Abstract

Electrospray has been recently advanced as a novel approach for the continuous deposition of self-assembled block copolymer thin films. It represents an analogue of physical vapor deposition in which the development of well-ordered microstructures is predicated on relatively rapid relaxation of the polymer compared to its rate of deposition. Here we describe the morphology development of a lamellae-forming poly(styrene-b-4-vinylpyridine) deposited by electrospray. Morphology was considered in the context of relative changes of the deposition and relaxation rates, with the latter significantly affected in some cases by the presence of residual solvent. We observe that the presence of residual solvent in deposited material accelerates the equilibration kinetics such that well-ordered alternating lamellar morphologies could be produced at deposition rates as high as 55 nm/min under “wet” spray conditions, whereas hexagonally packed micelles were produced when the polymer was deposited free of solvent, denote...

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