Vacuum-Driven Orientation of Nanostructured Diblock Copolymer Thin Films.
Aum Sagar PandaYi-Chien LeeChen-Jung HungKang-Ping LiuCheng-Yen ChangGkreti-Maria ManesiApostolos AvgeropoulosFan Gang TsengFu-Rong ChenRong-Ming HoPublished in: ACS nano (2022)
This work aims to demonstrate a facile method for the controlled orientation of nanostructures of block copolymer (BCP) thin films. A simple diblock copolymer system, polystyrene- block -polydimethylsiloxane (PS- b -PDMS), is chosen to demonstrate vacuum-driven orientation for solving the notorious low-surface-energy problem of silicon-based BCP nanopatterning. By taking advantage of the pressure dependence of the surface tension of polymeric materials, a neutral air surface for the PS- b -PDMS thin film can be formed under a high vacuum degree (∼10 -4 Pa), allowing the formation of the film-spanning perpendicular cylinders and lamellae upon thermal annealing. In contrast to perpendicular lamellae, a long-range lateral order for forming perpendicular cylinders can be efficiently achieved through the self-alignment mechanism for induced ordering from the top and bottom of the free-standing thin film.