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Dive into the research topics where Ivan Dozov is active.

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Featured researches published by Ivan Dozov.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2009

Liquid-crystalline nematic phase in aqueous suspensions of a disk-shaped natural beidellite clay.

Erwan Paineau; K. Antonova; Christophe Baravian; Isabelle Bihannic; Patrick Davidson; Ivan Dozov; Marianne Impéror-Clerc; Pierre Levitz; A. Madsen; Florian Meneau; Laurent J. Michot

After size-selection and osmotic pressure measurements at fixed ionic strength, the behavior of aqueous colloidal suspensions of anisotropic disklike beidellite clay particles has been investigated by combining optical observations under polarized light, rheological, and small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) experiments. The obtained phase diagrams (volume fraction/ionic strength) reveal, for ionic strength below 10(-3) M/L, a first-order isotropic/nematic (I/N) phase transition before gel formation at low volume fractions, typically around 0.5%. This I/N transition line displays a positive slope for increasing ionic strength and shifts toward lower volume fraction with increasing particle size, confirming that the system is controlled by repulsive interactions. The swelling laws, derived from the interparticle distances obtained by SAXS, display a transition from isotropic swelling at low volume fractions to lamellar swelling at higher volume fractions. The liquid-crystal properties have then been investigated in detail. Highly aligned nematic samples can be obtained in three different ways, by applying a magnetic field, an ac electric field, and by spontaneous homeotropic anchoring on surfaces. The birefringence of the fluid nematic phase is negative with typical values around 5 x 10(-4) at a volume fraction of about 0.6%. High nematic order parameters have been obtained as expected for well-aligned samples. The nematic director is aligned parallel to the magnetic field and perpendicular to the electric field.


Faraday Discussions | 2005

The complex phase behaviour of suspensions of goethite (α-FeOOH) nanorods in a magnetic field

Bruno J. Lemaire; Patrick Davidson; J. Ferré; J. P. Jamet; Denis Petermann; Pierre Panine; Ivan Dozov; Daniel Stoenescu; Jean-Pierre Jolivet

In 1902, Majorana reported the magneto-optical properties of aqueous colloidal suspensions of mixed iron oxides. Oddly enough, the magnetic-field induced birefringence displayed a non-monotonic dependence upon field intensity. This behaviour was later interpreted as due to the existence in these sols of at least two different chemical species. During the course of our studies of mineral liquid crystals, we have revisited this problem by examining aqueous suspensions of pure goethite (α-FeOOH) nanorods. Although they are comprised of a single chemical species, these suspensions show the same odd behaviour reported by Majorana. Moreover, we show that, as the volume fraction increases, the suspensions have an isotropic liquid/nematic/rectangular columnar phase sequence, with first-order transitions between these phases. The non-monotonic dependence of the field-induced birefringence can be explained by the existence of a remanent magnetic moment of the nanorods and the negative anisotropy of their magnetic susceptibility. Therefore, the nanorods align parallel to a weak field but realign perpendicular to the field beyond Bc ≈ 375 mT. In addition, other interesting phenomena appear upon application of a magnetic field: the disordered (i.e. isotropic in zero-field) phase becomes highly anisotropic and difficult to distinguish from the nematic phase. Both phases then acquire not only quadrupolar order but also dipolar order. The rectangular columnar phase is strongly stabilised versus the nematic one. Our experimental observations raise new theoretical questions about the phase diagram of these suspensions with respect to volume fraction and magnetic field intensity.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2012

Tailoring highly oriented and micropatterned clay/polymer nanocomposites by applying an a.c. electric field.

Erwan Paineau; Ivan Dozov; Isabelle Bihannic; Christophe Baravian; Marie-Eve M. Krapf; Adrian-Marie Philippe; Stéphan Rouzière; Laurent J. Michot; Patrick Davidson

Clay/polymer nanocomposites have recently raised much interest because of their widespread industrial applications. Nevertheless, controlling both clay platelet exfoliation and orientation during polymerization still remains challenging. Herein, we report the elaboration of clay/polymer nanocomposite hydrogels from aqueous suspensions of natural swelling clays submitted to high-frequency a.c. electric fields. X-ray scattering experiments have confirmed the complete exfoliation of the clay sheets in the polymer matrix, even after polymerization. Moreover, polarized light microscopy shows that the clay platelets were perfectly oriented by the electric field and that this field-induced alignment was frozen in by in situ photopolymerization. This procedure allowed us to not only produce uniformly aligned samples but also pattern platelet orientation, at length scales down to 20 μm. This straightforward and cheap nanocomposite patterning technique can be easily extended to a wide range of natural or synthetic inorganic anisotropic particles.


Langmuir | 2013

Electric-Field Alignment of Chitin Nanorod–Siloxane Oligomer Reactive Suspensions

Maria Yu Boltoeva; Ivan Dozov; Patrick Davidson; Krassa Antonova; Laura Cardoso; Bruno Alonso; Emmanuel Belamie

Uniaxially anisotropic chitin-silica nanocomposite solids have been obtained thanks to the electric field-induced macroscopic alignment of liquid-crystalline reactive cosuspensions. We demonstrate how chitin nanorods (260 nm long, 23 nm thick) can be aligned upon the application of an alternating current (ac) electric field, and within water-ethanol suspensions containing reactive siloxane oligomers (D(h) ∼ 3 nm). The alignment at the millimeter length scale is monitored by in situ small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) and polarized light optical microscopy. The composition and state (isotropic, chiral nematic) of the cosuspensions are proven to be determining factors. For nematic phases, the alignment is preserved when the electric field is switched off. Further solvent evaporation induces sol-gel transition, and uniaxially anisotropic chitin-silica nanocomposites are formed after complete drying of the aligned nematic suspensions. Here, the collective response of colloidal mesophases to external electric fields and the subsequent formation of ordered nanocomposite solids would represent a new opportunity for materials design.


SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers | 2002

5:3 Ultra Low Power Bright Reflective Displays using BiNem® Technology Fabricated by Standard Manufacturing Equipment

Cecille Joubert; Jacques Angele; Alain Boissier; Patrice Dave; Ivan Dozov; Thierry Elbhar; Bertrand Pecout; Daniel Stoenescu; Romain Vercelleto; Phillipe Martinot-Lagarde

We have developed reflective bistable nematic BiNem® LCDs with 160×160 and VGA resolutions. On state reflectance reaches 30% and contrast ratio exceeds 9 at normal incidence, with excellent viewing angle. Infinite bistability coupled to low driving voltage enable ultra low power consumption. Manufacturing process uses standard passive LCD fabrication equipment.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2014

Hybrid nanocomposites with tunable alignment of the magnetic nanorod filler.

Fabien Perineau; Céline Rosticher; Laurence Rozes; Corinne Chanéac; Clément Sanchez; Doru Constantin; Ivan Dozov; Patrick Davidson; Cyrille Rochas

For many important applications, the performance of polymer-anisotropic particle nanocomposite materials strongly depends on the orientation of the nanoparticles. Using the very peculiar magnetic properties of goethite (α-FeOOH) nanorods, we produced goethite-poly(hydroxyethyl methacrylate) nanocomposites in which the alignment direction and the level of orientation of the nanorods could easily be tuned by simply adjusting the intensity of a magnetic field applied during polymerization. Because the particle volume fraction was kept low (1-5.5 vol %), we used the orientational order induced by the field in the isotropic phase rather than the spontaneous orientational order of the nematic phase. At the strongest field values (up to 1.5 T), the particles exhibit almost perfect antinematic alignment, as measured by optical birefringence and small-angle X-ray scattering. The results of these two techniques are in remarkably good agreement, validating the use of birefringence measurements for quantifying the degree of orientational order. We also demonstrate that the ordering induced by the field in the isotropic suspension is preserved in the final material after field removal. This work illustrates the interest, for such problems, of considering the field-induced alignment of anisotropic nanoparticles in the isotropic phase, an approach that is effective at low filler content, that avoids the need of controlling the nematic texture, and that allows tuning of the orientation level of the particles at will simply by adjusting the field intensity.


Journal of information display | 2005

Development of low anchoring strength liquid crystal mixtures for bistable nematic displays

Ivan Dozov; Daniel‐Nicusor Stoenescu; Sandrine Lamarque-Forget; Stéphane Joly; Jean-Claude Dubois; Philippe Martinot-Lagarde

Abstract The recent Bistable Nematic (BiNem®) LCD technology presents long term bistability, high level passive matrix multiplexing, gray levels capabilities and high optical quality. The BiNem® device, based on anchoring breaking, needs specific low anchoring strength materials – alignment layers and liquid crystal mixtures. We present here our approach to develop nematic mixtures with wide enough temperature range and low zenithal anchoring energy.


SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers | 2007

40.2: Invited Paper: New Developments and Applications Update of BiNem® Displays

Jacques Angele; Daniel Stoenescu; Ivan Dozov; Jesper Osterman; Jean-Denis Laffitte; Maxime Compagnon; Thierry Emeraud; François Leblanc

We describe a new alignment material for BiNem® displays with improved azimuthal / zenithal anchoring energies that show no after-image effects and can withstand low and high temperature storage tests. We also describe a partial image refreshing driving mode to improve the response time of BiNem displays. We introduce display modules designed for electronic shelf label and e-dictionary applications.


SID Symposium Digest of Technical Papers | 2001

16.1: Recent Improvements of Bistable Nematic Displays Switched By Anchoring Breaking (BiNem®)

Ivan Dozov; Philippe Martinot-Lagarde; Sandrine Lamarque-Forget; Daniel Stoenescu; Jacques Angele; Romain Vercelletto; Bertrand Pecout; Alain Boissier

We present recent major improvements of 180° bistable twisted nematics displays (BiNem®), a new nematic bistable display technology characterized by the breaking of monostable anchoring. This technology allows the switching between 0° and 180°-twisted stable textures. We show that optimization of the liquid crystal material, suitable rubbed polymer anchoring layers, and the use of a simple multiplexing scheme allow, for the first time, to demonstrate a high contrast with a medium resolution black and white passive matrix. Excellent contrast ratio, wide view angle, pure black and white optical states, good response times and low electrical consumption are achieved.


Physical Review E | 2017

Electric-field-induced shape transition of nematic tactoids

Luuk Metselaar; Ivan Dozov; Krassimira Antonova; Emmanuel Belamie; Patrick Davidson; Julia M. Yeomans; Amin Doostmohammadi

The occurrence of new textures of liquid crystals is an important factor in tuning their optical and photonics properties. Here, we show, both experimentally and by numerical computation, that under an electric field chitin tactoids (i.e., nematic droplets) can stretch to aspect ratios of more than 15, leading to a transition from a spindlelike to a cigarlike shape. We argue that the large extensions occur because the elastic contribution to the free energy is dominated by the anchoring. We demonstrate that the elongation involves hydrodynamic flow and is reversible: the tactoids return to their original shapes upon removing the field.

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Maurizio Nobili

University of Montpellier

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R. Barberi

University of Calabria

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