Self-Assembly in Block Copolymer Thin Films upon Solvent
Evaporation: A Simulation Study
Hao, JL (Hao, Jinlong)[ 1 ] ; Wang, Z (Wang, Zhan)[ 1 ] ; Wang, Z (Wang, Zheng)[ 1 ] ; Yin, YH (Yin, Yuhua)[ 1 ] ; Jiang, R (Jiang, Run)[ 1 ] ; Li, BH (Li, Baohui)[ 1,2 ] ; Wane, Q (Wane, Qiang)[ 3 ]
MACROMOLECULES,
2017, 50(11): 4384-4396
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.7b00200
WOS:000403530400030
Abstract
The
self-assembly in cylinder-forming diblock copolymer thin films upon solvent
evaporation is studied by lattice Monte Carlo simulations under the assumption
that the solvent evaporation starts from the free surface and gradually
propagates toward the substrate. The effects of solvent selectivity, surface
preference, and solvent evaporation rate on the morphology evolution during
solvent evaporation are systematically investigated. It is found that the
perpendicular cylinder morphology tends to form under weak surface preference,
whereas under strong surface preference this morphology is promoted by the fast
solvent evaporation rate and the strong solvent selectivity. The surface
preference window for forming perpendicular cylinders with solvent evaporation
is found to be wider than with thermal annealing, and especially much wider
when the solvent evaporation starts from random (disordered) initial states. A
new mechanism of perpendicular cylinder formation is proposed and elucidated.
Hexagonally packed short perpendicular cylinders formed in the earlier stage of
the solvent evaporation may remain to the dry film when the solvent selectivity
for the majority block is strong or the solvent evaporation rate is fast, which
results in the enlargement of the surface preference-window of perpendicular
cylinder morphology. Mix-orientated morphology with one or two layers of
parallel cylinders at the top of the film and perpendicular cylinders
throughout the remaining film is also predicted, and its formation mechanism is
discussed.