Fast liquid-crystal elastomer swims into the dark
Top Cited Papers
- 25 April 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Materials
- Vol. 3 (5) , 307-310
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat1118
Abstract
Liquid-crystal elastomers (LCEs) are rubbers whose constituent molecules are orientationally ordered. Their salient feature is strong coupling between the orientational order and mechanical strain. For example, changing the orientational order gives rise to internal stresses, which lead to strains and change the shape of a sample. Orientational order can be affected by changes in externally applied stimuli such as light. We demonstrate here that by dissolving-rather than covalently bonding-azo dyes into an LCE sample, its mechanical deformation in response to non-uniform illumination by visible light becomes very large (more than 60 degrees bending) and is more than two orders of magnitude faster than previously reported. Rapid light-induced deformations allow LCEs to interact with their environment in new and unexpected ways. When light from above is shone on a dye-doped LCE sample floating on water, the LCE 'swims' away from the light, with an action resembling that of flatfish such as skates or rays. We analyse the propulsion mechanism in terms of momentum transfer.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Nematic elastomers with aligned carbon nanotubes: New electromechanical actuatorsEurophysics Letters, 2003
- Directed bending of a polymer film by lightNature, 2003
- The hydrodynamics of water strider locomotionNature, 2003
- Liquid crystalline elastomers: dynamics and relaxation of microstructurePhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 2003
- UV isomerisation in nematic elastomers as a route to photo-mechanical transducerThe European Physical Journal E, 2002
- A New Opto-Mechanical Effect in SolidsPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Anomalous Viscoelastic Response of Nematic ElastomersPhysical Review Letters, 2001
- Convective Nonlinearity in Non-Newtonian FluidsPhysical Review Letters, 2000
- Liquid crystal elastomers: Influence of the orientational distribution of the crosslinks on the phase behaviour and reorientation processesMacromolecular Chemistry and Physics, 1994
- Possibilites offertes par la reticulation de polymeres en presence d'un cristal liquidePhysics Letters A, 1969