2005 APS March Meeting 
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session U4: Polymer Microstructures
8:00 AM–11:00 AM, 
Thursday, March 24, 2005
LACC 
Room: 515A
Sponsoring
Unit: 
DPOLY
Chair: Karen Winey, University of Pennsylvania
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.U4.1
Abstract: U4.00001 : On the Formation of an Ordered Array of Holes in a Polymer Film:What can Dew Formation Teach Us?
8:00 AM–8:36 AM
Preview Abstract
  
Abstract  
Author:
Mohan Srinivasarao
(Georgia Institute of Technology)
Systems driven far from equilibrium have a remarkable tendency 
to produce 
very ordered structures. Such ordered structures have been 
observed in many 
a situation where the material subjected to an external 
perturbing field 
responds to this perturbation by creating ordered periodic 
structures. We 
have used a system driven far from equilibrium to create 
structures that 
have subwavelength dimensions and can be made reproducibly. 
Ordered 
subwavelength structures are ubiquitous in nature. However, it 
is only 
recently that ordered macroporous materials with pore 
dimensions on the 
order of the wavelength of visible light have attracted much 
greater 
attention. This interest has been in large part due to their 
anticipated 
optical properties. We have demonstrated the use of a simple 
and robust 
method that uses evaporative cooling for the formation of 
ordered structures 
with dimensions that are controllable in a systematic way 
ranging from about 
0.2$\mu $m to 20 $\mu $m. This method uses the formation, and 
subsequent 
crystallization of ``breath figures,'' to create the structures.
When a cold solid or a liquid surface comes in contact with 
moist air, 
moisture condenses on the surface, forming water droplets that 
grow with 
time to form patterns on the surface. Such phenomena, referred 
to as ``breath 
figures,'' have been studied in detail, starting with the early 
works of Lord 
Rayleigh, Baker and Aitken, and more recently by Knobler and co-
workers who 
demonstrated that it was possible to form a hexagonally ordered 
array of 
water droplets on a liquid surface as condensation proceeded. 
We have used 
``breath figures'' to form three-dimensional, ordered 
macroporous arrays 
with controllable dimensions. We generated breath figures on 
dilute 
solutions of polystyrene and other conjugated polymers 
dissolved in volatile 
solvents. When solvent evaporation is complete, one is left 
with a two or a 
three dimensional array of holes. In this presentation we will 
discuss the 
mechanism of structure formation as well as point to some 
applications for 
these structured films.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.U4.1