Title: Liquid Crystal Optics and Electro-Optics
1Liquid Crystal Optics and Electro-Optics
2Introduction
- Most studied applied properties
light-scattering ability - externally applied field control or realign the
anisotropic liquid crystal axis, thereby
controlling the effective refractive index and
phase shift - form the basis for various optical transmission,
reflection, switching, and modulation
applications. - LCs are noted for their large birefringence and
easy susceptibility to external field
perturbation. - basic principles and seek only some general
understanding by dealing with analytically or
conceptually solvable cases.
3LCD pixel
- Schematic of a typical liquid crystal display
pixel consisting of electronic driving circuit,
polarizers, liquid crystal cell, color filter,
and phase plate
4Content
- 0. Introduction
- Electro-Optics of Anisotropic and Birefringent
Crystals - Electro-Optics of Nematic Liquid Crystals
- Nematic Liquid Crystal Switches and Displays
- Electro-Optical Effects in Other Phases of Liquid
Crystals - Nondisplay Applications of Liquid Crystals
51. Electro-Optics of Anisotropic and Birefringent
Crystals
- Anisotropic, Uniaxial, and Biaxial Optical
Crystals - Index Ellipsoid in the Presence of an Electric
Field Linear Electro-Optics Effect - Polarizers and Retardation Plate
- Basic Electro-Optics Modulation
6Permittivity tensor (????)
The polarization and dielectric displacement are
now given by
The elements of the permittivity tensor depend on
the choice of coordinate system
7Principal axes
- A coordinate system can be found such that the
tensor is diagonal i.e.
This coordinate system define the principal
axes and principal planes associated to the
crystal. The corresponding refractive indexes
are known as principal indexes.
8Biaxial, Uniaxial isotropic crystal
- Crystals with three different principal
refractive indexes are referred to as biaxial
crystals - Crystal with two different principal refractive
indexes are referred to as uniaxial crystals - For uniaxial crystals, the refractive indexes
are nxnyno, and nzne where o stands for
ordinary axis and e for extraordinary axis. - If nogtne the crystal is said to be a positive
uniaxial crystal
9Uniaxial crystal
- such as nematic liquid crystal
- n1 n2 no, ordinary ray n3 ne
extraordinary ray - index ellipsoid
The ellipsoid in (x, y, z) intersect the axis
at x nx y ny z nz
10For light propagate along direction k The
direction of D is in the plan perpendicular to k.
Ordinary wave Do perpendicular to the z-k
plane no(?) ? n0
Extraordinary wave De in the z-k plane but
perpendicular to k
11Uniaxial crystals (cont)
12Presence of an Electric FieldLinear
Electro-Optics Effect
In the presence of an applied field, the index
ellipsoid becomes
(1/n2)i are dependent on the applied field E.
13Linear optical effect
14Examples
- For a widely used electro-optics crystal such as
lithium niobate (LiNbO3), r33 30.8 (in units of
10-12 m/V), r13 8.6,r22 3.4, and r42 28,
with ne 2.29 and no 2.20 (at 550 nm). - For these values of electro-optics coefficients
(10-11 m/V), an applied dc voltage of 10,000 V is
needed to create a phase shift of in a crystal
of centimeter length. - liquid crystal electro-optics devices, the
typical ac voltage needed is around 1 V and the
liquid crystal thickness is on the order of a few
microns
15Polarizers and Retardation Plate
Typical electro-optic modulation scheme with
polarizeranalyzer sandwiching an electro-optics
crystals and a retardation plate.
16Linear and circular polarizers
- Linear polarizers are usually made of anisotropic
absorbing materials in which the absorption along
a crystalline axis is much stronger than the
orthogonal axis - Circular polarizers are usually made by putting
in tandem(??) a linear polarizer and a
birefringent retardation (????) plate, with the
polarization vector bisecting the so-called fast
and slow axes of the retardation plate
17Polarization of output light
Various states of polarization resulting from the
addition of two orthogonal components of a
polarized light with a relative phase shift.
18Basic Electro-Optics Modulation
For A is oriented at 45 with respect to the
crystalline axes
?
?
At the exit plane of the crystal of length l
19Basic Electro-Optics Modulation
? ? crystal phase shift by retardation plate.
By summing the components of Ex? and Ey? on the
transmission axis of the output polarizer (along
y)
202. Electro-optics of Nematic Liquid Crystals
- In general, the distortions on the electronic
wave function of liquid crystal molecules caused
by an applied field do not cause appreciable
change to its contribution to the refractive
indices - However, the orientation of the molecules can be
dramatically altered by the applied field - principal mechanism used in liquid-crystal-based
electro-optical devices.
21Dual-Frequency Liquid Crystals
transparent conductor ITO to allow the
application of an electric field across the cell
AC instead of DC Avoid current flow, degration
along E away E
22Mixing and doping
23Dual-frequency liquid crystal
- Since the dielectric anisotropy is frequency
dependent (cf. Fig. 3.5), one could create a
mixture of liquid crystals with different
dielectric dispersions such that the resulting
so-called dual-frequency liquid crystal (DFLC)
possesses an effective positive anisotropy at one
frequency of the applied ac electric field, but
possesses a negative anisotropy at another ac
frequency.
24Freedericksz Transition Revisited
Geometry for observing (a) the S (splay)
deformation, (b) the B (bend) deformation, and
(c) the T (twist) deformation.
25Case 1 One-elastic-constant approximation.
Standard variation method
??
Reminder ? ?(2/d)?m d?/dz z2/d 0!
26Solution
For relatively small reorientation angles
only if E gt EF
27Case 2 Freedericksz transition voltage including
elastic anisotropies.
28Case 3 Freedericksz transition voltage including
elastic conductivity.
- The maximum reorientation angle ?m is described
by
29Field-Induced Refractive Index Change and Phase
Shift
Director axis reorientation profile in the cell
at various applied voltage above the Freedericksz
transition.
30Phase shift for light passing through
Approximation
Twisted configuration with maximum angle 900
31current liquid crystal display devices twisted
configuration.
- Tilting and unwinding of the director axis of a
90 twisted nematic liquid crystal cell under the
action of an applied field.
323. NEMATIC LIQUID CRYSTAL SWITCHES AND DISPLAYS
- To obtain higher resolution, faster response,
wider field of view, larger display area, and
more functions in each display pixel. - Two types transmissive and reflective
- make use of the polarizing and birefringent
properties - conjunction with polarizers and phase
(retardation) plates - broadband (from near UV to far infrared)
birefringence, and transparency
33A twisted nematic liquid-crystal switch.
- When the electric field is absent, the LC
cell acts as a polarization rotator the
light is trans-mitted. - When the electric field is present, the
cells rotatory power is suspended and the
light is blocked.
34Liquid Crystal Switch On-Axis Consideration for
Twist,Planar, and Homeotropic Aligned Cells
- normally black (NB) mode two parallel polarizers
- normally white (NW) mode two orthogonal
polarizers
35Off-Axis Transmission, Viewing Angle, and
Birefringence Compensation
- Has to be considered for display application
- transmission function T is now a function of many
variables - Example NB mode
- For on-axis light, the initial transmission is 0.
When the voltage is on, the transmission is at a
maximum for the on-axis light - for the off-axis light, the e and o waves will
pick up an extra phase shift because of the extra
optical path length
36Birefringent compensation film
- to place a birefringent film (of opposite
anisotropy to that of the liquid crystal)
adjacent to the LC film
limiting case of ? 0
compensation film should have birefringence of
opposite sign to that of the liquid crystal
37Sophisticated treatment
- For arbitrary angle ? or director axis
angular and spatial distributions, and more
complicated cell structure, the phase shift, and
therefore the transmission of light through the
cell and other accompanying polarization
selective elements, is not amenable to simple
analytical treatment. More sophisticated Jones
matrix methods or numerical technique such as the
finite difference time domain (FDTD) numerical
methods discussed in the next chapter are needed
to solve such a complex propaga- tion problem.
38Liquid Crystal Display Electronics
39Optical modulation of LCD
404. Electro-optical Effects in Other Phases of
Liquid Crystals
- nematics are the most extensively used
- other phases (smectic, cholesteric, etc.) and
mixed systems capable of field-induced
reorientation have also been employed for
electro-optical studies and applications - ferroelectric liquid crystals, generally switch
faster than nematic cells
41Surface Stabilized FLC
- Ferroelectric liquid crystal under an applied
field,
Typical values
42Approximation
- Under the assumption that e is appreciable, the
first term can be neglected
solution
43An practical case
? tilt angle phase retardation ? 2?d?n/?
44Soft-Mode FLCs
- SMFLCs use changes in the tilt ? while ? remains
constant. capable of continuous intensity change - SMFLCs employ smectic-A phase
- experimental setup
455. NONDISPLAY APPLICATIONS OF LIQUID CRYSTALS
- extremely broad spectral range (from near UV to
far infrared and into the microwave regime). - fluid nature and compatibility with most
optoelectronic materials - a whole host of tunable lens, filters, switches,
and beam/image processing devices have emerged. - good candidates for biochemical sensing
applications due to organic nature - light emitting diodes and electroluminescence
devices
46LC Spatial Light Modulator
- A typical optically addressed liquid crystal
spatial light modulator (OALCSLM) operating in
the reflective mode
47Tunable Photonic Crystals with LC Infiltrated
Nanostructures
- Photonic crystals in 1-, 2- and 3D forms made of
various optoelectronic materials - photonic crystals can function as tunable
filters, switches, and lasing devices - optical holography offers a quick one-step
process for the fabrication of photonic crystals
(limited)
48Tunable Frequency Selective Planar Structures
Transmission
Unit cell of an all-dielectric polarization
independent FSS for operation in the visible
region as a stop-band filter.
reflection
49Covered with LC
50Liquid Crystals for Molecular Sensing and
Detection
51Beam Steering, Routing, and Optical Switching and
Laser Hardened Optics
- Although most optical elements involve low level
light, liquid crystals are actually excellent
laser-hardened materials capable of handling very
intense pulsed lasers or high power continuous
wave cw lasers. - Intensity 1010 W/cm2
- liquid crystals also do not suffer any
structural/chemical damages.