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| United States Patent | 6300991 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/6300991.html |
| Inventor(s) | Schadt; Martin (Seltisberg, CH);
Schuster; Andreas (Freiburg, DE);
Seiberle; Hubert (Weil am Rhein, DE) |
| Abstract | Orientation layers of monomeric or polymeric liquid crystal layers having
any desired azimuthal orientation direction and a tilt angle are produced
by irradiating at an angle differing from the normal to the surface
photopolymers orienting parallel to linearly polarized light. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 6300991 |
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Photo-oriented polymer network material having desired azimuthal
orientation and tilt angle and method for its production |
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| Publication Date |
October 9, 2001 |
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| Filing Date |
February 22, 2000 |
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| Parent Case |
This application is a continuation of U.S. Ser. No. 08/690,665, filed Jul.
26, 1996, which is a continuation in part of U.S. Ser. No. 08/601,310,
filed Feb. 16, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,838,407, which is a continuation
of U.S. Ser. No. 08/373,733, filed Jan. 17, 1995 abandoned, U.S. Ser. No.
08/271,550, filed Jul. 7, 1994, abandoned U.S. Ser. No. 08/125,005, filed
Sep. 21, 1993 abandoned and U.S. Ser. No. 07/910,066, filed Jul. 8, 1992
abandoned. |
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| Priority Data |
Jul 28, 1995[CH]2218/95
Mar 15, 1996[CH]688/96 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field
The invention relates to a method of producing a photo-oriented
structurally anisotropic polymer network ("PPN") having any desired
azimuthal orientation direction and a tilt angle on its surface, to
orientation layers prepared by this method for orienting monomeric and
polymeric liquid crystals, to the use of this method, and the orientation
layers produced thereby.
2. Description
Uniaxially rubbed polymer orientation layers, such as polyimide are
conventionally used to orient liquid crystal molecules in liquid crystal
displays ("LCD"). The rubbing direction determines the orientation
direction and during the rubbing process a tilt angle is produced on the
polymer surface.
When a liquid crystal is placed in contact with such a surface the liquid
crystal molecules are disposed not parallel to the surface but at an
inclination thereto--that is, the tilt angle is transferred to the liquid
crystal. The size of the tilt angle is determined by rubbing parameters,
for example, feed rate and pressure, and by the chemical structure of the
polymer. For example, there are many structurally different polyimides
which when subjected to identical preparation and rubbing parameters lead
to completely different tilt angles. Tilt angles between 1.degree. and
15.degree. depending upon type, are necessary for the preparation of
liquid crystal displays. The larger tilt angles are required more
particularly for supertwisted nematic ("STN") LCDs in order to avoid the
incidence of so-called finger print textures. In twisted nematic ("TN")
and thin film transistor ("TFT")-TN-LCDs, the tilt angle defines the
rotational and the tilt direction so that reverse twist and reverse tilt
phenomena are inhibited. Reverse twist in the "off" state leads to zones
with a wrong direction of twist, a phenomenon which is optically
perceptible as a spotty appearance of the display. In contrast, reverse
tilt (occuring more particularly when the LCDs are actuated) causes a very
disturbing optical effect due to the liquid crystals tilting in different
directions. Also, reverse twist can be inhibited by doping the liquid
crystal mixture with a chiral dope of appropriate direction of rotation.
However, to suppress reverse tilt there is no alternative but to use
orientation layers having a tilt angle.
Although rubbed polymer layers have proved very satisfactory for orienting
liquid crystals in LCD production, there are a number of serious
disadvantages causally related to the rubbing. Because of optically
inadequate displays, LCD production yield is unsatisfactory since rubbing
(1) is associated with the production of dust and (2) produces an
electrostatic charge on the polymer layer. This can result, for example in
the case of TFF-TN LCDs, in the destruction of thin film transistors
below, as well as the attraction of additional dust to the surface.
Another serious disadvantage is that when a large area is rubbed, the
orientation direction cannot be varied locally. Accordingly, there is
therefore no practical way of enhancing the viewing angle dependency of TN
LCDs.
Recently orientation layers have become known wherein the orientation
direction can be determined by exposure with linearly polarized light. The
problems inherent in rubbing can therefore be avoided. The additional
possibility of zone-wise differentiation of orientation directions opens
up completely new possibilities for optimising the properties of liquid
crystal displays, for example, the viewing angle dependency of TN LCDs.
U.S. Pat. No. 4,974,941, the contents of which are herein incorporated by
reference, describes a process based on a guest-host system wherein a
preferred direction is induced in response to exposure with linearly
polarized light of an appropriate wavelength by the
cis/trans-isomerization of dyes. Liquid crystals in contact with a surface
thus exposed are oriented in accordance with this preferred direction.
This orientation process is reversible--that is, by further exposure of
the layer to light of a second polarization direction the orientation
direction already written in can be rotated again. Since this
re-orientation process can be repeated as often as required and needs high
light intensities, orientation layers on this basis are less suitable for
use in LCDs.
In contrast to this reversible orientation process, in the
photostructurable orientation layers such as described in U.S. Pat. No.
5,389,698, the contents of which is herein incorporated by reference, an
irreversible anisotropic polymer network is built up. The anisotropic
orienting properties induced in the network during the exposure to
linearly polarized light are photostable and so cannot be further
re-oriented by further exposures. The photo-orientated polymer networks
("PPN") are therefore of use more particularly wherever stable, structured
or unstructured liquid crystal orientation layers are required. In
addition to being used in LCDs, orientation layers of this kind are useful
in preparating other optical elements, such as non-absorptive color
filters, linear and cholesteric polarizing filters, optical delay layers,
and the like.
More particularly for use in LCDs, the orientation layer must transfer the
tilt angle as well as the orientation direction. However, endeavors to
induce a tilt angle in photostructurable orientation layers have so far
proved unsatisfactory. The only process known so far has been described in
Hashimoto, T. et al in SID 95 DIGEST, 877 (1995) wherein a combination of
two consecutive exposures in different conditions can produce a tilt
angle. The first exposure is carried out with a vertical incidence of
light whereas in the second exposure the incident of light is grazing, the
direction of polarization of the light having to be turned through
90.degree. relative to the first exposure. The orientation direction of
the polyvinyl cinnamate photopolymer used is perpendicular to the
polarization direction of the incident UV light. Consequently, only the
orientation direction is determined in the first exposure and for reasons
of symmetry no preferred direction for the tilt angle can be given. In the
second exposure with inclined incidence of light and a 90.degree. offset
polarization direction an orientation is built up perpendicularly to the
previous orientation, something which of course reduces the orientability
of the first direction. A tilt angle arises because of the asymmetrical
decrease of the orientation produced by the first exposure. A compromise
must therefore be made in the second exposure--the second exposure time
must be long enough to induce a tilt angle, but short enough not to
completely destroy the existing orientation. The PPN material must
necessarily still not be photostable after termination of the first
exposure if it is to be possible to make the second exposure.
Consequently, and because of unsatisfactory thermal stability, the
polyvinyl cinnamate used (which is of course not photostable) is of little
use for LCDs.
In the known PPN materials and PPN orientation processes, irradiation with
linearly polarized UV light incident parallel to the normal to the surface
is used to produce an orientation perpendicular to the polarization
direction of the light. The PPN materials having this property will be
called hereinafter "perpendicularly orienting", whereas PPN materials
which under the same conditions produce an orientation parallel to the
polarization direction of the UV light will be called "parallelly
orienting".
It is the object of the invention to devise a simple process, and
appropriate photostructurable materials, such that during exposure a
defined long-term-stable tilt angle combined with any required azimuthal
angle can be programmed.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The subject invention provides a method of producing a photo-oriented
polymer network having a tilt angle. The method comprises providing a
photo-orientable material having a surface, the photo-orientable material
orienting parallel to the polarization direction of an exposing light, and
exposing the photo-orientable material to light such that the direction of
incidence of the light is not parallel to the normal to the surface of the
photo-orientation material to produce the photo-oriented polymer network.
The subject invention also provides for an orientation device having an
orientation layer containing the photo-oriented polymer network produced
by the above method.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
Exemplified embodiments of the invention will be described hereinafter with
reference to the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of the exposure of a PPN layer;
FIG. 2 is a diagrammatic representation of an LC layer having a tilt angle
pattern;
FIG. 3 shows conoscopic images of a cell having a tilt angle induced in
accordance with the invention without and with voltage applied to the
electrodes, and
FIG. 4 shows a transmission curve of an STN cell having a tilt angle
induced in accordance with the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The subject invention will now be described in terms of its preferred
embodiments. These embodiments are set forth to aid in understanding the
invention but are not to be construed as limiting.
To this end, according to the invention, a PPN material orienting parallel
to the polarization direction of the exposing light is so exposed that the
direction of incidence of the light is not parallel to the normal to the
surface of the photo-orientable layer. A distinctive feature of
orientation layers prepared by this method is that the tilt angle varies
locally.
To produce a tilt angle on the surface of a PPN material an asymmetry
relative to the normal to such surface must be built up. This might be
effected, for example, during the preparation of the layer, by programming
a preferred direction in the application of the layer. In this case,
however, the advantage of the photostructurability of the PPN layer would
be lost since, as with rubbing, the tilt angle direction would turn out to
be consistent over a large area. The most advantageous way of ensuring
photostructurability is therefore to introduce the asymmetry during the
exposure of the layer. This can be effected by exposing the PPN layer to
an inclined incidence of light. However, the orientation direction of the
known PPN materials is in all cases perpendicular to the polarization
direction of the incident light. Consequently, for reasons of symmetry the
direction information of the obliquely incident light is lost so far as
the production of the tilt angle is concerned, and so these systems cannot
be used to produce tilt angle by a single exposure.
Surprisingly it has proved possible to induce a tilt angle by inclined
exposure in PPN materials for which, unlike the known PPN materials, the
orientation direction is parallel to, and not perpendicular to, the
polarization direction of the exposing linearly polarized UV light. The
polarization direction of the light in the exposure of the layer was
disposed in the plane described by the normal to the surface and by the
direction of the incident light. Since in the case of inclined exposure
the electrical field vector of the light is at an inclination to the
surface, the photo cross-linking also occurs preferably at an inclination
to the surface, with the surprising result on the polymer surface of a
preferred orientation direction other than in the plane of the surface.
The magnitude of the tilt angle can be controlled by various physical
parameters such as the angle of incidence and the exposure time.
One possible way of preparing PPN material-based orientation layers having
a large tilt angle is first to induce a tilt angle in a PPN layer by
inclined exposure and then, as described in EP-A-611 981 (corresponding to
U.S. application Ser. No. 08/194,234, filed Feb. 10, 1994, the contents of
which are herein incorporated by reference), to apply a layer of
cross-linkable liquid crystals. Orientation and tilt direction are
transferred from the PPN layer to the liquid crystals and fixed by the
subsequent cross-linking. Appropriate choice of the cross-linkable liquid
crystal molecules enables mixtures to be developed which tend to take up a
perpendicular orientation on the boundary surface between the liquid
crystal and air. However, liquid crystal inclination does not vary over
thickness in very thin layers whereas in relatively thick layers the
inclination to the surface increases. Consequently, the liquid crystal
layer ("LCP") which has been oriented by the PPN layer, tilted and then
cross-linked can be used as an orientation layer for liquid crystals, the
magnitude of the tilt angle at the LCP/air boundary layer being adjustable
over a wide range by the thickness of the LCP layer.
Since they enable a tilt angle to be produced, the PPN materials suitable
for this effect can be used instead of rubbed polymer layers as
orientation layers for liquid crystals in various kinds of liquid crystal
displays. The structurability of the PPN layers, in addition to providing
the advantage of contact-free orientation, has the main effect of opening
up completely new ways of optimizing liquid crystal displays. For example,
adjacent zones measuring a few mm can be produced which have different
azimuthal orientation directions and defined tilt angles.
According to the invention, the direction of the tilt angle can be altered
from zone to zone. The magnitude of the tilt angle can even be varied
locally by exposure from different directions. For instance, the optics of
adjacent pixels in LCDs can be varied by variation of the orientation and
the tilt angle or the optics of a single pixel can be varied by the pixel
being subdivided into subpixels each having a different orientation
direction and/or tilt angle direction. The multidomain LCDs which then
become possible greatly enhance the viewing angle dependency. In the case
of the multidomain LCDs which are described in Yang, K. H. in IDRC 91
DIGEST, 1991, 68 and which are based on two rubbings of a polyimide layer,
the same is coated with photoresist after the first rubbing, a pattern is
exposed therefrom photolithographically and rubbing is then effected in a
second direction. In contrast to this elaborate and unreliable procedure
the photo-orientation of PPN layers has fewer and also contact-free
working steps, so that output is much higher.
As in the case of TN-LCDs the viewing angle dependency of STN-LCDs can be
enhanced by subdividing each pixel into two or more subpixels, the
azimuthal orientation direction on the two orientation layers differing
from subpixel to subpixel. In the case of STN-LCDs needing a higher tilt
angle than TN-LCDs, the tilt angle has an even greater effect on the
operation and electro-optical behaviour than in the case of TN-LCDs. The
multiple rubbing of polyimide layer is of little use for multidomain
STN-LCDs since it is almost impossible to expunge in a second rubbing the
tilt angle produced in the first rubbing while simultaneously producing an
exactly equal tilt angle in another direction.
As well as being simpler to handle, PPN materials are particularly suitable
as orientation layers for multidomain STN-LCDs since because of the
structuring using photomasks each subpixel is exposed only once and so the
tilt angle in each subpixel is the same.
The color compensation necessary for colored STN liquid crystal displays
cannot be produced in multidomain STN-LCDs by the conventional application
of retarder films on the outsides of the glass plates since the optical
axis of the retarder must be at a defined angle to the orientation
direction of the liquid crystal. The optical axis of the retarder must
therefore be adjusted for each subpixel in accordance with the particular
liquid crystal orientation concerned. Instead, structured retarders such
as described in EP-A 94101684.2 (corresponding to U.S. application Ser.
No. 08/194,234, filed Feb. 10, 1994, the contents of which are herein
incorporated by reference) are suitable, so that layer structures
consisting of retarder and orientation layer can be built up in accordance
with EP-A 95108817.8 (corresponding to U.S. application Ser. No.
08/489,865, filed Jun. 13, 1995, the contents of which are herein
incorporated by reference). Also, a PPN layer has written into it an
orientation pattern whose local orientation coincides with the required
direction of the optical axis concerned. There is then applied to the PPN
layer an LCP layer which has the required optical delay and in which the
optical axis varies locally in accordance with the orientation pattern of
the PPN layer below. To avoid parallaxes the structured retarder layer
inside the LCDs must be disposed between the glass plate and the LC
orientation layer.
In addition to the orientation of liquid crystals in LCDs, defined tilt
angles are very useful for preparing domain-free layers from cross-linked
liquid crystals (LCP) such as are described in EP-A-611 981 or in the
still unpublished European patent applications Nos. 95 108817.8 and 95
108866.5 (corresponding to U.S. application Ser. No. 08/489,866, filed
Jun. 13, 1995, the contents of which are herein incorporated by
reference). These hybrid layers can be used for the preparation of optical
delay layers, polarizing interference filters, linear polarizers and
circular polarizers and so on. Optically biaxial layers can be produced by
stacking delay layers having tilted optical axes. Azimuthal orientation
and tilt angle can be adjusted individually pixel-wise for each layer.
Delay layers which are optically biaxial or whose optical axis is at an
inclination to the surface are required more particularly to further
enhance the viewing angle dependency of STN liquid crystal displays.
Safety elements based on PPN-oriented LCP layers such as described in the
still unpublished European patent applications Nos. 95 108817.8 and 95
108866.5 can be further refined by an additional feature by the production
of a defined tilt angle. Data in the form of text, patterns or images can
be written into PPN-LCP hybrid layers by different azimuthal orientation.
Read-out using one or two polarizers can be based either on the
birefringency of the LCP layer or the anisotropy of dichroic dyes oriented
in the LCP layer.
If in accordance with the invention a defined tilt angle which is taken
over by the LCP layer and possibly even increased is programmed in the
exposure of the PPN layer, an asymmetric tilt effect is also produced.
Since the LCP molecules are at an inclination to the surface, the rotation
of such a layer around an axis which is disposed in the layer plane and
which is perpendicular to the orientation direction of the LCP molecules
(optical axis), causes the angle between the optical axis and the viewing
direction to be reduced or increased in accordance with the direction of
rotation. Since in this case the birefringency of birefringent layers is
reduced or increased, the result in the case of layers having optical
delays of up to approximately 300 nm is an asymmetrical light/dark effect,
while in the case of greater optical delay the two possible direction of
rotation produce different colors.
In the case of dichroic layers the tilting of the layer in the two
different directions results in less or greater absorption respectively,
with the result of an asymmetric variation of contrast. Since in
accordance with the invention the direction of the tilt angle can be
varied locally, it is therefore even possible for the first time to
encrypt information without variation of the azimuthal orientation and
solely by the direction of the tilt angle. In this case the information is
not initially visible when viewed perpendicularly, but appears only when
the layer is tilted. In this case the appearance again depends upon the
direction of rotation, for when the layer is tilted in the opposite
direction the zones change over their different brightness or
colour--i.e., the pattern represented is inverted. It is of course
possible to provide local variation in a layer of both the directions of
the azimuthal orientation and also of the tilt angle. In this case zones
having the same azimuthal orientation differ from one another in the
direction of the tilt angle. When such a layer is viewed perpendicularly,
a pattern written in by different azimuthal orientation is observed. When
the layer is tilted a second pattern is superimposed upon the first
pattern and can also be inverted by tilting in the opposite direction.
Complex unequivocally verifiable security elements which are very
difficult to counterfeit can be produced in this way.
The following examples further illustrate the subject invention.
EXAMPLE 1
Preparation of a photostructured PPN layer
To induce a tilt angle by inclined exposure, according to the invention a
PPN material capable of orienting liquid crystals parallel to the
polarization direction of the incident UV light is required. Examples of
appropriate PPN materials having this property are the following
photopolymers used in the following examples:
##STR1##
The PPN material in each case was dissolved in NMP to a concentration of
5%. This solution was then used to apply a PPN layer to a glass plate by
spin coating at 2000 rpm. The layer was then dried for 2 hours at
130.degree. C. on a heat bench and for a further 4 hours at 130.degree. C.
in vacuo.
EXAMPLE 2
Exposure of a PPN Layer to Produce a Tilt Angle
As in example 1 a layer 2 of the photopolymer PPN 1 was prepared on a glass
plate 1 , whereafter, as shown in FIG. 1, the left half of the layer was
exposed to vertically incident linearly polarized light from a 200 W Hg
very high pressure lamp. The right half remained covered during this
exposure. The PPN-coated plate was then turned through 70.degree. around
an axis perpendicular to the incident direction 3 and the right half of
the layer was exposed for three minutes to the polarized UV light. In this
inclined exposure the polarization direction was chosen to be in the plane
formed by the perpendicular 4 to the plate and by the incident direction
of the UV light. The increased exposure time of the inclined exposure took
account of the reduced effective incident lamp intensity due to rotation
of the plate. An approximately 1 mm thick layer of a nematic liquid
crystal was then applied to the exposed PPN layer by spin coating. When
the plate was then viewed under crossed polarizers, it was seen that the
liquid crystal had been oriented over the entire plate surface parallel to
the UV polarization direction used.
However, when viewed under the polarization microscope a large number of
domains of a size of some tens of mm could be seen in the left half of the
plate, whereas the right half was free from domains. When the plate was
arranged with the orientation direction at 45.degree. to the cross
polarizers, it was consistently light because of the birefringency. When
the plate was then tilted around an axis perpendicularly to the
orientation direction, about half the domains of the left side of the
plate became lighter (increased birefringency) and the other half became
darker (less birefringency). When the plate was tilted in the opposite
direction, the domains changed from light to dark and vice versa. The
asymmetrical change in birefringency when the plate was tilted showed that
the liquid crystal molecules had tilted relatively to the plate surface.
Since no direction had been marked out in the exposure of the left half of
the plate no preferred tilting of the liquid crystal molecules was to be
expected, and so there were domains which differed from one another in
their tilt direction.
When the right half of the plate was observed, the whole surface became
lighter in the case of tilting in one direction but darker in the case of
tilting in the opposite direction. The inclined exposure had therefore
produced in this zone a tilt angle in the PPN material, so that the liquid
crystal molecules were tilted consistently in the direction thus
programmed.
EXAMPLE 3
LC Layer with Tilt Angle Pattern
A layer was prepared from the photopolymer PPN 2 in accordance with Example
1. A chromium mask containing a checkered pattern of squares of 3 mm side
length was placed on the layer. The PPN-coated plate together with the
mask was placed at an angle of +70.degree. to the direction of incident
light of a UV lamp and exposed through the mask. As in Example 2 the
polarization direction was disposed in the plane bounded by the
perpendicular to the plate and the UV incidence direction. The mask was
then removed and the PPN plate turned in the opposite direction so that
the normal to the plate and the UV incidence direction formed an angle of
-70.degree.. The subsequent second exposure could be made without a mask
because of the photostability of the PPN material.
After the exposure a cross-linkable nematic liquid crystal mixture was
dissolved in anisole and applied to the PPN layer by spin coating. The
mixture consisted mainly of molecules having strongly polar cyano terminal
groups tending to take up a position perpendicular to the surface at the
boundary layer with the air, so that existing tilt angle is increased. The
cross-linkability was produced by adding to the mixture 5% of the
following diacrylate component:
##STR2##
The mixture also contained 2% of the photo-initiator IRGACURE 369 produced
by Ciba. The liquid crystal layer was then cross-linked by being exposed
for about 30 minutes to the isotropic light of a 150 W xenon lamp.
It could be seen under cross-polarizers that the liquid crystal molecules
had been oriented consistently in one direction over the entire area. As
shown on the left of FIG. 2, no pattern was recognisable in perpendicular
viewing. When the layer was positioned with the orientation direction of
the liquid crystals at an angle of 45.degree. to the polarizers,
birefringency was maximum. When, as shown in the centre of FIG. 2, the
plate was tilted around an axis perpendicularly to the orientation
direction, the checkerboard pattern with light and dark zones became
clearly recognisable. When the plate was tilted in the opposite direction
as shown on the right of FIG. 2 the complementary checkerboard pattern was
obtained --i.e., the light and dark zones were changed over. The
appearance of the pattern despite consistent azimuthal orientation of the
liquid crystal molecules was due to the differently directed tilt angles
induced in the two inclined exposures, the latter angles having been
transferred from the PPN material to the liquid crystal layer. In the
tilting, the zones in which the longitudinal axis of the liquid crystal
(optical axis) was at an inclination to the viewing direction became dark
whereas the zones whose optical axes had turned away from the viewing
direction became lighter, so that birefringency was increased.
To make the induced tilt angle clearly visible, the liquid crystal mixture
used in this example consisted largely of non-cross-linkable highly polar
molecules, and so the mechanical stability of the cross-linked layer was
not very high. Instead of this, of course, a liquid crystal mixture
consisting solely of cross-linkable molecules can be used, so that a dense
network and, therefore, high mechanical and thermal stability can be
achieved. Tilt angle patterns of this kind having an asymmetrical viewing
angle dependency can be used, for example, as a security element for
credit cards, identity cards or the like.
EXAMPLE 4
Two TN-LCD Domains
A PPN 3 coated glass plate having ITO electrodes was exposed as in Example
3 with a checkerboard pattern. Half of the zones were illuminated
diagonally through a chromium mask in a first exposure process at an angle
of +70.degree. while the remaining zones were then exposed at an angle of
-70.degree.. A cell with a plate separation of 10 mm was constructed with
this plate and a second ITO glass plate having a rubbed polyimide
orientation layer. The rubbing direction of the polyimide layer was
perpendicular to the orientation direction of the PPN plate. The cell was
then filled with a liquid crystal mixture at a temperature slightly above
the clarification point of the mixture, then slowly cooled. Under crossed
polarizers a rotatory cell was identified which had a twist of 900 and a
rotatory direction alternating from zone to zone. A tilt angle responsible
for the alternately left-rotatory and right-rotatory zone was therefore
induced by the different radiation direction in the exposure of the PPN
layer. In TN-LCDs, subdividing the pixels into subpixels which differ from
one another by the direction of rotation as in this example can provide
so-called two-domain TN-LCDs which have a much improved viewing angle
dependency as compared with conventional TN-LCDs.
If photostructured orientation layers are used on both sides four-domain
TN-LCDs can be produced which further improve the viewing angle
dependency.
EXAMPLE 5
Measurement of the Tilt Angle
Layers of PPN 1 were applied to two glass plates coated with transparent
ITO electrodes as in Example 1. Both layers were then exposed over their
entire surfaces with inclinedly incident linearly polarized UV light. The
polarization direction was disposed in the plane bounded by the
perpendicular to the plate and the direction of UV incidence. The two
plates were then assembled to form a parallel cell with a between-plates
distance of 20 .mu.m, the parallel cell was filled with a nematic liquid
crystal mixture at a temperature slightly above the clarification point of
the mixture. After the cell had cooled slowly it changed over consistently
when a voltage was applied to the two electrodes. No reverse tilt was
observed. The tilt angle induced in the inclined exposure had therefore
been transferred to the liquid crystal molecule in the cell. The tilt
angle of the liquid crystals is then measured optically by the crystal
rotation method. A tilt angle of 0.6.degree. was found.
EXAMPLE 6
Effect of the Angle of Incidence on the Tilt Angle
Two glass plates were coated with PPN 4 as in Example 5. In contrast to
Example 5 the layers were exposed to UV light incident at an angle of
70.degree. to the normal to the surface. The effective radiation time was
the same as in Example 5 so that the actual radiation time, which had to
be corrected by the geometry factor, was 88 minutes. The parallel cell
formed by the two plates was again filled with the liquid crystal mixture
7728 of ROLIC AG. The tilt angle of the liquid crystal was 1.4.degree. in
this case.
EXAMPLE 7
Variation of Tilt Angle During Exposure Time
As in Example 6 two ITO-coated glass plates were coated with PPN 4 and
exposed diagonally at an angle of 70.degree.. However, in this case the
exposure time was 12 minutes and not 88 minutes. As in Examples 5 and 6 a
parallel cell was constructed from the two plates and filled with the
liquid crystal mixture 7728 of ROLIC AG. It could be seen under crossed
polarizers that the liquid crystal no longer had a planar orientation;
instead, the conoscopic imaging (FIG. 3a) showed that the liquid crystal
molecules were substantially perpendicular to the orientation layer.
However, the fact that they were slightly inclined to the normal to the
surface was apparent from the difference from the actually perpendicular
(homeotropic) orientation produced after the application of a voltage of 6
volts to the two ITO electrodes, so that the conoscopic cross was shifted
to the centre (FIG. 3b). The subsequent measurement of the tilt angle
showed that the longitudinal axis of the liquid crystal molecules was at
an angle of 86.degree. to the plate surface.
Variation of the radiation angle and irradiation time enables the tilt
angle to be adjusted to any value between 0.degree. and 90.degree..
EXAMPLE 8
LPP Oriented STN Cell
Two ITO-coated glass plates were coated with PPN 4 and exposed diagonally
at 70.degree. for 60 minutes. The two plates were so combined that a
left-rotatory 240.degree. STN cell was produced. The between-plates gap
was adjusted by spacers to 7 mm. The mixture 7728 was doped with 0.73% of
the left-rotatory chiral dope CM 9209F of ROLIC AG and charged into the
cell. No fingerprint textures were observed when a voltage was applied.
The transmission curve of the cell (FIG. 4) revealed a steepness of
V.sub.90 /V.sub.10 =1.06. This shows that the cell operates in the STN
mode.
Orientation layers having a tilt angle sufficient for STN cells can
therefore be prepared by diagonal exposure of parallel orienting PPN
materials.
Upon reading the present specification, various alternative embodiments
will become obvious to those skilled in the art. These embodiments are to
be considered within the scope and spirit of the subject invention which
is only to be limited by the claims that follow and their equivalents.
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