The following relates to the high-speed optical switching devices, high-speed phase retarder devices, high-speed intensity modulation devices, display technologies, fiber optical communication technologies, and related arts.
Liquid crystal materials are widely used as optical modulators, for example as display pixels (e.g. in televisions, computer monitors, and so forth), as signal modulators in fiber optical communications, and so forth.
However, a significant difficulty is that the switching speeds achievable with liquid crystal devices have heretofore been relatively slow, exhibiting switching speeds typically no better than 0.5 msec (that is, 0.5 milliseconds, also suitably written as 500 microseconds or 500 μs), and the switching speed is of order several milliseconds in many liquid crystal devices. These relatively slow switching speeds are insufficient for some applications such as three-dimensional (3D) television, field-sequential display technologies, high speed fiber optical communication links, and so forth.
Another difficulty with some liquid crystal devices is the need to provide an alignment layer on one or both substrate surfaces. This increases processing, and formation of the alignment layer by conventional techniques such as mechanical rubbing can introduce contaminants into the device and adversely impact device fabrication yield.
In some illustrative embodiments disclosed herein, an apparatus comprises a phase retarder including a liquid crystal cell containing electrodes and an active layer comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure, and electrical switching circuitry operatively connected with the electrodes of the phase retarder and configured in cooperation with the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its dynamic range with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of less than 500 microseconds and a 90%-to-10% decay time of less than 500 microseconds. In some embodiments, the electrical switching circuitry is configured in cooperation with the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its dynamic range with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of 200 microseconds or less and a 90%-to-10% decay time of 200 microseconds or less. In some embodiments the electrical switching circuitry is configured in cooperation with the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its dynamic range with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of 200 microseconds or less and a 90%-to-10% decay time of 200 microseconds or less over a temperature range of at least 30° C. In some embodiments the electrical switching circuitry is configured in cooperation with the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its dynamic range with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of less than 500 microseconds and a 90%-to-10% decay time of less than 500 microseconds over a temperature range of at least 30° C. The dynamic range of the phase retarder may be suitably defined in some embodiments as the phase retardation range obtainable by biasing the electrodes of the phase retarder. In other embodiments, the apparatus further comprises polarizers disposed on opposite sides of the phase retarder, and the dynamic range of the phase retarder is defined as the range of light transmission intensity through the optical assembly comprising the phase retarder and the polarizers obtainable by biasing the electrodes of the phase retarder. In some embodiments the polymer network has pores of less than or about 200 nm. The liquid crystal material may, by way of illustrative example, comprise a nonchiral nematic liquid crystal material, a chiral nematic liquid crystal material, or a chiral smectic liquid crystal material. In some embodiments the phase retarder does not include an alignment layer. The polymer network may comprise a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase of type I having a body-centered cubic structure using a washout/refill procedure.
In some illustrative embodiments disclosed herein, a display includes an array of pixels, in which each pixel of the array of pixels includes an instance of the phase retarder of the immediately preceding paragraph sandwiched between polarizers. The display further includes the electrical switching circuitry of the immediately preceding paragraph comprising pixel driver circuitry operatively connected with the electrodes of the phase retarder of each pixel of the array of pixels. The display still further includes a display controller comprising an electronic component programmed to generate and communicate to the electrical switching circuitry electrical signals indicating gray scale values for the pixels of the array of pixels. In such a display embodiment, the dynamic range of the phase retarder is suitably defined as the range of gray scale intensity obtainable by biasing the electrodes of the phase retarder.
In some illustrative embodiments disclosed herein, a method comprises: providing a phase retarder including a liquid crystal cell containing electrodes and an active layer comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure; and applying voltages to the electrodes of the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its phase retardation dynamic range obtainable by biasing the electrodes of the phase retarder with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of less than 500 microseconds and a 90%-to-10% decay time of less than 500 microseconds. In some embodiments the applying comprises applying voltages to the electrodes of the phase retarder to switch the phase retarder over its phase retardation dynamic range with both a 10%-to-90% rise time of 200 microseconds or less and a 90%-to-10% decay time of 200 microseconds or less. In some embodiments the providing comprises shaping the polymer network by a blue phase of type I having a body-centered cubic structure using a washout/refill procedure.
In some illustrative method embodiments of the immediately preceding paragraph, the providing comprises performing the washout/refill procedure by operations including: filling the liquid crystal cell with a first mixture comprising a nematic liquid crystal, a chiral dopant, a reactive monomer, and a photoinitiator; controlling temperature of the liquid crystal cell containing the first mixture to convert the first mixture to a blue phase; irradiating the liquid crystal cell with the first mixture in the blue phase with ultraviolet light at a wavelength and exposure duration effective to polymerize the reactive monomer to form a three-dimensional polymer network inside the liquid crystal cell; disposing the liquid crystal cell in a solvent to wash out the first mixture while leaving the three-dimensional polymer network in the liquid crystal cell; and refilling the liquid crystal cell with the liquid crystal material of the active layer.
In some illustrative embodiments disclosed herein, an apparatus comprises: a phase retarder including a liquid crystal cell containing electrodes and an active layer comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure; and electrical switching circuitry configured to operate the phase retarder at a switching speed of less than 500 microseconds for both rise time and decay time. In some embodiments the electrical switching circuitry is configured to operate the phase retarder at a switching speed of 200 microseconds or less for both rise time and decay time. In some embodiments the polymer network has pores of less than or about 200 nm. In some embodiments the liquid crystal material comprises a nonchiral nematic liquid crystal material, a chiral nematic liquid crystal material, or a chiral smectic liquid crystal material. In some embodiments the liquid crystal cell does not include an alignment layer.
The drawings are described in the referencing text in this application. Except where otherwise indicated, the drawings are understood to be diagrammatic and not to scale.
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A backlight, such as a diagrammatically illustrated (LED)-based backlight 22 integrated into the pixel array 10, generates illumination that is modulated by the pixel array 10. In other embodiments, the backlight is suitably an incandescent, fluorescent, or halogen backlight lamp which may be integrated with or separate from the pixel array 10. Light from the backlight 22 passes through the pixel array 10 and is modulated by the pixels to transform the input backlighting into modulated display light output. For illustrative purposes, light 24 output after processing by illustrative pixel 12 is diagrammatically indicated.
The illustrative pixel 12 includes an active layer 30 comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure. The liquid crystal/polymer network layer 30 is disposed in a liquid crystal cell sandwiched between transparent substrates 32, 34, one or both of which include electrodes 36 disposed on the side contacting the active layer 30. In illustrative
The liquid crystal cell comprising active layer 30 sandwiched between substrates 32, 34 and including electrodes 36 defines an electrically controlled phase retarder whose phase retardation is controlled by the electrical bias applied to the electrodes 36. Such a device may be useful by itself, for example in a modulator for certain types of fiber optical communication systems that employ phase modulation. For the illustrative display application, the phase retarder 30, 32, 34 is converted to an intensity modulator (i.e. gray scale pixel 12) by further inclusion of polarizers 40, 42. (Note that in the art one of these polarizers is sometimes referred to as an analyzer). For a color display, a color filter 44 is typically provided, with various pixels of the pixel array 10 having different-color filters, e.g. red, green, or blue color filters to implement red, green, and blue pixels, respectively. Alternatively, in a field-sequential display configuration the color filter 44 is omitted and instead the backlight 22 is cycled between, e.g., red, green, and blue color output cycling faster than the human eye response.
In some applications of interest, the pixel driver circuitry 14 (or other electronic controller applying voltage to the electrodes 36) operates at high speed, for example switching the pixel 12 between minimum and maximum transmission levels (corresponding to switching the phase retarder 30, 32, 34, 36 between minimum and maximum operative phase retardation levels) at a minimum→maximum transition time interval (“rise time” τon) and a maximum→minimum transition time interval (“decay time τoff) of each less than one millisecond, and preferably less than 500 microseconds, and still more preferably at 200 microseconds or less (where the transition is measured between 10% of the minimum and 90% of the maximum, see illustrative
It is disclosed herein that suitably fast-switching liquid crystal devices are achievable using active layer 30 comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure. Without being limited to any particular theory of operation, it is believed that the unexpectedly high switching speeds obtained for these liquid crystal devices are due to a small pore size of around 200 nm observed for the blue-phase shaped polymer network, together with improved temperature stability of the refill liquid crystal material as compared with that of the blue phase of the liquid crystal material used to shape the polymer network.
In the following, fabrication and testing is described of some actually constructed liquid crystal devices including the active layer 30 comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure.
Blue phases of liquid crystal materials are an example of a frustrated soft matter system. They are formed by chiral molecules that tend to arrange locally into structures with two axes of twist (so-called double twist). However, the double-twist structure cannot extend itself to fill the entire volume of the liquid crystal cell defined between the substrates 32, 34. Rather, the double-twist structure is stabilized by a lattice of topological defects known as disclinations. A disclination is a defect in the orientation of the liquid crystal director ordering, and is roughly analogous to a dislocation in a crystal which is a defect in positional order. At the cores of disclinations, the orientational order is reduced, so that the material can be considered as partially melted. A consequence of this is that the blue phase in single compounds is typically observed only within a close proximity of the isotropic liquid phase. Depending on the arrangement of ordered and disordered regions, three classes of the blue phase can be distinguished: blue phase type I (BPI) which has a body-centered cubic structure; blue phase type II (BPII) which has a simple cubic structure; and blue phase type III (BPIII) which comprises an amorphous lattice. In the absence of an electric field, the all three types of blue phase are optically isotropic and show no birefringence. An applied electric field {right arrow over (E)} lifts the symmetry and causes birefringence that is described as a Kerr effect, ΔnE=λKE2, where λ is the wavelength of light at which the birefringence is measured, K is the Kerr constant, generally on the order of 10−10 m/V2 to 10−9 m/V2, and E=|{right arrow over (E)}| is the magnitude of the applied electric field.
A problem with employing liquid crystal material in a blue phase is that liquid crystal materials known to enter the blue phase are found to maintain the blue phase only over a narrow temperature range near the isotropic liquid phase. This makes such devices undesirable for commercial applications such as displays. Improved temperature stability has been obtained by employing a polymer-stabilized blue phase in which the blue phase is stabilized by a polymer network. Kikuchi et al., Nat Mater vol. 1 no. 1 page 64 (2002); Coles et al., Nature vol. 436 (7053), page 997 (2005); Hyunseok et al., Appl Phys Lett vol. 101 page 13 (2012). Polymer-stabilized blue phase materials have been shown to be operative over a wider temperature range as compared with blue phase materials. Another known variant is to employ a washout-and-refill operation to produce a polymer network that is shaped by the blue phase of a liquid crystal material, and then to wash out the liquid crystal material providing the blue phase and refill the liquid crystal cell (with the blue phase-shaped polymer network remaining in place) using a refill liquid crystal material having more favorable temperature stability characteristics. See Castles et al., Nat Mater vol. 11 no. 7, page 599 (2012). Castles et al. disclosed the washout-and-refill method produces chiral blue phase-like structures when the blue phase-templated polymer is refilled with a non-chiral nematic liquid crystal.
However, it has been reported that polymer stabilization of the blue phase introduces substantial hysteresis into the electrooptic response. Chen et al., J Disp Technol vol. 6 no. 8, page 318 (2010). The hysteresis produces a different optical birefringence when the field is increased versus when the field is decreased, and also leads to build-up and enhancement of residual birefringence after multiple cycles of switching. These effects make such devices undesirable for commercial applications such as displays.
As demonstrated herein, the active layer 30 comprising liquid crystal material stabilized by a polymer network that is shaped by a blue phase using a washout/refill procedure exhibits negligible hysteresis (see
In an actually performed washout-and-refill fabrication procedure to manufacture an optical retarder including the active layer 30, the liquid crystal in blue phase was formed using a mixture of a nematic liquid crystal MLC2048 (Merck), chiral dopant S811 (Merck), reactive monomers RM257 (BDH, Ltd) and TMPTA (Aldrich), and photoinitiator IRG651 (Aldrich) with weight percentages 51 wt %, 36.1 wt %, 7.3 wt %, 5 wt %, and 0.6 wt %, respectively. The mixture was injected into a liquid crystal cell of thickness 3.8 micron in its isotropic phase. The liquid crystal cell included two glass substrates with no alignment layers. (In general, the devices disclosed herein do not employ alignment layers.) Temperature was controlled by a Linkam hot stage (with programmer Linkam TMS94). The mixture was cooled down at a rate of 0.2° C./min, and the blue phase was observed in a temperature range of 42° C. to 22° C. On heating, the blue phase was observed from 31° C. to 43° C. The material with a supercooled blue phase type I (BPI) state was kept at 24° C. and irradiated with ultraviolet (UV) light (wavelength 365 nm, intensity 1 mW/cm2) for 3 hours. UV irradiation triggered polymerization resulting in a three-dimensional (3D) periodic structure. The clearing temperature of the polymer-stabilized blue phase was 56° C.
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During the refill process, the polymer networks that remained confined between two glass plates was employed. These cells were refilled with a commercial mixture E7 (EM Industries). The nematic phase of E7 is stable in the broad range between −30° C. and 58° C. It is nonchiral and thus cannot form the blue phase by itself. However, the E7 liquid crystal material disposed in the liquid crystal cell in contact with the blue phase-shaped polymer template shows textures very similar to that of the blue phase platelet textures, in the entire temperature range of the nematic phase.
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Disclosed herein are fast electro-optic switching (response time 0.1 millisecond or faster) of a nematic liquid crystal in a polymer template shaped by blue phase. The template is formed by photo-polymerizing a photosensitive component of a liquid crystal blue phase mixture; the polymer template memorizes the periodic structure of the blue phase with cubic symmetry and submicron period. In the field-free state, the nematic in polymer template is optically isotropic. The applied electric field causes non-zero optical retardance. The approach thus combines beneficial structural and optical features of the blue phase (spatial cubic structure with submicron periodicity) and superior thermodynamic stability and electrooptic switching ability of the nematic filler.
The illustrative samples have blue phase type I (BPI) body-centered cubic structure. However, the disclosed results are also expected to apply to washout/refill devices with blue phase type II (BPII) simple cubic structure. While a nonchiral nematic liquid crystal material was used as the refill material, other refill liquid crystal materials such a nonchiral nematic liquid crystal material, chiral nematic liquid crystal material, a chiral smectic liquid crystal material, or so forth are expected to provide similarly fast electro-optic switching (due to the small pore size of about 200 nm), and the refill liquid crystal material can be chosen for desired properties such as thermodynamic stability.
It will be appreciated that various arrangements of the above-disclosed and other features and functions, or alternatives thereof, may be desirably combined into many other different systems or applications. It will be further appreciated that various presently unforeseen or unanticipated alternatives, modifications, variations or improvements therein may be subsequently made by those skilled in the art which are also intended to be encompassed by the following claims.
This application is a national stage entry of PCT/US2014/040174 filed May 30, 2014 and titled “FAST ELECTROOPTIC SWITCHING DEVICES EMPLOYING POLYMER TEMPLATE SHAPED BY BLUE PHASE LIQUID CRYSTAL” which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/828,732 filed May 30, 2013 and titled “FAST ELECTROOPTIC SWITCHING DEVICES EMPLOYING POLYMER TEMPLATE SHAPED BY BLUE PHASE LIQUID CRYSTAL”. U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/828,732 filed May 30, 2013 and titled “FAST ELECTROOPTIC SWITCHING DEVICES EMPLOYING POLYMER TEMPLATE SHAPED BY BLUE PHASE LIQUID CRYSTAL” is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
This invention was made with Government support under grant/contract no. NSF DMR 1121288 awarded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). The Government has certain rights in this invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US14/40174 | 5/30/2014 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61828732 | May 2013 | US |