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Journal ArticleDOI

Photomobile polymer materials: towards light-driven plastic motors.

TLDR
New sophisticated motions of LCEs and their composite materials are demonstrated, including a first lightdriven plastic motor with laminated films composed of an LCE film and a flexible polyethylene (PE) sheet, leading to a reversible deformation of L CEs containing azobenzene chromophores just by changing the wavelength of actinic light.
Abstract
As light is a good energy source that can be controlled remotely, instantly, and precisely, light-driven soft actuators could play an important role for novel applications in wideranging industrial and medical fields. Liquid-crystalline elastomers (LCEs) are unique materials having both properties of liquid crystals (LCs) and elastomers, and a large deformation can be generated in LCEs, such as reversible contraction and expansion, and even bending, by incorporating photochromic molecules, such as an azobenzene, with the aid of photochemical reactions of these chromophores. Herein we demonstrate new sophisticated motions of LCEs and their composite materials: a plastic motor driven only by light. If materials absorb light and change their shape or volume, they can convert light energy directly into mechanical work (the photomechanical effect) and could be very efficient as a single-step energy conversion. Furthermore, these photomobile materials would be widely applicable because they can be controlled remotely just by manipulating the irradiation conditions. LCEs show an anisotropic order of mesogens with a cooperative effect, which leads them to undergo an anisotropic contraction along the alignment direction of mesogens when heated above their LC-isotropic(I) phase transition temperatures (TLC-I) and an expansion by lowering the temperature below TLC-I. [1, 13–18] The expansion and contraction is due to the microscopic change in alignment of mesogens, followed by the significant macroscopic change in order through the cooperative movement of mesogens and polymer segments. It is well known that when azobenzene derivatives are incorporated into LCs, the LC-I phase transition can be induced isothermally by irradiation with UV light to cause trans–cis photoisomerization, and the I-LC reverse-phase transition by irradiation with visible light to cause cis–trans back-isomerization. This photoinduced phase transition (or photoinduced reduction of LC order) has led successfully to a reversible deformation of LCEs containing azobenzene chromophores just by changing the wavelength of actinic light. Although the photoinduced deformation of LCEs previously reported is large and interesting, it is limited to contraction/expansion and bending, preventing them from being used for actual applications. Herein we report potentially applicable rotational motions of azobenzene-containing LCEs and their composite materials, including a first lightdriven plastic motor with laminated films composed of an LCE film and a flexible polyethylene (PE) sheet. The LCE films were prepared by photopolymerization of a mixture of an LC monomer containing an azobenzene moiety (molecule 1 shown in Scheme 1) and an LC diacrylate with an azobenzene moiety (2 in Scheme 1) with a ratio of 20/ 80 mol/mol, containing 2 mol% of a photoinitiator in a glass cell coated with rubbed polyimide alignment layers. The photopolymerization was conducted at a temperature at which the mixture exhibited a smectic phase. The glasstransition temperature of the LCE films is at about room temperature, allowing the LCE films to work at room temperature in air, as the films are flexible enough at this temperature. We prepared a continuous ring of the LCE film by connecting both ends of the film. The azobenzene mesogens were aligned along the circular direction of the ring. Upon exposure to UV light from the downside right and visible light from the upside right simultaneously (Figure 1), the ring

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photochromism of Diarylethene Molecules and Crystals: Memories, Switches, and Actuators

TL;DR: Switches, and Actuators Masahiro Irie,*, Tuyoshi Fukaminato,‡ Kenji Matsuda, and Seiya Kobatake.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spiropyran-based dynamic materials

TL;DR: This review discusses the synthesis, switching conditions, and use of dynamic materials in which spiropyran has been attached to the surfaces of polymers, biomacromolecules, inorganic nanoparticles, as well as solid surfaces.
Journal ArticleDOI

Programmable and adaptive mechanics with liquid crystal polymer networks and elastomers

TL;DR: The historical development of liquid crystalline polymeric materials is detailed, with emphasis on the thermally and photogenerated macroscale mechanical responses--such as bending, twisting and buckling--and on local-feature development (primarily related to topographical control).
Journal ArticleDOI

Soft Actuators for Small-Scale Robotics.

TL;DR: A detailed survey of ongoing methodologies for soft actuators, highlighting approaches suitable for nanometer- to centimeter-scale robotic applications, including both the development of new materials and composites, as well as novel implementations leveraging the unique properties of soft materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Liquid Crystalline Elastomers as Actuators and Sensors

TL;DR: This review collects recent developments in the field of liquid crystalline elastomers with an emphasis on their use for actuator and sensor applications and how these materials can be turned into usable devices using different interdisciplinary techniques.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Photomechanics: directed bending of a polymer film by light.

TL;DR: It is shown that a single film of a liquid-crystal network containing an azobenzene chromophore can be repeatedly and precisely bent along any chosen direction by using linearly polarized light.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new opto-mechanical effect in solids.

TL;DR: It is proposed that large, reversible shape changes in solids, of between 10%-400%, can be induced optically by photoisomerizing monodomain nematic elastomers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fast liquid-crystal elastomer swims into the dark

TL;DR: It is demonstrated 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 and is more than two orders of magnitude faster than previously reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Photomechanics of liquid-crystalline elastomers and other polymers.

TL;DR: This Review focuses on light as an energy source and describes the recent progress in the area of soft materials that can convert light energy into mechanical energy directly (photomechanical effect), especially the photomechanICAL effects of LCEs with a view to applications for light-driven LCE actuators.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular machines: nanomotor rotates microscale objects.

TL;DR: A synthetic, light-driven molecular motor that is embedded in a liquid-crystal film and can rotate objects placed on the film that exceed the size of the motor molecule by a factor of 10,000.
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