High-diffraction-efficiency Fresnel lens based on annealed blue-phase liquid crystal-polymer composite
Özet
We demonstrated a relatively simple and effective method to fabricate a periodically isolated polymer wall of blue-phase liquid crystal Fresnel lens (BPLCFL) by employing a single-masking process of the ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, leading to excellent photopolymerisation-induced phase separation between blue-phase liquid crystal (BPLC) molecules and UV-curable monomers. Nevertheless, some uncured monomers would inherently reside in the BPLC-rich area and slightly inhibit the BPLC molecules realigned under the external electric field. To enhance the optical properties of the polymer-wall BPLCFL considerably, a novel technique for fabricating a pure BPLC zone is proposed that successfully expels the residual monomers from the BPLC volume using a thermal annealing process. Experimental results show that the maximum diffraction efficiency reaches 36%, which approaches the theoretical limit of41%. Consequently, the annealing technique to purify phase-separated composite films has a strong potential to construct the BPLCFL in light of polarisation-free applications. [GRAPHICS] .