Abstract A mechanochromic, programmable, cholesteric liquid crystalline elastomer (CLCE) is fabricated, and after straining, resulting in a blue shift through the visible spectrum, is returned to its initial shape and color upon heating through its isotropic phase transition. Light initiated, radical‐mediated, addition fragmentation chain transfer (AFT), facilitate permanent programming or erasure of thermoreversible shape and color by relaxing stress imparted on the strained network through reversible bond exchange. Thermoreversible strain is coupled with reversible color change and can be made permanent at any desired strain by light exposure and corresponding AFT activation, temporarily restoring nearly initial shape and color upon heating. The optical characteristics and photonic structure, inherently linked to the network, are measured as a function of strain, to confirm the reflection notch narrowing indicating that prepolymerization alignment via shearing is poor thereby causing a broad spectrum of reflected light that narrows when the material is stretched. Beyond programming a new shape and color, the reflection notch is erased and separately, photopatterned to achieve dynamic color schemes that are toggled with heating and cooling, similar to that of a chameleon's camouflaging technique that has the ability to manipulate multiple colors in a single material, also with use for strain mapping.
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Permanent and reversibly programmable shapes in liquid crystal elastomer microparticles capable of shape switching
Reversibly programmable liquid crystal elastomer microparticles (LCEMPs), formed as a covalent adaptable network (CAN), with an average diameter of 7 μm ± 2 μm, were synthesized via a thiol-Michael dispersion polymerization. The particles were programmed to a prolate shape via a photoinitiated addition–fragmentation chain-transfer (AFT) exchange reaction by activating the AFT after undergoing compression. Due to the thermotropic nature of the AFT-LCEMPs, shape switching was driven by heating the particles above their nematic–isotropic phase transition temperature ( T NI ). The programmed particles subsequently displayed cyclable two-way shape switching from prolate to spherical when at low or high temperatures, respectively. Furthermore, the shape programming is reversible, and a second programming step was done to erase the prolate shape by initiating AFT at high temperature while the particles were in their spherical shape. Upon cooling, the particles remained spherical until additional programming steps were taken. Particles were also programmed to maintain a permanent oblate shape. Additionally, the particle surface was programmed with a diffraction grating, demonstrating programmable complex surface topography via AFT activation.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1809841
- PAR ID:
- 10300597
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Soft Matter
- Volume:
- 17
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 1744-683X
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 467 to 474
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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