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We've all sat there in a dull moment at work
stretching an elastic band between our fingers and watching it return
to its original shape and size as we let it go. But how many of us
would have thought of combining the elasticity of rubber with the
optical properties of the liquid crystals commonly used in watches,
laptops and calculators? On Monday 5th April at the Institute of
Physics Condensed Matter and Materials Physics Conference in Warwick,
Professor Mark Warner from the University of Cambridge will describe
how he did just that when he mathematically predicted a new range of
physical phenomena in materials known as 'liquid crystal elastomers'.
The molecular structure of a liquid crystal
elastomer is similar to that of conventional rubber as it consists of
long chains of molecules that can slide past each other easily and so
allow the material to be stretched with little effort. Attached to
these chains like the branches of a tree are smaller rod-like
molecules that are usually found in liquid crystals. They allow the
material to interact with light and can align the long chains and give
unexpected mechanical properties, such as the ability to change colour
when they are stretched and the ability to drastically change their
shape either when they are heated or - for certain versions of the
materials - when light falls on them. They have a variety of potential
uses, for example they could provide the basis for a laser which only
needs a small amount of power to operate and can change its wavelength
(colour) just by being stretched. Alternatively the natural twisting
of their internal structure means liquid crystal elastomers could act
as a new system for detecting the difference between right-handed and
left-handed forms of drugs. Many drugs have these two so-called 'chiral'
forms which are the mirror image of each other, and the liquid crystal
elastomer will only alter its internal twisting when it comes into
contact with one form. The other form will have no effect on it and as
a consequence will not be absorbed. Separating out the different forms
during the manufacturing process is extremely important for the
pharmaceutical industry as the right-handed version of a particular
drug can produce a different medical effect to the left-handed version.
"Strangest of all these properties was the
prediction and experimental discovery that certain shape changes could
be imposed with little or no energy cost. This has been christened
'soft elasticity' and places these materials between liquid and solid
in an elastic classification of matter as I will explain in my
lecture. The secret is to think very carefully about the idea of
changing shape, which is so central to defining the solid state.
Whenever you sit down and think for a moment there seem to be no
shortage of new phenomena that these new types of materials would have,
but which are not found in existing solids or liquids. My aim is to
try and find more and more of these phenomena and look at the uses
they might be put to" says Professor Warner.
Since his first predictions in liquid crystal
elastomers in the late 1980's, Professor Warner - who won the 2003
Agilent Europhysics Prize for this work (in conjunction with Prof
Heino Finkelmann from the Institut für Makromolekulare Chemie in
Germany who simultaneously and independently created them
experimentally) - has watched interest in these materials increase.
Some of the liquid crystal elastomers which are now
being produced can significantly change their length within 10
milliseconds (10 thousandths of a second)of light being shone on them.
"So there's an enormous possibility for a light-activated sensor, or a
light-activated actuator to make something move, in a system where you
don't want to feed in heat or electricity" explains Professor Warner.
Despite the variety of experimental investigations
taking place world-wide, Professor Warner thinks liquid crystal
elastomers - which are relatively straightforward to make - may still
have other as yet undiscovered properties which could allow even more
potential applications. "There always seem to be new twists to this
story and I don't think I've got remotely near the end of it" he says. |