Collective rotations of ferroelectric liquid crystals at the air/water interface

Langmuir. 2008 Nov 4;24(21):12354-63. doi: 10.1021/la801566a. Epub 2008 Oct 1.

Abstract

We study the Langmuir monolayers of four different ferroelectric liquid crystals on water surface. Two of them are attached to water surface by their polar groups, and the chiral groups, at the opposite ends of the elongated molecules, remain well above the interface. The other two ferroelectrics have both groups (polar and chiral) at close proximity, and therefore the chiral group is also attached to the surface or even submerged in water. We demonstrate that only when the chiral group of the ferroelectric liquid crystal in Langmuir monolayer is not attached to the interface and stays in the air does the system exhibit the collective rotations induced by evaporation of water (described for the first time by: Tabe, Y.; Yokoyama, H. Nat. Mater. 2003, 2, 806). The isotherms of surface pressure and surface potential versus molecular area of four compounds were measured with simultaneous observations using Brewster angle microscopy. Experimental data of the compression isotherms are described with a van der Waals model with very good accuracy, and the fitted parameters were used for calculations of compressibility coefficients for different phases found in the compounds under investigations. The ability of the two compounds for rotation and the disability of the two others is discussed in a context of thermodynamic properties of the monolayers.