Abstract
Functionalized alkanethiols have been self-assembled on gold to modify the wetting properties of the surface and promote or hinder the adsorption of block copolymers containing both hydrophobic and hydrophilic blocks. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) studies of spin-coated polyethylene-block-poly(ethylene oxide) (PE-b-PEO) copolymers on 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid (MHDA)-, octadecanethiol (ODT)-, and 1H,1H,2H,2H-perfluorodecanethiol (PFDT)-covered surfaces have been performed. In the case of an 80 wt % PEO block copolymer, spin-coating on a gold surface precovered with MHDA results in a polymer film thick enough to completely attenuate Au 4f photoelectrons; spin-coating on the more hydrophobic ODT and PFDT monolayers leads to significantly thinner polymer films and incomplete attenuation of the gold photoelectrons. The opposite results are observed when a 20 wt % PEO block copolymer is used. Angle-resolved XPS studies of the 80 wt % PEO block copolymer spin-coated onto an MHDA-covered surface indicate that the PE blocks of the polymer segregate to the near-surface region, oriented away from the hydrophilic carboxylic acid tails of the monolayers; the surface concentration of PE is further enhanced by annealing at 90 degrees C. Microcontact printing and dip-pen nanolithography have been used to pattern gold surfaces with MHDA, and the surfaces have been backfilled with ODT or PFDT, such that the unpatterned regions of the surface are covered with hydrophobic monolayers. In the case of backfilling with PFDT, spin-coating the 80 wt % PEO copolymer onto these patterned surfaces and subsequent annealing results in the block copolymer preferentially adsorbing on the MHDA-covered regions and forming well-defined patterns that mimic the MHDA pattern, as determined by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy. Significantly worse patterning, characterized by micron-sized polymer droplets, results when the surface is backfilled with ODT instead of PFDT. Using PFDT and MHDA, polymer features having widths as small as 500 nm have been formed. These studies demonstrate a novel method to pattern block copolymers with nanoscale resolution.
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