Cyclical 'flipping of morphology in block copolymer films

Typeset version

 

TY  - JOUR
  - Mokarian-Tabari, P, Collins, T.; Holmes, J. D.; Morris, M. A.
  - 2011
  - June
  - ACS Nano
  - Cyclical 'flipping of morphology in block copolymer films
  - Published
  - ()
  - 5
  - 4617
  - 4623
  - We studied the kinetics of nanopattern evolution in (polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide) diblock copolymer thin films. Using scanning force microscopy, a highly unexpected cylindrical flipping of morphology from normal to parallel to the film plane was detected during solvent annealing of the film (with average thickness of 30 nm) at high vapor pressure. Using an in situ time resolved light scattering device combined with an environmental cell enabled us to obtain kinetic information at different vapor pressures. The data indicated that there is a threshold value for the vapor pressure necessary for the structural transition. We propose a swelling and deswelling mechanism for the orientation flipping of the morphology. The cyclic transition occurs faster in thick films (177 nm) where the mass uptake and solvent volume fraction is smaller and therefore the driving force for phase separation is higher. We induced a stronger segregation by confining the chains in graphoepitaxially patterned substrates. As expected, the cyclic transition occurred at higher rate. Our work is another step forward to understanding the structure evolution and also controlling the alignment of block copolymer nanocylinders independently of thickness and external fields.
  - http://pubs.acs.org/journal/ancac3
DA  - 2011/06
ER  - 
@article{V95057125,
   = {Mokarian-Tabari, P, Collins, T. and  Holmes, J. D. and  Morris, M. A.},
   = {2011},
   = {June},
   = {ACS Nano},
   = {Cyclical 'flipping of morphology in block copolymer films},
   = {Published},
   = {()},
   = {5},
  pages = {4617--4623},
   = {{We studied the kinetics of nanopattern evolution in (polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide) diblock copolymer thin films. Using scanning force microscopy, a highly unexpected cylindrical flipping of morphology from normal to parallel to the film plane was detected during solvent annealing of the film (with average thickness of 30 nm) at high vapor pressure. Using an in situ time resolved light scattering device combined with an environmental cell enabled us to obtain kinetic information at different vapor pressures. The data indicated that there is a threshold value for the vapor pressure necessary for the structural transition. We propose a swelling and deswelling mechanism for the orientation flipping of the morphology. The cyclic transition occurs faster in thick films (177 nm) where the mass uptake and solvent volume fraction is smaller and therefore the driving force for phase separation is higher. We induced a stronger segregation by confining the chains in graphoepitaxially patterned substrates. As expected, the cyclic transition occurred at higher rate. Our work is another step forward to understanding the structure evolution and also controlling the alignment of block copolymer nanocylinders independently of thickness and external fields.}},
   = {http://pubs.acs.org/journal/ancac3},
  source = {IRIS}
}
AUTHORSMokarian-Tabari, P, Collins, T.; Holmes, J. D.; Morris, M. A.
YEAR2011
MONTHJune
JOURNAL_CODEACS Nano
TITLECyclical 'flipping of morphology in block copolymer films
STATUSPublished
TIMES_CITED()
SEARCH_KEYWORD
VOLUME5
ISSUE
START_PAGE4617
END_PAGE4623
ABSTRACTWe studied the kinetics of nanopattern evolution in (polystyrene-b-polyethylene oxide) diblock copolymer thin films. Using scanning force microscopy, a highly unexpected cylindrical flipping of morphology from normal to parallel to the film plane was detected during solvent annealing of the film (with average thickness of 30 nm) at high vapor pressure. Using an in situ time resolved light scattering device combined with an environmental cell enabled us to obtain kinetic information at different vapor pressures. The data indicated that there is a threshold value for the vapor pressure necessary for the structural transition. We propose a swelling and deswelling mechanism for the orientation flipping of the morphology. The cyclic transition occurs faster in thick films (177 nm) where the mass uptake and solvent volume fraction is smaller and therefore the driving force for phase separation is higher. We induced a stronger segregation by confining the chains in graphoepitaxially patterned substrates. As expected, the cyclic transition occurred at higher rate. Our work is another step forward to understanding the structure evolution and also controlling the alignment of block copolymer nanocylinders independently of thickness and external fields.
PUBLISHER_LOCATION
ISBN_ISSN
EDITION
URLhttp://pubs.acs.org/journal/ancac3
DOI_LINK
FUNDING_BODY
GRANT_DETAILS