Self-Assembling Flower Petals in Liquid Crystals Focus Light

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Liquid crystals, as the name suggests, occupy a state somewhere between a liquid and a solid. Researchers long ago learned how to exploit the unique properties of liquid crystals by manipulating the crystals' rod-shaped molecules to control light in digital displays. Now a University of Pennsylvania team has developed a new optical approach. When the researchers dropped a silica bead into a layer of liquid crystals, capillary forces drew the crystals into hundreds of tiny petals around the bead to form the flowerlike pattern pictured here. The work was detailed in Physical Review X.

The self-assembling petals collectively act as a compound lens that focuses light much like a fly's eye. The lens could find use in solar panels, boosting the collection of sunlight, or could form the tip of a fiber-optic probe to give surgeons a better view inside our bodies.

Annie Sneed is a science journalist who has written for the New York Times, Wired, Public Radio International and Fast Company.

More by Annie Sneed
Scientific American Magazine Vol 310 Issue 3This article was published with the title “What Is It?” in Scientific American Magazine Vol. 310 No. 3 (), p. 23
doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0314-23b

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