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Download fileLocally Favored Two-Dimensional Structures of Block Copolymer Melts on Nonneutral Surfaces
journal contribution
posted on 10.01.2018, 17:34 authored by Mani Sen, Naisheng Jiang, Maya K. Endoh, Tadanori Koga, Alexander Ribbe, Atikur Rahman, Daisuke Kawaguchi, Keiji Tanaka, Detlef-M. SmilgiesSelf-assembly of
block copolymers (BCPs) into arrays of well-defined
nanoscopic structures has attracted extensive academic and industrial
interests over the past several decades. In contrast to the bulk where
phase behavior is controlled by the segmental interaction parameter,
the total number of segments in BCPs and volume fraction, the morphologies
and orientations of BCP thin films can also be strongly influenced
by the substrate surface energy/chemistry effect (considered as a
“substrate field”). Here, we report the formation of
locally favored structures where all constituent blocks coexist side-by-side
on nonneutral solid surfaces irrespective of their chain architectures,
microdomain structures, and interfacial energetics. The experimental
results using a suite of surface-sensitive techniques intriguingly
demonstrate that individual preferred blocks and nonpreferred blocks
lie flat on the substrate surface and form a two-dimensional percolating
network structure as a whole. The large numbers of solid-segment contacts,
which overcome a loss in the conformational entropy of the polymer
chains, prevent the structure relaxing to its equilibrium state (i.e.,
forming microdomain structures) even in a (good) solvent atmosphere.
Our results provide direct experimental evidence of the long-lived,
nonequilibrium structures of BCPs and may point to a new perspective
on the self-assembly of BCP melts in contact with impenetrable solids.