Liquid Crystals: A KSU Institution
April 5, 2010
The lines started well before
the release of the highly anticipated
new Apple gadget Saturday.
The lines started well before
the release of the highly anticipated
new Apple gadget Saturday.
By the day’s end, Apple said
it had sold 300,000 iPads.
But before its release, three
graduates of Kent State’s Liquid
Crystal Institute played a key role
as part of Apple’s design team in
the development of the 1.5-pound
tablet device.
“Because they have the technical
knowledge (of liquid-crystal
technology), they can set those
designs with the authority,” said
Phil Bos, associate director of LCI.
“These guys work very closely
with the liquid-crystal display
manufacturers to optimize the
display for Apple’s application.”
Translation for non-science
people: The Kent State graduates
on Apple’s design team helped
determine the resolution of the
display, the thickness of the tablet
and the brightness of colors —
pushing the limits of technology
based on their knowledge of liquid
crystals.
But what’s a liquid crystal?
Liquid crystals are actually
an intermediate phase of matter
between a solid and a liquid, Bos
said. The cigar-shaped molecules
were first discovered in the 1800s
and are crucial to computer and
television displays because of
their ability to reorient when hit
by a small voltage.
The polarization state of light
changes depending on the molecule’s
orientation, Bos said.
That process yields liquid-crystal
displays, empowering vibrant
screens for flat-screen televisions,
computers, GPS systems and the
new iPad, among other applications.
The science behind those products
emerged from Kent State as
scientists began developing uses
for the cigar-shaped molecules.
Now, the liquid-crystal display
industry rakes in more than $150
billion per year, said Oleg Lavrentovich,
director of LCI.
Liquid crystals’ Kent State roots
In the 1960s, Glenn Brown, a
Kent State chemistry professor,
became interested in the liquidcrystal
field, Bos said. He wrote a
few articles about liquid crystals,
and he tried to attract key scientists
to study them at Kent State.
In 1965 he established the Liquid
Crystal Institute — an academic
situation unique to Kent State.
Bos said after World War II,
most universities studied disciplines,
such as physics or biology.
But LCI combined multiple
disciplines to focus research on a
single topic.
“Because they had that focus,
LCI was able to be and still is the
best in the world,” Bos said. “It’s
not just because we’re so much
smarter. It’s because of the university’s
structure that puts a focus on
a topic rather than a discipline.”
Within a few years of its creation,
LCI developed in huge
strides as the focus shifted from
the link between the structure
of liquid crystals and biological
systems to the business opportunities
associated with liquidcrystal
technology.
“At the time, people didn’t
have a clue that in 40 years people
would use liquid crystals routinely,”
Lavrentovich said.
In 1969, James Fergason, one
of LCI’s first associate directors,
patented the twisted nematic cell,
the first liquid-crystal device that
led to huge growth in the industry.
Fergason won a prestigious
Lemelson-MIT $500,000 prize
in 2006 for his discovery, and he
donated $25,000 to LCI.
Fergason also helped establish the first spinoff company of LCI in 1970 called ILIXCO, paving the way for future offshoot companies. ILIXCO, now called LXD Inc., is a manufacturer of liquid-crystal displays.
“Fergason understood that it’s not only (that) you make a discovery,” Lavrentovich said, “you need to make the follow-up steps, such as creating a company that would produce the real products.”
Early uses of liquid-crystal technology included displays for quartz watches and calculators. Now, more than 30 years later, many products in Best Buy stores rely on liquid-crystal technology, he said.
The growth of the industry translated into more research funding at Kent State. The Liquid Crystal Institute generated more than $60 million in outside research funds to Kent State between 1995 and 2010, Lavrentovich said.
The three-story Liquid Crystal and Materials Sciences Building opened in 1996 and acts as the central home for the about 20 faculty members and 35 graduate students studying liquid crystals. Many come from different departments, such as physics, chemistry, biology and chemical physics.
“We are not a traditional science department. We are not a traditional engineering department,” said Qi-Huo Wei, an assistant professor at LCI. “We have both. That’s unique.
“It’s not easy to be such an institution. This is a culture that I think accumulated from a longtime history.”
Emerging liquid-crystal technology
Today, researchers at LCI are looking at other uses for liquid-crystal technology — biological-sensing devices to detect anthrax and E. coli, “smart” greenhouses to adjust for sunlight conditions and even a product similar to the invisibility cloak in the “Harry Potter” series.
“We have very prominent scientists working here,” Lavrentovich said.
Green technology tops the priority list of many researchers, he said, as they try to develop low-energy consuming liquid-crystal devices.
“Their dream is to have a display that would capture the energy of the sun,” he said. “So this is a very powerful concept.”
It’s a concept that could eliminate the use of batteries and allow electronics to run longer on less energy.
“If a unit is requiring a lot of power, it means it costs a lot, but there’s also the inconvenience factor,” said Bos, who is also an LCI professor. “If it has a big battery, it’s heavier and it needs to be replaced often.”
That inconvenience factor is also a driving force behind the creation of electronic paper, an effort to drastically lower the world’s paper consumption.
Bos said the push for electronic paper stems from two main concerns: cost and transportation. A terabyte drive costs about $100 and can hold 1,000 filing cabinets worth of information.
Lavrentovich said the LCI, recently deemed a center of excellence by the state, will continue to explore as many avenues for liquid-crystal technology as possible.
“We’re trying to explore, if not all of them, most of them,” he said.
Contact enterprise reporter Jackie Valley at [email protected].