Laterally Confined Block Copolymer Cylinder Monolayers: Smectic, Nematic, and Isotropic Ordering

ORAL

Abstract

We investigate the temperature dependence of nanodomain ordering in laterally confined, monolayer films of a cylinder-forming block copolymer. The lateral confinement (in channels up to 3 $\mu $m wide) aligns the cylinders, providing long range orientational order of the nanodomains over the entire channel width at annealing temperatures T well below the bulk ODT. As T is progressively increased, an increasing density of dislocations and disclinations is observed and the orientation correlation function g$_{2}$(r) decreases with r, eventually exponentially above a T$_{c} \quad <$ ODT. We compare these results to theory(1), which predicts that a 2-D smectic film at 0 K is, as T increases, transformed to a ``nematic'' phase, in which the local cylinder normal acts as the nematic director, by phonons and thermally generated dislocations. As the system is heated through T$_{c}$, we examine whether it is indeed the unbinding of disclinations that produces the observed isotropic (yet still microphase-separated) phase, as suggested by theory. (1) J. Toner and D. R. Nelson, Phys. Rev. B, \textbf{23}, 316, (1981)

*Supported by the NSF DMR-Polymers Program

Authors

  • M.R. Hammond

  • Edward Kramer

    • UCSB
    • MRL, UCSB, CA 93106, U.S.A.
    • University of California at Santa Barbara
    • University of California Santa Barbara
    • Materials Department and MC-CAM, UCSB
    • Materials Department, UCSB