Cholesteric liquid crystal mirror with safety features
First Claim
1. A variable reflectance mirror comprising:
- a transparent front slide;
a rear slide;
a spacer for spacing apart said front and rear slides;
a layer of a cholestric liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric antisotrophy contained in the space formed by said spacer between said front and rear slides;
a transparent electrode structure on said front slide;
an electrode structure on said rear slide;
a highly reflecting surface on said rear slide;
the facing surfaces of both slides having a surface treatment that produces a tilt to the liquid crystal molecules in contact with said surface, said tilt being substantially between 20° and
75°
; and
voltage control means for applying at least two discrete non-zero voltage levels to the cell electrodes including applying a first voltage level to the cell electrodes in order to rapidly establish a light transmissive state in said liquid crystal layer and applying a second voltage level, lower than said first voltage level, to the cell electrodes in order to rapidly establish a light scattering state in said liquid crystal layer, said voltage control means when not applying voltage to the cell electrodes results in said liquid crystal layer slowly relaxing to said light transmissive state.
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Accused Products
Abstract
The reflectance of a mirror is variable to provide a dipping car mirror. The mirror comprises a liquid crystal cell formed by two transparent slides coated on their inner surfaces with electrodes. The front electrode is transparent while the rear one is a reflector or a separate reflecting surface is provided. Between the slides is a layer 8 to 12 μm thick of a cholesteric liquid crystal material. The slides are surface treated to give a high tilt homogeneous boundary condition, i.e. the liquid crystal molecules at the slide wall incline at a high (20°-75°) tilt to the surface. A control unit applies either a high voltage (10 volts at 1 kHz) or a low voltage (1 to 2 volts at 1 kHz). The high voltage results in the liquid crystal adopting a light transmissive state. In this state light reflects off the rear of the cell. The low voltage state is a scattering state for the liquid crystal material. In the scattering state light reflects off the front slide and is about 1/10 that reflected off the rear electrode. A photocell controls the switching of the cell. With zero voltage across the cell the liquid crystal material adopts a light transmitter state.
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Citations
4 Claims
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1. A variable reflectance mirror comprising:
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a transparent front slide; a rear slide; a spacer for spacing apart said front and rear slides; a layer of a cholestric liquid crystal material having a positive dielectric antisotrophy contained in the space formed by said spacer between said front and rear slides; a transparent electrode structure on said front slide; an electrode structure on said rear slide; a highly reflecting surface on said rear slide; the facing surfaces of both slides having a surface treatment that produces a tilt to the liquid crystal molecules in contact with said surface, said tilt being substantially between 20° and
75°
; andvoltage control means for applying at least two discrete non-zero voltage levels to the cell electrodes including applying a first voltage level to the cell electrodes in order to rapidly establish a light transmissive state in said liquid crystal layer and applying a second voltage level, lower than said first voltage level, to the cell electrodes in order to rapidly establish a light scattering state in said liquid crystal layer, said voltage control means when not applying voltage to the cell electrodes results in said liquid crystal layer slowly relaxing to said light transmissive state. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4)
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Specification