smectic-C* phase), suspended graphene flakes enhance the spontaneous polarisation by improving the tilted smectic-C* ordering resulting from the π–π electron stacking. This effect accelerates the ferroelectric-switching phenomenon. Graphene can possess strain chirality due to a soft shear mode. This surface chirality of graphene can be transmitted into LC molecules exhibiting two types of chiral signatures in the LCs: an electroclinic effect (a polar tilt of the LC director perpendicular to, and linear in, an applied electric field) in the smectic-A phase, and a macroscopic helical twist of the LC director in the nematic phase. Finally, we show that a graphene-based LC cell can be fabricated without using any aligning layers and ITO electrodes. Graphene itself can be used as the electrodes as well as the aligning layers, obtaining an electro-optic effect of the LC inside the cell.

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research (Award No. N0001415WX01534) and the investment grant at the U.S. Naval Academy.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Office of Naval Research Global: [Grant number: N0001415WX01534] and the investment grant at the U.S. Naval Academy.

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