Optical limiting is a phenomenon widely recognized as the potential application for a protector of human eyes and optical sensors from irradiation with lasers. However, a high optical limiting threshold and low flexibility have restricted such applications. Here, we report that oligothiophene-doped liquid crystals (LCs) function as a low-threshold optical limiter with deformability. Irradiation of dye-doped LCs with a continuous wave (CW) laser beam brings about the formation of diffraction rings, and the number of rings changes depending on the incident light intensity due to their photoinduced molecular reorientation. Utilizing such reorientation enables reversible optical limiting without additional multilayered optical components. In particular, an electric field application to a LC-based optical limiter decreases their optical limiting threshold from 2100 to 25 mW/cm 2 , and the threshold can be tuned by adjusting the applied voltage. Furthermore, the softness of LCs allows for the fabrication of the deformable optical limiter; optical limiting due to the molecular reorientation occurs even in largely bent states. The low-threshold and deformable optical limiter based on oligothiophene-doped LCs thus will enable one to develop the protector of eyes and optical sensors from glaring light-induced damage.
The optical Freedericksz transition (OFT) can reversibly control the molecular orientation of liquid crystals (LCs) only by light irradiation, leading to the development of all-optical devices, such as smart windows. In particular, oligothiophene-doped LCs show the highly sensitive OFT due to the interaction between dyes and an optical-electric field. However, the sensitivity is still low for the application to optical devices. It is necessary to understand the factors in LCs affecting the OFT behavior to reduce the sensitivity. In this study, we investigated the effect of the host LC structure on the OFT in oligothiophene-doped LCs. The threshold light intensity for the OFT in trifluorinated LCs was 42% lower than that in LCs without fluorine substituents. This result contributes to the material design for the low-threshold optical devices utilizing the OFT of dye-doped LCs.
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