Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where S. A. Shvetsov is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by S. A. Shvetsov.


Polymer Science Series A | 2011

Orientational optical nonlinearity of nematic liquid crystals induced by high-molecular-mass azo-containing compounds

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; V. N. Ochkin; M. P. Smayev; S. A. Shvetsov; A. Yu. Bobrovsky; N. I. Boiko; Valery Shibaev; M. I. Barnik

Processes of light-induced reorientation of nematic liquid-crystalline molecules induced by the addition of low concentrations (0.1–2.0 wt %) of comb-shaped polymers and carbosilane dendrimers containing azobenzene fragments are studied. When the molecular structure of the above compounds becomes more complicated, the induced orientational nonlinearity increases. The introduction of 2G and 3G dendrimers into a nematic has for the first time made it possible to visualize and study a purely optical first-order Freedericksz transition in the field of a linearly polarized wave.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 2011

Optical Director Reorientation in NLCs Doped with Light-Absorbing Codendrimers of Different Generations

I. A. Budagovsky; V. N. Ochkin; S. A. Shvetsov; M. P. Smayev; A. S. Zolot'ko; D. A. Brazhnikov; N. I. Boiko; M. I. Barnik

The orientational optical nonlinearity induced in NLCs by light-absorbing carbosilane codendrimers with statistical distribution of terminal aliphatic and azobenzene fragments has been studied comparatively for different (from the second to the fourth) codendrimer generations. It was found that all the codendrimers induce the negative nonlinearity (director rotates away from the light field thus decreasing the refractive index of the extraordinary wave). The orientational response increases with the generation number. The optical bistability is manifested for NLCs doped with the codendrimers of the second and third generations.


Bulletin of the Lebedev Physics Institute | 2015

Orienting effect of light on dye-doped liquid-crystal polymer

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; M. P. Smayev; S. A. Shvetsov; A. Yu. Bobrovsky

Light-induced reorientation of the dye-doped liquid-crystal polymer director is found and studied. The director rotates from the light field direction, which corresponds to the negative optical nonlinearity. The nonlinearity coefficient is several times larger than that of a low-molecular liquid crystal doped with the same dye.


Molecular Crystals and Liquid Crystals | 2012

Light Interaction with NLCs Doped with Comb-Shaped Azopolymers with Different Degrees of Polymerization

I. A. Budagovsky; D. S. Pavlov; S. A. Shvetsov; M. P. Smayev; A. S. Zolot’ko; N. I. Boiko; M. I. Barnik

The light-induced director reorientation in NLCs doped with the comb-shaped azopolymers with different degrees of polymerization (the number of chromophore groups) has been studied. The negative optical nonlinearity (a decrease in the refractive index of the extraordinary wave due to the director rotation away from the light field) was observed for all dopants. It was found that the threshold power of the Freedericksz transition decreases with the polymerization degree. The light-induced Freedericksz transition of the first order was observed for the dopants with lower degrees of polymerization.


Applied Physics Letters | 2012

First-order light-induced orientation transition in nematic liquid crystal in the presence of low-frequency electric field

I. A. Budagovsky; D. S. Pavlov; S. A. Shvetsov; M. P. Smayev; A. S. Zolot’ko; N. I. Boiko; M. I. Barnik

Director deformation in a planar nematic liquid crystal (NLC) with negative optical nonlinearity (director rotates away from the light field) has been studied. First-order orientation transition and a wide hysteresis loop were observed at changing the light intensity in the presence of an ac field that is non-perpendicular to the undistorted director of liquid crystal due to pretilt. The theory of light beam interaction with NLC under ac field was constructed.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2017

Communication: Orientational structure manipulation in nematic liquid crystal droplets induced by light excitation of azodendrimer dopant

S. A. Shvetsov; A. V. Emelyanenko; N. I. Boiko; Jui-Hsiang Liu; Alexei R. Khokhlov

Reversible orientational transitions in the droplets of a nematic liquid crystal (NLC) caused by the change of boundary conditions under the low intensity diode illumination are investigated. Photosensitivity of NLC is achieved by the addition of the dendrimer compound with azobenzene terminal groups. Two types of NLC droplets in glycerol are considered: the spherical droplets in the bulk of glycerol and the droplets laid-down onto the solid substrate. In the second case, the first order phase transition is revealed. The effects described can be useful for the development of highly sensitive chemical detectors and microsized photo-tunable optical devices.


Optics and Spectroscopy | 2015

Generation of spiral dislocation of wave front in absorbing nematic liquid crystal

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; D. L. Korshunov; M. P. Smayev; S. A. Shvetsov; M. I. Barnik

It is demonstrated that an optical beam acquires a component with spiral dislocation of wave front (optical vortex) due to passage through a layer of homeotropically aligned nematic liquid crystal with light-absorbing admixture. The vortex is formed owing to the heating of liquid crystal and transition to isotropic phase in the irradiated region, which leads to the generation of axisymmetric field distribution of director at the interface of the isotropic channel and nematic liquid crystal.


Bulletin of the Lebedev Physics Institute | 2015

Formation of the light beam with wavefront screw dislocation at the photorefractive effect in nematic liquid crystal

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; M. P. Smayev; S. A. Shvetsov

A light beam with wavefront screw dislocation is generated using a nematic liquid crystal under a dc electric field. Axisymmetric deformation of the director field required for the formation of such a beam appears due to light-induced removal of dc field screening by surface electric charges.


Bulletin of the Lebedev Physics Institute | 2016

Light-induced orientation transition in nematic liquid crystalline polymer

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; V. N. Ochkin; S. A. Shvetsov; A. Yu. Bobrovsky; N. I. Boiko; Valery Shibaev

Optical orientation in transparent nematic liquid crystalline polymer (NLCP) was observed for the first time. In NLCP with dye dopant, the light-induced second-order orientation transition being an analogue of the Freedericksz transition in low-frequency fields is found. The transition threshold is ~10 μW which is lower than the threshold of the light-induced Freedericksz transition in low-molecular nematics by four orders ofmagnitude and is lower than the characteristic value for low-molecular nematics with dye dopant by two orders of magnitude.


Bulletin of the Lebedev Physics Institute | 2014

Light-induced orientation of the molecules of nematic liquid crystals doped with comb-shaped polymers with different spatial distributions of chromophores

I. A. Budagovsky; A. S. Zolot’ko; T. E. Koval’skaya; M. P. Smayev; S. A. Shvetsov; N. I. Boiko; M. A. Bugakov; M. I. Barnik

The orienting effect of light on nematic liquid crystals (NLCs) doped with comb-shaped polymers with different spatial distributions of side absorbing azobenzene fragments, i.e., a homopolymer (containing only azofragments), a block copolymer (containing additionally a block of non-absorbing fragments), and a statistical copolymer (containing randomly arranged absorbing and non-absorbing fragments) is experimentally studied. The light-induced Freedericksz transition threshold for the block copolymer is two times lower than that for the homopolymer. For NLC with statistical copolymer dopant, the first-order orientation transition with an extremely wide optical bistability region is observed.

Collaboration


Dive into the S. A. Shvetsov's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

I. A. Budagovsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. P. Smayev

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N. I. Boiko

Moscow State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. S. Zolot’ko

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. I. Barnik

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. S. Zolot'ko

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

V. N. Ochkin

Russian Academy of Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge