APS March Meeting 2017
Volume 62, Number 4
Monday–Friday, March 13–17, 2017;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session C9: Symposium Honoring Ed Kramer - Block Copolymers, Nanoparticles, and Conduction
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 13, 2017
Room: 268
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: Rachel Segalman, University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract ID: BAPS.2017.MAR.C9.1
Abstract: C9.00001 : Orientation and Order in Shear-Aligned Thin Films of Cylinder-Forming Block Copolymers.
2:30 PM–3:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Richard Register
(Princeton University)
The regularity and tunability of the nanoscale structure in block copolymers
makes their thin films attractive as nanolithographic templates; however, in
the absence of a guiding field, self-assembly produces a polygrain structure
with no particular orientation and a high density of defects. As
demonstrated in the elegant studies of Ed Kramer and coworkers,
graphoepitaxy can provide local control over domain orientation, with a
dramatic reduction in defect density. Alternatively, cylindrical
microdomains lying in the plane of the film can be aligned over macroscopic
areas by applying shear stress at the film surface. In non-sheared films of
polystyrene-poly(n-hexylmethacrylate) diblocks, PS-PHMA, the PS cylinder
axis orientation relative to the surface switches from parallel to
perpendicular as a function of film thickness; this oscillation is damped
out as the fraction of the PS block increases, away from the sphere-cylinder
phase boundary. In aligned films, thicknesses which possess the highest
coverage of parallel cylinders prior to shear show the highest quality of
alignment post-shear, as measured by the in-plane orientational order
parameter. In well-aligned samples of optimal thickness, the quality of
alignment is limited by isolated dislocations, whose density is highest at
high PS contents, and by undulations in the cylinders' trajectories, whose
impact is most severe at low PS contents; consequently, polymers whose
compositions lie in the middle of the cylinder-forming region exhibit the
highest quality of alignment. The dynamics of the alignment process are also
investigated, and fit to a melting-recrystallization model which allows for
the determination of two key alignment parameters: the critical stress
needed for alignment, and an orientation rate constant. For films containing
a monolayer of cylindrical domains, as PS weight fraction or overall
molecular weight increases, the critical stress increases moderately, while
the rate of alignment drastically decreases. As the number of layers of
cylinders in the film increases, the critical stress decreases modestly,
while the rate remains unchanged; substrate wetting condition has no
measurable influence on alignment response. [Work of Raleigh Davis, in
collaboration with Paul Chaikin.]
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2017.MAR.C9.1