Self-Assembling Semicrystalline Polymer into Highly Ordered, Microscopic Concentric Rings by Evaporation
POSTER
Abstract
A drop of semicrystalline polymer, poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) solution was placed in a restricted geometry consisting of a sphere on a flat substrate (i.e., sphere-on flat geometry). Upon solvent evaporation from the sphere-on-flat geometry, microscopic concentric rings of PEO with appropriate high molecular weight were produced via controlled, repetitive pinning (``stick'') and depinning (``slip'') cycles of the contact line. The evaporation-induced concentric rings of PEO exhibited a fibrillar-like surface morphology. Subsequent isothermal crystallization of rings at 40 \r{ }C and 58 \r{ }C led to the formation of multilayer of flat-on lamellae (i.e., spiral morphology). In between adjacent spirals, depletion zones were developed during crystallization, as revealed by AFM measurements. The present highly ordered, concentric PEO rings may serve as a platform to study cell adhesion and motility, neuron guidance, cell mechanotransduction, and other biological processes.