We report herein the modular synthesis and nanolithographic potential of poly(dimethylsiloxane-block-methyl methacrylate) (PDMS-b-PMMA) with self-assembled domains approaching sub-10 nm periods. A straightforward and modular coupling strategy, optimized for low molecular weight diblocks and using copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne “click” cycloaddition, was employed to obtain a library of PDMS-b-PMMA and poly(dimethylsiloxane-block-styrene) (PDMS-b-PS) diblock copolymers. Flory–Huggins interaction parameters, determined from small-angle X-ray scattering experiments, were high for PDMS-b-PMMA (χ ∼ 0.2 at 150 °C), suggesting this diblock copolymer system has promise for sub-10 nm lithographic applications when compared to the corresponding PDMS-b-PS diblock copolymers (χ ∼ 0.1 at 150 °C). Performance evaluation in thin film self-assembly experiments allowed domain periods as small as 12.1 nm to be obtained, which is among the smallest highly ordered nanoscale patterns reported hitherto for thermally annealed materials.
The consequences on certain physical properties of controlled levels of epoxidation of the poly(isoprene) blocks in poly(styrene-b-isoprene) (PS-PI) diblock copolymers and poly(isoprene) (hPI) homopolymers have been studied, where the products after epoxidation are denoted PS-PIxn and hPIxn, respectively. The effective interaction parameters χ eff between the PS and the PIxn blocks were estimated by applying mean-field theory to the lamellar periodicities identified by small-angle X-ray scattering and to the order-to-disorder transition temperatures determined by dynamic mechanical spectroscopy. These results were fit to a binary segment−segment interaction parameter model indicating a nonlinear change in χ eff with percent epoxidation. In contrast, contact angle measurement on hPIxn and lamellar orientations of thin-film PS-PIxn suggest that the surface energy of PIxn increases linearly with epoxidation. This decoupling of bulk and thin-film thermodynamic behaviors is attributed to the different roles that a random copolymer architecture plays in establishing three-dimensional order versus wetting at a two-dimensional surface.
Two high-χ block copolymers, lamella-forming poly(styrene-block-[isoprene-random-epoxyisoprene]) (PS-PEI78, with 78 mol % epoxidation) and lamella-forming poly(4-trimethylsilylstyrene-block-d,l-lactide) (PTMSS-PLA), were used to study three combinations of interfacial neutrality involving at least one neutral interface. PS-PEI78 annealed on a nonpreferential polymer mat (SMG) produced perpendicular lamellae independent of film thickness, indicating a neutral substrate and neutral free surface. In contrast, the presence of only one neutral interface results in the formation of surface topography ("islands" and "holes") with 0.5L0 step heights. PS-PEI78 (neutral free surface) annealed on PS brush (PS block preferential) forms "half" islands and holes. The inverse experiment, PTMSS-PLA (with a PTMSS preferential free surface) annealed on a neutral (or near neutral) substrate surface, also generates 0.5L0 topography. These "half" island and hole structures are stable to extended thermal annealing. PS-PEI78 exposes both blocks at the free surface in contrast to PTMSS-PLA, which exposes just one. All three combinations of interfacial neutrality are explained by the precise balancing of the wetting tendencies of the two blocks. Evolution of the 0.5L0 motifs appears to be facilitated by a preference to form half-period thick nuclei in the initial stages of morphological development.
A new type of physically cross-linked solid polymer electrolyte was demonstrated by using a poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) homopolymer in a room-temperature ionic liquid. The physical origins of gelation, specific capacitance, ionic conductivity, mechanical property, and capacitive charge modulation in organic thin-film electrochemical transistors were investigated systematically. Gelation occurs through bridging phase-separated homopolymer crystals by polymer chains in the composite electrolyte, thereby forming a rubbery network. The resulting homopolymer ion gels are able to accommodate both outstanding electrical (ionically conductive and capacitive) and mechanical (flexible and free-standing) characteristics of the component ionic liquid and the structuring polymer, respectively. These ion gels were successfully applied to organic thin-film transistors as high-capacitance gate dielectrics. Therefore, these results provide an effective route to generate a highly conductive rubbery polymer electrolyte that can be used in widespread electronic and electrochemical devices.
The impact of thin film confinement on the ordering of lamellae was investigated using symmetric poly(styrene-b-[isoprene-ran-epoxyisoprene]) diblock copolymers bound by nonpreferential wetting interfaces. The order-disorder transition temperature (TODT) and the occurrence of composition fluctuations in the disordered state are not significantly affected by two-dimensional confinement. Directed self-assembly using chemical patterning is demonstrated near TODT. These results establish the minimum feature size attainable using directed self-assembly of a given diblock copolymer system.
We present experimental and theoretical investigations of the order-disorder transition (ODT) in thin films of cylinder-forming diblock copolymers with asymmetric wetting conditions. Grazing incidence small-angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS) was implemented to determine the ODT temperatures (TODT) for poly(styrene-b-2-vinyl pyridine) (PS-P2VP) block copolymer thin films on a P2VP-preferential silicon substrate. Specifically, films consisting of multilayers of horizontally-oriented cylindrical structures (from 1- to 9-layers) were tested. We find that films with more than 2 cylindrical layers have a TODT comparable to the bulk case. However, TODT decreases as the film becomes thinner and the monolayer system has an ODT 30 °C below the bulk. Using self-consistent field theory (SCFT), we studied the ordering in corresponding thin films with asymmetric (top and bottom surface) wetting conditions. Surprisingly, SCFT is found to predict an opposite trend in TODT with film thickness than observed experimentally. Field-theoretic simulations with complex Langevin sampling were employed to resolve this discrepancy and demonstrate that thermal fluctuations in the PS-P2VP thin-film system dominate its ordering behavior in monolayer and bilayer films.
The thermal conductivity (k) of poly(acrylic acid) (PAA) nanofibers, which were electrospun at various electrospinning voltages, was measured using suspended microdevices. While the thermal conductivities of the as-spun PAA nanofibers varied depending on the electrospinning voltages, the most pronounced 3.1-fold increase in thermal conductivity in comparison to that of bulk PAA was observed at the electrospinning voltage of 14 kV. On the other hand, a reduction in the thermal conductivity of the nanofibers was observed when the as-spun nanofibers were either thermally annealed at the glass transition temperature of PAA or thermally crosslinked. It is notable that the thermal conductivity of crosslinked PAA nanofibers was comparable to that of crosslinked bulk PAA. Polarized Raman spectroscopy and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy verified that the k enhancement via electrospinning and the k reduction by the thermal treatments could be attributed to the conformational changes between gauche and trans states, which may be further related to the orientation of molecular chains. In contrast, hydrogen bonds did not contribute significantly to the k enhancement. Additionally, the suppression of k observed for the crosslinked PAA nanofibers might result from the shortening of single molecular chains via crosslinking.
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