Helical Chirality of Supramolecular Columns and Spheres Self‐Organizes Complex Liquid Crystals, Crystals, and Quasicrystals

Author(s):  
Virgil Percec ◽  
Qi Xiao
1989 ◽  
Vol 149 ◽  
Author(s):  
E P Raynes

ABSTRACTThe first major progress towards complex LCD's has been made using arrays of thin film transistors (TFT's) fabricated using amorphous silicon (a - Si) technology. However, apart from other two and three terminal devices, there are also two new LCD technologies which directly improve the performance of the LCD without the need for extra switching elements. These are the supertwist (or STN) LCD and displays based on ferroelectric liquid crystals (FELC). These two alternative technologies are described and teir performance compared with that of displays fabricated using α - Si TFT's.


2004 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabel M. Saez ◽  
John W. Goodby

2000 ◽  
Vol 2 (20) ◽  
pp. 3189-3192 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawn K. Collins ◽  
Glenn P. A. Yap ◽  
Alex G. Fallis

Author(s):  
M. Locke ◽  
J. T. McMahon

The fat body of insects has always been compared functionally to the liver of vertebrates. Both synthesize and store glycogen and lipid and are concerned with the formation of blood proteins. The comparison becomes even more apt with the discovery of microbodies and the localization of urate oxidase and catalase in insect fat body.The microbodies are oval to spherical bodies about 1μ across with a depression and dense core on one side. The core is made of coiled tubules together with dense material close to the depressed membrane. The tubules may appear loose or densely packed but always intertwined like liquid crystals, never straight as in solid crystals (Fig. 1). When fat body is reacted with diaminobenzidine free base and H2O2 at pH 9.0 to determine the distribution of catalase, electron microscopy shows the enzyme in the matrix of the microbodies (Fig. 2). The reaction is abolished by 3-amino-1, 2, 4-triazole, a competitive inhibitor of catalase. The fat body is the only tissue which consistantly reacts positively for urate oxidase. The reaction product is sharply localized in granules of about the same size and distribution as the microbodies. The reaction is inhibited by 2, 6, 8-trichloropurine, a competitive inhibitor of urate oxidase.


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