Self-Assembly of Liquid Crystals in Nanoporous Solids for Adaptive Photonic Metamaterials
Kathrin Sentker, Arda Yildirim, Milena Lippmann, Arne W. Zantop,, Florian Bertram, Tommy Hofmann, Oliver H. Seeck, Andriy V. Kityk, Marco G., Mazza, Andreas Sch\"onhals, Patrick Huber

TL;DR
This study explores how embedding liquid crystals in nanoporous solids enables the design of adaptive photonic metamaterials with tunable optical properties, driven by temperature and pore structure control.
Contribution
It reveals complex self-assembly behaviors of liquid crystals in nanopores and demonstrates their potential for adjustable optical anisotropy in metamaterials.
Findings
Rich self-assembly behaviors including columnar and ring structures.
Optical birefringence can be tuned from positive to negative.
Pore size and surface modifications influence phase transitions and optical properties.
Abstract
Nanoporous media exhibit structures significantly smaller than the wavelengths of visible light and can thus act as photonic metamaterials. Their optical functionality is not determined by the properties of the base materials, but rather by tailored, multiscale structures, in terms of precise pore shape, geometry, and orientation. Embedding liquid crystals in pore space provides additional opportunities to control light-matter interactions at the single-pore, meta-atomic scale. Here, we present temperature-dependent 3D reciprocal space mapping using synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction in combination with high-resolution birefringence experiments on disk-like mesogens (HAT6) imbibed in self-ordered arrays of parallel cylindrical pores 17 to 160 nm across in monolithic anodic aluminium oxide (AAO). In agreement with Monte Carlo computer simulations we observe a remarkably rich…
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