Abstract

Abstract We have performed a structural study of the liquid crystal (LC) octylcyanobiphenyl (8CB), deposited on gratings and flat surfaces, using high resolution X-ray scattering as a function of film thickness. 8CB is a room temperature smectic A2, with a layer spacing of 31·6 Å. Glass was used as substrate and treated with either one of the organic surfactants MAP or DMOAP. Surface tension forces cause the liquid crystal molecules to align perpendicularly with respect to the plane of the substrate at the air interface. Competing with the LC-air interface, which is a strong aligner, a grating at the LC-substrate interface produces distortions in the smectic layering with an excess of elastic energy, which favours alignment parallel to the substrate and the grooves. Our purpose was to detect the onset and evolution of parallel alignment as a function of film thickness. The studies used 9 keV (1·403 Å) X-rays focused to a spot size of 2 mm2 at the sample position. In-plane scans, which detect the smectic layers perpendicular to the plane of the substrate, were done at angles φ = 0° and 90° with respect to the gratings to ascertain the molecular orientation, at a nominal X-ray incidence angle of α = 0°. In order to observe regions of varying smectic layer orientation within the film, we performed a series of scans where the out-of-plane tilt angle χ changed from 0°, corresponding to scattering in the plane of the film, to 90°, which corresponds to scattering normal to the surface of the film. The results from these scans were fitted to a multilayer model where the orientation of the smectic layers varies as a function of film depth. The analysis confirmed our earlier observations that surface tension at the air interface plays a dominant role in the alignment of the LC molecules.

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