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Researchers developed novel liquid crystalline elastomers capable of ambidirectional movement, exhibiting two opposite deformation modes. This breakthrough in soft materials science enables scalable, complex transformations for advanced applications.

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Soft Matter Physics
  • Polymer Chemistry

Background:

  • Ambidirectionality, or movement in two opposite directions, is prevalent in nature but challenging to achieve in conventional soft materials.
  • Existing soft materials often require complex hybrid designs for bidirectional deformation, limiting their practical applications.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To design and synthesize novel liquid crystalline elastomers (LCEs) exhibiting ambidirectional movement.
  • To investigate the relationship between mesophase transitions and the resulting deformation modes in LCEs.

Main Methods:

  • Utilized a combination of mesogen self-assembly, polymer chain elasticity, and polymerization-induced stress.
  • Engineered LCEs to exhibit two distinct mesophases: chevron smectic C (cSmC) and smectic A (SmA).
  • Investigated the cSmC-SmA-isotropic phase transition to induce and analyze the deformation behavior.

Main Results:

  • Achieved ambidirectional movement in LCEs, demonstrating opposite deformation modes like consecutive shrinkage/expansion and twisting/tilting.
  • Observed an unusual inversion of the strain field in the microstructure during the cSmC-SmA-isotropic phase transition.
  • Generated high-frequency nonmonotonic oscillations and scalable Gaussian transformations at the macroscale.

Conclusions:

  • The developed LCEs successfully exhibit scalable ambidirectional movement through controlled mesophase transitions.
  • This work offers a new pathway for designing soft materials with complex, programmable deformation capabilities.
  • The findings have potential implications for robotics, actuators, and adaptive structures.