Surface-induced ordering in block copolymer melts
- 15 August 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in The Journal of Chemical Physics
- Vol. 101 (4) , 3310-3317
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.467578
Abstract
Surface‐induced ordering in block copolymer melts is studied numerically. For symmetric copolymers, the thickness of the surface‐enrichment layer is found to scale as R eq∼N θ with θ≊0.6, suggesting the system is undergoing a surface‐induced strong segregation. The density profile perpendicular to the interacting surface is described quite well by the form predicted by Fredrickson in a mean‐field analysis. In asymmetric copolymers, the surface is found to have a profound effect on domain formation. For some off‐critical compositions, domains were found to form near the surface with a geometry different from that in the bulk; while for stronger asymmetry in composition, minority domains were nucleated near the wall only, long before any formed in the bulk. These interesting pattern formation processes should be observable in experiments using a depth profiling technique.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Interference of spinodal waves in thin polymer filmsMacromolecules, 1993
- Mean-field theory of block copolymers: bulk melts, surfaces, and thin filmsMacromolecules, 1992
- Ordering of thin diblock copolymer filmsPhysical Review Letters, 1992
- Dynamics of phase separation in a binary polymer blend of critical compositionThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1990
- Fluctuation effects in a symmetric diblock copolymer near the order–disorder transitionThe Journal of Chemical Physics, 1990
- Interference microscopy on thin diblock copolymer filmsJournal de Physique, 1990
- Spinodal decomposition in polymer mixturesPhysical Review Letters, 1989
- ⅔ -Power Law for Copolymer Lamellar Thickness Implies a ⅓ -Power Law for Spinodal DecompositionPhysical Review Letters, 1988
- Time-resolved small-angle x-ray scattering studies on the kinetics of the order-disorder transition of block polymers. 2. Concentration and temperature dependenceMacromolecules, 1986
- Nonlinear growth of wetting layersJournal of Physics A: General Physics, 1985