Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy of Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal
スポンサーリンク
概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
Different smectic-phase transition temperatures have been observed from the study of the temperature dependence of dielectric strength and relaxation frequency. The phase transition temperatures (crystalline to isotropic phases) have also been observed from the temperature-dependent symmetric and asymmetric shape parameters of the relaxation function and also the DC conductivity obtained from the fitting procedure. We have obtained the chiral smectic C–smectic X (SmC*–SmX) phase transition temperature very precisely from Arrhenius’ plot of the relaxation frequency. In a planar-aligned cell, four relaxation processes have been observed in both the SmX and SmC* phases. The three symmetric modes are the Goldstone mode, domain mode, and molecular mode. The other asymmetric mode (X-mode) observed in the present measurement may be related to the interaction of dipoles of the ferroelectric liquid crystals being affected by the surface of the cell. In the SmA phase, we have observed two relaxation modes: the molecular mode (symmetric) and X-mode (asymmetric).
- 2007-05-30
著者
-
Yagihara Shin
Department Of Physics Faculty Of Science Tokai University
-
Kundu Shyamal
Department Of Solid State Physics Indian Association For The Cultivation Of Science
-
Yagihara Shin
Department of Physics, Tokai University, 1117 Kitakaname, Hiratsuka, Kanagawa 259-1292, Japan
-
Kundu Shyamal
Department of Physics, Tokai University, 1117 Kitakaname, Hiratsuka, Kanagawa 259-1292, Japan
関連論文
- Evaluation of Dielectric Permittivity by DC Transient Current Method
- Dielectric Relaxation Behavior and Thickness Dependent Phase Transition of a Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal
- Microwave Dielectric Study on Unfolded Protein by Urea
- Structured water mobile below the freezing point in aqueous solutions of a triple-helical polysaccharide schizophyllan
- Broadband Dielectric Spectroscopy of Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal
- Dielectric Relaxation Behavior and Thickness Dependent Phase Transition of a Ferroelectric Liquid Crystal