posted on 2019-10-15, 19:14authored byAlexa
M. Wong, Daniel J. Valles, Carlos Carbonell, Courtney L. Chambers, Angelica Y. Rozenfeld, Rawan W. Aldasooky, Adam B. Braunschweig
Here, we show that
the surface-initiated thiol-(meth)acrylate polymerization
can be used to create brush polymer patterns with precise control
over the feature height at each microscale pixel. The reaction was
studied using a printer where a digital micromirror device controls
light delivery to the surface, so multiple reaction conditions can
be examined in each print. The resulting increases in experimental
throughput and precision were demonstrated by studying systematically
the effect of photocatalyst, photoinitiator, and light intensity on
feature growth rate. In addition to demonstrating the utility of surface-initiated
thiol-(meth)acrylate chemistry for creating complex brush polymer
patterns, this work describes an improved and high-throughput approach
for studying grafted-from photopolymerizations.