화학공학소재연구정보센터
Macromolecules, Vol.35, No.16, 6324-6331, 2002
Polymer-dispersed liquid crystals with co-continuous structures generated by polymerization-induced phase separation of EBBA-epoxy solutions
Polymer-dispersed liquid crystals (PDLCs), consisting of a dispersion of LC-rich domains in a polymer matrix, are used in different types of electrooptical devices. Their efficiency can in principle be increased if the LC domains exhibit a uniform characteristic size in the range of the wavelength of visible light. In an attempt to generate this type of morphology, a model PDLC system based on a 50 wt % solution of N-4-ethoxybenzylidene-4'-n-butylaniline (EBBA) in an epoxy monomer (diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A, DGEBA) was analyzed. The polymerization-induced phase separation was performed at 80 degreesC, using a tertiary amine as initiator (benzyldimethylamine, BDMA). By selecting an initial concentration located close to the critical composition to promote spinodal demixing, co-continuous morphologies were obtained, which were rapidly fixed by gelation. The conversion of epoxy groups (p) was followed by near-infrared spectroscopy (NIR). At p = 0.28, phase separation took place as revealed by transmission optical microscopy (TOM) and by the acceleration observed in the isothermal cure rate. Gelation took place at p = 0.35, soon after the cloud point. Although the primary structure was arrested by gelation, the LC-rich phase was continuously enriched in pure EBBA, as revealed by the increase in T-NI with conversion monitored by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Co-continuous structures remained unmodified after the storage of PDLCs for several months. The nematic range of the LC-rich phase at p = 1 was comprised between 34 degreesC (melting point) and T-NI = 68 degreesC. A 57% of the initial LC was present in nematic domains at 40 degreesC, as determined by the variation of the FTIR absorbance of a characteristic LC peak between isotropic and nematic states. Therefore, a possible route to obtain PDLCs with a uniform characteristic size of LC domains is to start with a composition close to the critical one and select conditions to produce liquid-liquid demixing soon before gelation.