Abstract

We report the use of a gradient library approach to characterize the structure and behavior of thin films of a thermally responsive block copolymer (BCP), poly(styrene-b-tert-butyl acrylate) (PS-b-PtBA), which exhibits chemical deprotection and morphological changes above a thermal threshold. Continuous gradients in temperature and film thickness, as well as discrete substrate chemistry conditions, were used to examine trends in deprotection, nanoscale morphology, and chemical structure. Thermal gradient annealing permitted the extraction of transformation rate constants (k(t)) for the completion of thermal deprotection and rearrangement of the film morphology from a single BCP library on hydroxyl and alkyl surfaces, respectively. The transformation rate constants ranged from 1.45 × 10(-4) s(-1) to 5.02 × 10(-5) s(-1) for temperatures between 185 and 140 °C for hydroxyl surfaces. For the same temperature range, the alkyl surfaces yielded k(t) values ranging from 4.76 × 10(-5) s(-1) to 5.73 × 10(-6) s(-1), an order of magnitude slower compared to hydroxyl surfaces. Activation energies of the thermal deprotection and film transformation on these surfaces were also extrapolated from linear fits to Arrhenius behavior. Moreover, we noted a morphology shift and orientation transformation from parallel lamellae to perpendicular cylinders at the free surface because of changes in volume fraction and surface energetics of the initially symmetric BCP. Using gradient techniques, we are able to correlate morphological and chemical structure changes in a rapid fashion, determine kinetics of transitions, and demonstrate the effect of surface chemistry on the deprotection reaction in thermally responsive BCP thin films.

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