scholarly journals Multifunctional Optical Device with a Continuous Tunability over 500 nm Spectral Range Using Polymerized Cholesteric Liquid Crystals

Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 3720
Author(s):  
Mi-Yun Jeong ◽  
Hyeon-Jong Choi ◽  
Keumcheol Kwak ◽  
Younghun Yu

We report that polymerization makes a robust, practically applicable multifunctional optical device with a continuous wavelength tunable over 500 nm spectral range using UV-polymerizable cholesteric liquid crystals (CLCs). It can be used as a circular polarizer generating an extremely high degree of circularly polarized light with |g| = 1.85~2.00. It can also be used for optical notch filters, bandwidth-variable (from ~28 nm to ~93 nm) bandpass filters, mirrors, and intensity-variable beam splitters. Furthermore, this CLC device shows excellent stability owing to the polymerization of CLC cells. Its performance remains constant for a long time (~2 years) after a high-temperature exposure (170 °C for 1 h) and an extremely high laser beam intensity exposure (~143 W/cm2 of CW 532 nm diode laser and ~2.98 MW/cm2 of Nd: YAG pulse laser operation for two hours, respectively). The optical properties of polymerized CLC were theoretically analyzed by Berreman’s 4 × 4 matrix method. The characteristics of this device were significantly improved by introducing an anti-reflection layer on the device. This wavelength-tunable and multifunctional device could dramatically increase optical research efficiency in various spectroscopic works. It could be applied to many instruments using visible and near-infrared wavelengths.

2007 ◽  
Vol 16 (04) ◽  
pp. 471-483 ◽  
Author(s):  
SVETLANA V. SERAK ◽  
NELSON V. TABIRYAN ◽  
TIMOTHY J. BUNNING

Cholesteric liquid crystals (CLCs) which possess a periodicity in the visible portion of the spectra, exhibit selective reflection of circularly polarized light. The ability to modulate this color through a variety of means has been explored, including work which incorporated azobenzene LCs. Two types of systems have recently been explored utilizing wavelength-specific cis-trans isomerization processes, which enable unprecedented photosensitivity. The first system exhibits large blue or red-shifted changes in reflection wavelength upon visible irradiation. The second system exploits the metastable, long-lived photoinduced isotropic state, whose return to the reflective Grandjean texture can be induced by wavelength-specific radiation. We demonstrate nonlinear transmission from both types of systems, starting with submicrowatt power levels and spanning over four orders of magnitude dynamic range. The power dependence and temporal evolution of this effect (10–100 ms) is documented here for red or green laser wavelengths. The effect for the former case is due to bandgap auto-tuning, when the laser beam is tuning the CLC Bragg reflection band to its own wavelength. For the latter case, autonomous, optical feedback due to bandgap restoration is the cause of the nonlinear transmission properties.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. eaat8276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sang Seok Lee ◽  
Jong Bin Kim ◽  
Yun Ho Kim ◽  
Shin-Hyun Kim

2004 ◽  
Vol 43 (26) ◽  
pp. 5006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haiqing Xianyu ◽  
Sadeg Faris ◽  
Gregory P. Crawford

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