4.5 Article

Electric Switching Behaviors and Dielectric Relaxation Properties in Ferroelectric, Antiferroelectric, and Paraelectric Smectic Phases of Bent-Shaped Dimeric Molecules

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcb.2c01938

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Funding

  1. LG x JXTG Nippon Oil & Energy Smart Materials & Devices Collaborative Research Programs

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This study investigates the electric switching behaviors and dielectric properties of four different liquid crystal phases formed by mixing specific molecules. Each phase exhibits distinct characteristics, including collective or non-collective modes and varying dielectric strengths.
This study reports the electric switching behaviors and dielectric properties of the ferroelectric smectic-A (SmAP(F)), anti-ferroelectric smectic-A (SmAP(A)), anti-ferroelectric SmCAPA, and smectic-A (SmA) phases formed by mixing the bent-shaped dimeric molecules, alpha,omega-bis(4-alkoxyanilinebenzylidene-4'-carbonyloxy)pentanes. These four phases each show characteristic features. The SmAPF shows a low threshold electric field for ferroelectric switching and a large dielectric strength due to the collective fluctuation mode of dipoles at around 500 Hz. Both the threshold electric field and dielectric strength are strongly dependent on the cell thickness. The threshold field decreases to 0.1 V mu m(-1), and the dielectric strength increases up to a huge value of 10,000 as the cell thickness increases up to 80 mu m. The SmAP(A) also shows a similar collective mode at around 2 kHz with a relatively small dielectric strength (around 200), which may be induced by the anti-phase rotation of dipoles in adjacent layers. In these collective modes, the dielectric strength is found to be inversely proportional to the switching threshold field. On the other hand, another anti-ferroelectric SmCAP(A) as well as the paraelectric SmA show only the non-collective mode (i.e., rotational relaxation of individual molecules around their short axes) at a high frequency of around 100 kHz.

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