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Colorimetric qualification of shear sensitive liquid crystal coatingsThe work that has been done to date on the Shear Sensitive Liquid Crystal Project demonstrated that cholesteric liquid crystal coatings respond to both the direction and magnitude of a shearing force. The response of the coating is to selectively scatter incident white light into a spectrum of colors. Discernible color changes at a fixed angle of observation and illumination are the result of an applied shear stress. The intention was to be able to convert these observable color patterns from a flow visualization technique into a quantitative tool. One of the earlier intentions was to be able to use liquid crystals in dynamic flow fields. This was assumed possible because liquid crystals had made it possible to visualize transients in surface shear forces. Although the transients were visualized by color changes to an order one micro second, the time response of a coating to align to a shearing force is dependent on the magnitude of the change between its initial and final states. Unfortunately, the response is not instantaneous. It is for this reason any future attempt at quantifying the magnitude and directions of a shearing force are limited to surface shear stress vector fields in three dimensional steady state flows. This limitation does not significantly detract from the utility of liquid crystal coatings. The measurement of skin friction in the study of transition on wings, prediction of drag forces, performance assessment, and the investigation of boundary layer behavior is of great importance in aerodynamics. There exist numerous examples of techniques for the measurement of surface shear stress. Most techniques require arduous calibrations and necessitate extensive preparation of the receiving surfaces. However, the main draw back of instruments such as Preston tubes, hot films, buried wire gages, and floating element balances is that they only provide a point measurement. The advantages of capturing global shear data would be appreciable when compared with conventional point measurement sensors. It has yet to be determined if a repeatable correlation exists between the measured color of a liquid crystal coating and the magnitude/directional components of a shear vector imposed onto it.
Document ID
19940008818
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Muratore, Joseph J., Jr.
(MCAT Inst. San Jose, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
August 1, 1993
Subject Category
Solid-State Physics
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-194126
MCAT-93-17
NAS 1.26:194126
Report Number: NASA-CR-194126
Report Number: MCAT-93-17
Report Number: NAS 1.26:194126
Accession Number
94N13291
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NCC2-704
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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