Abstract

The rapid rise of oil and gas, petrochemical, food processing, and pharmaceutical industries has added a complex mixture of contaminants like oil, particulates, metals, and other organic compounds to wastewater. Multipurpose membranes with precise pore structure can offer a solution to this problem and block copolymers (BCP) can be used to achieve such structures. Achieving vertical assembly of BCP domains provides a perfect template for developing uniform through film channels for separation and transport of material, besides being useful for the rectification of defects in photolithography patterns. Producing such morphologies may require extensive film/substrate processing and is not always feasible for scale-up. With this article, we demonstrate a facile solution casting method to induce vertical domain assembly in as-cast diblock copolymer thin films in the presence of an ionic liquid (IL) additive that preferentially segregates to one block and neutralizes interfacial interactions. We also show the tunability of domain sizes by controlling the additive concentration. These vertically aligned morphologies are important for the development of next-generation lithographic techniques and form excellent templates for ultrafiltration membranes with uniform pore sizes. This article demonstrates how IL additives can be used to obtain stable non-equilibrium morphologies in as-cast BCP films and the effect of BCP molecular mass, block volume fractions, and IL content on self-assembly.

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