Abstract

Polymer dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) films are formed of droplets of liquid crystal (LC) held in a polymer matrix. Similar to aligned LC films, PDLCs exhibit the acousto-optic (AO) effect when excited by acoustic waves of sufficient amplitude, whereby the PDLC film becomes transparent in the excited regions (acoustic clearing). Despite decades of research there is still debate over the mechanisms of the AO effect for the case of LC films, with several competing theories, and AO effects in PDLC have not been studied theoretically. This paper explores the AO effect in PDLC both experimentally and theoretically, and attempts a theoretical description of the observed phenomena based on the theoretical approach by Selinger etal. for aligned LC films. The acousto-optic effect in PDLC is shown to be due to direct interaction of acoustic waves with LC droplets, rather than due to compression of the droplet itself. Polarizing microscopy revealed changes in droplet shape at excited points. This is consistent with reorientation as a contributing factor, possibly coexisting with flows at higher excitation powers. In previous experimental studies PDLC films were prepared with cover slides, in the same way as LC AO cells, significantly limiting applications by adding complexity to the design. Also, to exhibit AO clearing it was considered that the PDLC needed to be prepared with high LC concentrations (over 75% by weight). We demonstrate that no cover slide is necessary, and that PDLC coatings without a cover have improved sensitivity to acoustic waves. We demonstrate the AO effect for LC concentrations as low as 40% by weight. The ability to use standard composition PDLC, with no top cover, is paving the way to paint-on visual ultrasound sensors.

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