Research Webzine of the KAIST College of Engineering since 2014
Spring 2025 Vol. 24
Photonic microcapsules confining cholesteric liquid crystals are microfluidically produced, potentially serving as building blocks to compose any shapes of photonic devices.
Article | Spring 2016
Liquid crystal (LC) molecules spontaneously form helical structures in the presence of chiral molecules, and these structures are referred to as cholesteric LC (CLC). The CLCs exhibit pronounced colors when the helical pitch is comparable with the wavelength of visible light. Such a photonic effect renders the CLCs promising for various photonic devices. Nevertheless, the fluidity of LCs severely limits the ease of processing and structural stability, restricting their applications.
To overcome this limitation, Prof. Shin-Hyun Kim’s group has encapsulated the LCs with an elastic membrane. A droplet of LCs is enclosed in another droplet of elastomer precursors using a microfluidic technology. Such a drop-in-drop structure, called a double-emulsion drop, yields stable microcapsule as the precursors are polymerized. The microcapsules containing LCs can serve as building blocks that are assembled to construct any shapes of photonic devices. However, LC molecules in direct contact with the elastomer lose their planar alignment, which severely deteriorates optical performance.
To align the LC molecules at the boundary, an ultra-thin layer is inserted between the LC core and precursor shell. To fulfill this, triple-emulsion drops, composed of an LC core, aqueous inner shell, and precursor outer shell, are produced with a specially-designed microfluidic device. The aqueous inner shell makes the LC molecules have planar alignment at the boundary, resulting in striking colors with high reflectivity. Moreover, the thinness of the alignment layer provides a high lubrication resistance, preserving the layer integrity during elastic deformation of the outer membrane. Therefore, the microcapsules can maintain planar alignment of CLCs, even during microcapsule deformation.
The elastic deformation of microcapsules and adaptive molecular orientation provide high reconfigurability as well as flexible shapes to present various optical features. This class of photonic ink capsules has great potential as new building blocks for the construction of photonic devices. For example, the microcapsules can be densely packed to form void-free panels with any shapes. More importantly, spontaneous rearrangement of CLC molecules guided by an alignment layer in each deformed microcapsule can maximize the reflection intensity of the panels.
An article on this research (entitled “Reconfigurable Photonic Capsules Containing Cholesteric Liquid Crystals with Planar Alignment”) was published on December 2015 in Angewandte Chemie International Edition and highlighted as a ‘Hot Paper’ and the ‘Back Cover’ of the journal.
Reference: S.-S. Lee. Reconfigurable Photonic Capsules Containing Cholesteric Liquid Crystals with Planar Alignment. Angew. Chem. Int. Edit., 127, 15481-15485 (2015).
Additional link for more information:
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.201507723/abstract (Article)
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/anie.201509872/full (Back cover)
When and why do graph neural networks become powerful?
Read moreSmart Warnings: LLM-enabled personalized driver assistance
Read moreExtending the lifespan of next-generation lithium metal batteries with water
Read moreProfessor Ki-Uk Kyung’s research team develops soft shape-morphing actuator capable of rapid 3D transformations
Read moreOxynizer: Non-electric oxygen generator for developing countries
Read more