Controlling the phase of light with a high efficiency and precision is essential for applications in imaging, tunable devices, and optical systems. Spatial light modulators (SLMs) based on liquid crystals (LCs) have been regarded as one of the best choices for the generation of phase profiles for the steering of light. The upper glass substrate has an unpatterned electrode for a common electrode, while the lower glass substrate has one-dimensional micro-patterned electrodes for controlling the single pixel level by the applied voltages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the formation of high optical power microlenses in the near-surface region of the liquid crystal layer. Such microlenses, possessing a very small focal length at a rather large aperture A (/∼2), are able to focus the light into spots of a characteristic size comparable with the wavelength. Using numerical modeling, a specific patterning profile of a liquid crystal (LC) alignment surface by an ion beam is proposed to provide the aligning properties necessary for the formation of an array of microlenses with a focal length comparable to the LC cell thickness.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on experimental investigations of the lasing effect in novel chiral liquid crystal (CLC) systems with a deformed lying helix (DLH). The lasing is studied for both odd- and even-order field-induced stop-bands, which are characteristic exclusively of the DLH state. The DLH state is achieved in special CLC cells with periodic boundary conditions, when the surface alignment is flipped between planar and vertical states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelf-assembling of liquid-crystal metasurfaces on polymer layers patterned by a focused ion beam manifests itself in distinctly colored optical transmission, as light from certain spectral bands is efficiently diffracted by the periodic liquid crystal modulations. We explore the metasurface electro-optics by applying voltage across the liquid crystal to straighten its director distribution and reroute the diffracted light into the direct transmission. We show that the characteristic times of switching from the diffracting to the transmitting state can be decreased down to a millisecond by increasing the driving voltage up to 6-8 V, while the main part of the relaxation back into the periodically deformed diffracting state occurs within about a few milliseconds, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe alignment of liquid crystals by surfaces is crucial for applications. It determines the director configuration in the bulk, its stability against defects and electro-optical switching scenarios. The conventional planar alignment of rubbed polymer layers can be locally flipped to vertical by irradiation with a focused ion beam on a scale of tens of nanometers.
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