1. Introduction
Lyotropic chromonic liquid crystals (LCLCs) are a particular class of liquid crystals in which mesophases appear to vary both with the solvent concentration, usually water, and the temperature. Chromonic molecules have a disk-like polyaromatic central core and two or more ionic groups at the peripheries. Through non-covalent interactions, such as van der Waals, electrostatic, excluded volume, hydrophobic and pi–pi stacking, molecules are able to self-assemble, even at low concentrations, in cylindrical supramolecular aggregates. These, in turn, self-align along a common direction, the director, giving rise to nematic or 2D phases. Food dyes, drugs, and DNA and its derivatives belong to this class of materials. Cromolyn (DSCG), an anti-asthmatic drug, is an example of a LCLC whose phase diagram and properties are well-known.
Chirality is a widely studied phenomenon in thermotropic liquid crystals (TLCs) that can be easily induced by doping a nematic with chiral moieties. Chiral nematic liquid crystals have been investigated in detail when confined in planar and spherical geometries.
This last form of confinement is obtained by dispersing the liquid crystal in an immiscible fluid and subjecting it to mechanical stirring to obtain an emulsion of liquid crystalline microspheres.
The torque imposed by the chiral molecules on the nematic ones gives rise to a helical arrangement of the director inside the microsphere that provides them with peculiar optical properties. A plethora of stable and metastable optical textures is observed that can also be easily modulated by external stimuli. As an example, when planar anchoring is imposed at the interface and the radius of the microsphere is larger than the pitch of the cholesteric helix, the typical Frank–Pryce texture is obtained. It consists of a series of concentric layers with a defect at the center, with the helical axes oriented radially. If the pitch of the helix is comparable with the wavelength of visible light, Bragg type reflection is observed from microspheres. This optical feature can be exploited in applications in photonics [
1], sensing [
2] and anti-counterfeiting [
3].
In this last context, the intricate and difficult-to-reproduce textures obtained in microspheres when subjected to external stimuli [
4,
5] makes them ideal candidates for the creation of novel anti-counterfeiting tags to be used for tracing, authentication and identification of goods.
With respect to thermotropic liquid crystals, LCLCs offer the considerable advantage of being biocompatible and eco-friendly. LCLCs when confined in curved geometries, for example, in tactoids, droplets, and capillaries, show large reflection symmetry breaking [
6]. This is due to the fact that the strong splay and bend deformations of the director, induced by the curved interface and the surface anchoring at this interface, are relaxed through twist deformations [
7,
8]. This natural chirality may be enhanced by doping them with L and D peptides [
9,
10]. Tactoids or microspheres are an easy method to evaluate chirality in chromonics with respect to standard fingerprint texture or the Cano-wedge method [
6,
11]. In general, without chiral additives, the number of tactoids that show left or right asymmetry are equal to each other; conversely, when the chiral material is added, one type of tactoid prevails. The observed cholesteric pitch can vary from two microns to tens of microns depending on the helical twisting power of the peptides and on their concentration. Recently, a pitch of around three microns was obtained in a planar geometry doping DSCG with trans-hydroxyproline (Trans-Hyp) [
11]. The possibility to further reduce the pitch is appealing from a fundamental point of view, but especially for applications, to enhance the material’s optical and photonic properties. Chiral textures in microspheres are also easily measurable with a polarized-light optical microscope (POM), since in curved geometries, chirality is straightforwardly detectable, especially for high pitch values [
12]. The textures observed in chromonics [
13] are similar to the ones reported in several papers focused on chiral TLCs, even if LCLCs contain different ingredients that are thermodynamically balanced in the mesophases with respect to TLCs. Loss of water, temperature variations, changes in dopant solubility and the use of ions can affect the phase diagram and, consequently, the droplet state diagram [
5]. For this reason the induction of chirality in LCLCs is extremely difficult to control and a deeper understanding of the mechanisms that control the supramolecular self-assembly at molecular level is mandatory.
The work reported here is focused on the properties of DSCG, confined in microspheres and doped with two different amino acids with different helical twisting power: L-alanine and Trans-Hyp. As for TLCs the spherical confinement is obtained preparing an emulsion of chiral DSCG in a suitable immiscible matrix.
As discussed previously, the easiest procedure to obtain an emulsion is to confine the water-based chromonic solution in an oily matrix and to shake the blend. In TLCs, microfluidic techniques are used to create an emulsion of monodispersed liquid-crystalline microspheres. For LCLCs this technique is extremely difficult to implement since other materials, as surfactants, have to be added in order to decrease the interfacial tension between the two immiscible liquids, and this can alter the system’s thermodynamic balance [
14,
15]. Further, the oily matrix must also have low viscosity to be pumped inside microfluidic channels, and this poses a limitation on the materials that can be used. Once the emulsion is prepared, the textures obtained in microspheres, that are the fingerprint of the molecular arrangement, are observed by POM. Experimental analysis confirms the presence of the typical radial arrangement of the Frank–Pryce texture indistinguishable from the one obtained for thermotropic liquid crystals. Thin films of the chiral material are studied as well to obtain information on the chirality induction mechanism; the results confirm what has been previously observed for L-alanine-doped DSCG. In addition, in the case of Trans-Hyp, it appears clear that the mechanism involved in induced chirality is an external binding of the chiral molecules to DSCG cylinders [
13]. Nevertheless, in the reported case, the presence of Trans-Hyp considerably increases the number of microspheres that exhibit the ordered texture. Further, the effect of a charged fluorescent dye on the texture formation was also investigated.
The emulsion is extremely useful since it offers the opportunity to easily manipulate the different components, and provides the system with a high reconfigurability. Nevertheless, a fluid matrix is not optimal for applications because water slowly evaporates from the microspheres. Transforming the mixed emulsion in a polymeric film in which microspheres are embedded is a necessary step to preserve their optical properties in time [
16]. Microspheres containing a LCLC were, for the first time, successfully incorporated in a solid matrix in order to be used in practical applications. The texture obtained in the microspheres’ emulsion is preserved in the free-standing polymeric films and, if the system is kept at low temperatures, it is stable for days. When the system is brought to room temperature the texture degrades after a few days. This makes the investigated materials suitable as anti-counterfeiting labels for cold-chain security applications [
17,
18,
19].
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Chromonic Liquid Crystal
DSCG (
Figure 1a) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (Steinheim, Germany) and used without further purification. When dissolved in water it stacks in cylinder formations, the length of which depends on temperature and concentration; the cylinders then give rise to a nematic phase. At room temperature, the nematic phase exists between 12 and 16 wt% (
Figure 1b) [
20].
Trans-4-Hydroxy-L-proline (Trans-Hyp) was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (
Figure 2a), and a solution of 26% of Trans-Hyp in ultrapure water was used to prepare chiral DSCG.
L-alanine, a non-polar left-hand amino acid, was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (
Figure 2b). For the chiral mixture, DSCG was dissolved in 10%
w/
w L-alanine water solution.
Oxazine 725 (Exciton, Lockbourne, OH, USA) is a fluorescent dye, with a positive charge. In water, it has an absorption peak at 650 nm and an emission peak at 725 nm. Its molecular structure is shown in
Figure 2c. It was added to chromonic solution in a percentage less than 1‰.
2.2. Chromonic-in-Oil Emulsion
To confine the LCLC in a spherical geometry, emulsions were prepared adding a small amount of DSCG to an immiscible matrix. In particular, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) was used. PDMS (Sylgard kit 184, Sigma-Aldrich) is liquid, optically clear and has a high viscosity. The kit is composed of the material and the crosslinker. The PDMS structure is shown in
Figure 2d. It was used as received. 1ml of PDMS was placed at the bottom of a vial, and a droplet of DSCG was successively added to prevent its adhesion to wall surfaces. Through mechanical agitation, a large number of microspheres were obtained.
The volume fraction of chromonic solution in oil was ~1%, and the resulting droplets had diameters ranging from 1 to 300 μm. For microdroplet texture investigations, 10 μL of the prepared emulsion were sandwiched between two laboratory glass plates separated by mylar stripes. Glasses were then glued using epoxy resin to avoid emulsion leakage and slow down water evaporation. Textures were studied using a polarized light microscope (DMRX, Leica, Wetziar, Germany).
2.3. Thin Films
DSCG and chiral DSCG thin films were prepared as in the following. Initially, glasses were thoroughly washed to remove dust and oily residues; then, they were dried with a jet of hot air. A thin polymeric layer of PDMS with crosslinker was deposited by spin-coating on the glasses and, to eliminate any solvent residue, they were placed in an oven at 130 °C for 30 min. In order to increase the wettability of the polymeric substrate and, therefore, to favor the deposition of a uniform and thin film, the coated glasses were treated for two minutes in a plasma cleaner. Once the substrates were ready, 5 μL of chromonic solution was deposited on each of them. Samples were kept at 4 °C and at controlled humidity for one week; then, they were brought back to room temperature and analyzed.
Thin films were measured by X Ray diffraction (XRD) by a D8 Discover (Bruker Axs, Karlsruhe, Germany), λ = 1.5418 Å using two different geometries (Bragg Brentano and Asymmetric Geometry), and by Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) using a Multimode 8 (Bruker, Santa Barbara, CA, USA) equipped with a Nanoscope V controller operating in QNM mode. Topographies were acquired using a silicon nitride tip from Bruker, with k = 40 N/m and a radius 10 nm.
2.4. Free-Standing Flexible Films
Flexible free-standing films, in which microspheres containing nematic and chiral solutions of DSCG were embedded, were obtained using the following procedure. The starting emulsions were prepared as described above with the only exception being in the case of PDMS, wherein the hardener was added in a proportion of 9:1. Emulsions were then deposited in small glass containers and left to dry for 3 days at room temperature. The transparent and flexible films were removed from the containers and observed using POM, they were stored either at room temperature or at 4 °C.
4. Conclusions
Being able to obtain well-defined optical textures is the first crucial step towards the use of chromonic liquid crystals confined in microspheres for practical applications. In this work, for the first time, we have shown that a Frank–Pryce texture, indistinguishable from the one observed in TLC microspheres, can be obtained by doping a chromonic with an high-twisting-power amino acid. What happens at the molecular level seems to be consistent with what is observed for amino acids with low helical-twisting power. The chiral dopant does not influence the molecular stacking of DSCG, but it attaches to the external part of the cylinders, helping their twist, which is also favored by the spherical confinement.
The half-pitch obtained using Trans-Hyp is around 1.65 microns. This value is still too big for applications that exploit the use of visible light in devices. Nevertheless, it represents an important step toward this direction and applications in the sensor field could already be within reach.
The addition of an ionic dye to the solution improves the quality of the texture, and the pitch measured is slightly lower than the one obtained using Trans-Hyp alone. As reported in a previous article [
13], a similar effect has been observed by adding a 1M solution of a monovalent salt to the chromonic mixture. It is known that the presence of ions causes an elongation of the columnar aggregates due to electrostatic effects. In this case, since the dye quantity is in the mM range, we may ascribe the effect both to electrostatic and steric interactions.
The preservation of the microsphere texture when embedded in a thin flexible film has never been reported before. This was obtained by preparing the emulsion with PDMS mixed with its hardener. The possibility of preparing biocompatible and eco-friendly flexible films is fundamental for the creation of novel devices. Due to the temperature sensitivity of the texture, at present, its applications in food cold-chain tracing and sensor technology are envisaged.