Liquid-crystalline photocrosslinkable mixture

Stock material or miscellaneous articles – Liquid crystal optical display having layer of specified... – Alignment layer of specified composition

Reexamination Certificate

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C428S001300, C349S124000, C349S127000

Reexamination Certificate

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06548127

ABSTRACT:

The present invention relates to photocrosslinkable, mesogenic mixtures and to optical or electro-optical devices that have such mixtures in their crosslinked state.
Anisotropic thin films are used for an extremely wide variety of optical and electro-optical devices and components, such as, for example, optical retarders, cholesteric colour filters, polarising interference filters, dielectric mirrors, retarder films for enlarging the viewing angle of liquid crystal displays, optical security elements (copy proof devices), waveguide components (with or without &khgr;
2
-coupling) and so on. A method of producing such anisotropic thin films that is elegant and efficient in practice consists of applying liquid-crystalline polymers or liquid-crystalline monomers to suitably prepared substrates by spin-coating. In the case of liquid-crystalline monomers, the monomers are subsequently crosslinked in the liquid-crystalline phase (LC phase). Such optical components, referred to below as LCP films, can then fulfil special tasks (LCP denotes liquid crystal polymer; films include single or multiple layers).
For the production of such LCP films, generally a certain number of mesogenic monomers is dissolved in a solvent suitable for the purpose, usually together with a (photo)initiator. The idea underlying such liquid crystal mixtures is to set certain physical properties, such as melting point, clear point, optical anisotropy, viscosity etc., to desired values. The combined effect of the liquid crystal components contained in the mixture, with their specific physical properties, results in the liquid crystal mixture's having properties that cannot be achieved by individual liquid crystal components. An example of this is the eutectic, that is to say the finding of the lowest melting point in dependence upon the concentration of individual liquid crystal components. A liquid crystal mixture can generally be satisfactorily optimised to one or more desired physical properties.
After filtration, the solution can then be applied by spin-coating or other coating technique to a cleaned substrate plate (glass, silicon wafer, metal) provided with an orientation layer. For the orientation layer predominantly known methods are used, such as LPP (linear photopolymerisation, i.e. photo-oriented polymer network), rubbed polyimide, or SiOx vapour-deposited at an angle. The LCP film so produced is then dried (removal of the solvent) and crosslinked, for example by means of a UV lamp. Such LCP films are distinguished by an optical anisotropy, for which the optical axis is determined by the underlying orientation layer or by an applied electric field. The orientation can also be structured spatially by using an LPP orientation layer.
A disadvantage of the method is that after crosslinking the formation of so-called tilt domains is often observed. Tilt domains are adjoining LCP regions that have opposite angles of tilt while having the same orientation of the optical axis. Such tilt domains are frequently a source of defects and losses of efficiency. For example, in waveguides they increase the scattering losses and in optical filters the contrast, that is to say the dark state, is adversely affected. Especially when an LCP retarder layer is to serve simultaneously as the orientation layer of a liquid crystal cell, in which angles of tilt that are precisely defined in terms of magnitude and direction must generally be present, tilt domains cannot be tolerated.
Surprisingly, it has now been found that in the described production of LCP layers the formation of tilt domains does not occur when the mixture of liquid-crystalline monomers brought to photopolymerisation additionally contains at least one further compound that, on the one hand, is photopolymerisable but, on the other hand, is non-liquid-crystalline (i.e. non-mesogenic or isotropic). LCP films produced from such mixtures are distinguished especially by particularly high contrast and by uniform spatial (lateral) angle dependency, without the thermal or photochemical stability being impaired to any appreciable extent.
In principle, the addition of isotropic compounds in liquid-crystalline mixtures is undesirable; because as the amount increases, the mesophase region of the mixtures is significantly reduced as a result. In practice, however, isotropic additives in the form of optically active compounds are used when it is desired to achieve chiral liquid-crystalline phases, such as cholesteric or chiral smectic phases, and suitable optically active additives that -are themselves liquid-crystalline are not available. The use of isotropic monomers for the suppression of tilt domains in liquid-crystalline polymer networks was unknown hitherto, however.
In order to reduce mesophase depressions, the mentioned, already known isotropic optically active dopants have chemical structures that are as close as possible to those of liquid crystals, that is to say they contain generally at least two, mostly six-membered, rings. In contrast, the isotropic compounds present in the mixtures according to the invention are especially effective in the suppression of tilt domains when, in terms of chemical structure, they are as different as possible from the general structural principle of liquid-crystalline compounds, that is to say they have at most one ring, which need not necessarily be six-membered, or preferably have no ring at all. In addition, these isotropic additives need not necessarily be optically active. Generally, therefore, achiral or chiral racemic compounds are preferred; in principle, however, isotropic optically active compounds having at most one ring can also be used.
The present invention accordingly relates to liquid-crystalline mixtures crosslinkable by photopolymerisation that contain at least two liquid-crystalline monomers each having at least two terminal polymersable groups and additionally at least one non-liquid-crystalline monomer having no or, at most, one alicyclic or aromatic structural unit and having at least one terminal polymerisable group, and to optical or electro-optical devices that have such a mixture in its crosslinked state, and to the use of such a mixture in its crosslinked state for an optical or electro-optical device.
A minimum of two terminal polymerisable groups on each of the liquid-crystalline monomers (and thus the possibility of fixing the molecules at at least two points) is a prerequisite for the formation of a crosslinked product in which the liquid-crystalline monomers later retain the orientation set during the crosslinking process with sufficient stability. The non-liquid-crystalline monomer need not be specially oriented, however, so that in this instance a single terminal polymerisable group can suffice.
In principle, the effect of suppressing tilt domains brought about by the invention can be achieved also by the admixture of non-polymerisable isotropic additives. In that case, however, there is a risk of later diffusion or dissolving out through any overlying liquid-crystalline substances, which is prevented by the presence of at least one polymerisable group.
Previous experience has shown that, as a rule, the non-liquid-crystalline monomers having no or, at most, one alicyclic or aromatic structural unit must be present in a proportion of at least one percent by weight in order to achieve the desired positive effect. Especially good results are frequently obtained only from a proportion of at least five percent by weight.
On the other hand, the presence of an isotropic monomer as a component in a liquid-crystalline mixture has the effect that, as its concentration increases, the liquid-crystalline phase region is increasingly reduced, so that its content has an upper limit and generally may not be more than 50%.
It will be understood that it is also possible for two or more different non-liquid-crystalline monomeric compounds each having at least one terminal polymerisable group to be present.
There especially come into consideration liquid-crystalline mixtures in which the at least two liquid-crys

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