Periodic Reporting for period 1 - LCFlow (Liquid Crystals in Flow: A New Era in Sensing and Diagnostics)
Okres sprawozdawczy: 2022-09-01 do 2025-02-28
This project is designed to open a new era in the sensing and diagnostic systems involving the use of LCs by introducing a microfluidic flow. The system of interest differs significantly from its counterparts by introducing LC-water interfaces that facilitate the exchange of analytical species during flow. However, the design of such a system is challenging, and critical understanding is required to proceed toward the next generation LCFlow platforms.
This project aims to design highly sensitive, dynamically tunable, and label-free LC-based fluidic sensing platforms and it is structured to understand:
1) The effect of the presence of the “soft” interfaces and the LC interfacial anchoring on the flow regimes, and the LC director profiles,
2) The role of the type, scale, shape and the symmetry of the chemical heterogeneity at the contacting surfaces on the LC flow and configurations,
3) The dynamic influences of the changes occurring at the contact interfaces on the configuration and the optical appearance of the LC medium,
The context of the project is positioned at the intersection of fundamental knowledge generation and application. It is highly interdisciplinary involving physics, chemistry, materials science and engineering.
The LC-aqueous multiphase flow platform that is capable of applying bulk and interfacial shear independently in a controlled environment is of critical importance and is a breakthrough in studying the role of shear on structures of the LCs at their responsive interfaces. We identified the fundamental set of the maintained nematic LC structures and transitions as a function of shearing and found a critical dependence of the shear strength and the orthogonality of the interfacial and bulk nematic directors on the LC structures maintained. This progress opened a field for studying the role of shear experimentally for various systems (including more complex anchoring conditions and LC phases) that will also trigger additional studies on the theory and simulations of flowing LCs. Future progress in this direction will serve in the engineering of LC-based flow systems for responsive applications.
We developed experimental methods to study the influence of the heterogenous interfacial anchoring of LCs at hard and soft interfaces on their flow properties. Our system is composed of LCs with soft, active interfaces that allows to modify the chemical and physical state of the LC interfaces in a controlled environment. Such an approach is novel and beyond the state-of-the-art because it is the first time the influence of heterogeneity and shear conditions at LC interfaces are being explored. Such approaches will provide additional modality in the design of LC-based optical systems.