Photoactive/passive molecular glass blends : an efficient strategy to optimize azomaterials for surface relief grating inscription
Article [Accepted Manuscript]
Is part of
ACS Applied materials and interfaces ; vol. 9, no. 1, pp. 798-808.Publisher(s)
American Chemical SocietyAuthor(s)
Abstract(s)
: Irradiation of azomaterials causes various photophysical and photomechanical effects that can be exploited
for the preparation of functional materials such as surface relief gratings (SRGs). Herein, we develop and apply an efficient
strategy to optimize the SRG inscription process by decoupling, for the first time, the important effects of the azo content
and glass transition temperature (Tg). We prepare blends of a photoactive molecular glass functionalized with the azo Dis‐
perse Red 1 (gDR1) with a series of analogous photopassive molecular glasses. Blends with 10 and 40 mol% of gDR1 are
completely miscible, present very similar optical properties, and cover a wide range of Tg from below to well above ambient
temperature. SRG inscription experiments show that the diffraction efficiency (DE), residual DE and initial inscription rate
reach a maximum when Tg is 25 to 40 °C above ambient temperature for low to high azo content, respectively. Indeed, for
a fixed 40 mol% azo content, choosing the optimal Tg enables doubling the SRG inscription rate and increasing DE sixfold.
Moreover, a higher azo content enables higher DE for a similar Tg. Spectroscopy measurements indicate that the photo‐
orientation of DR1 and its thermal stability are maximal with Tg around 70 °C, independent of the azo content. We conclude
that the SRG potential of azomaterials depends on their capability to photo‐orient but that the matrix rigidity eventually
limits the inscription kinetics, leading to an optimal Tg that depends on the azo content. This study exposes clear material
design guidelines to optimize the SRG inscription process and the photoactivity of azomaterials.
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