Abstract

Order and frustration play an important role in liquid-crystalline polymer networks (elastomers). The first part of this review is concerned with elastomers in the nematic state and starts with a discussion of nematic polymers, the properties of which are strongly determined by the anisotropy of the polymer backbone. Neutron scattering and X-ray measurements provide the basis for a description of their conformation and chain anisotropy. In nematic elastomers, the macroscopic shape is determined by the anisotropy of the polymer backbone in combination with the elastic response of elastomer network. The second part of the review concentrates on smectic liquid-crystalline systems that show quasi-long-range order of the smectic layers (positional correlations that decay algebraically). In smectic elastomers, the smectic layers cannot move easily across the crosslinking points where the polymer backbone is attached. Consequently, layer displacement fluctuations are suppressed, which effectively stabilizes the one-dimensional periodic layer structure and under certain circumstances can reinstate true long-range order. On the other hand, the crosslinks provide a random network of defects that could destroy the smectic order. Thus, in smectic elastomers there exist two opposing tendencies: the suppression of layer displacement fluctuations that enhances translational order, and the effect of random disorder that leads to a highly frustrated equilibrium state. These effects can be investigated with high-resolution X-ray diffraction and are discussed in some detail for smectic elastomers of different topology.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call