Abstract

ABSTRACTWe present the results of photon correlation spectroscopy investigations of the influence of confinement, interface, porous matrix structure, pore size and shape on the dynamic behavior of nematic liquid crystals (LC) dispersed in porous matrices with randomly oriented, interconnected pores (porous glasses) and parallel cylindrical pores (Anopore membranes). Investigations of LC in cylindrical pores together with studies in random porous matrices, makes it possible to separate the role of random structure and domain formation from the contributions due to existence of LC - solid pore wall interface and pure finite size effect in relaxation of order parameter or director fluctuations. In the temperature range below nematic - isotropie phase transition temperature we observed two overlapping relaxational processes which are satisfactorily described by the decay functionf(q,t) =a·exp(–t/τ1) + (1–a)·exp(–xz), wherex=ln(t/τ0)/ln(τ2/τ0) and τ0= 10−8s. For LC in 100 Å random pores the second term describing the slow process dominates, whereas for 200 Å and 2000 Å cylindrical pores as well as 1000 Å random pores the contribution from the first term (fast process) is more visible. Since the slow relaxational process which does not exist in the bulk LC and broad spectrum of relaxation times (10−6- 10)s appear not only for LC in random pores but in cylindrical as well, we conclude that differences in dynamical behavior of confined LC from that in the bulk are mainly due to the existence of the interface.

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