Macromolecules, 36 (11), 4084 -4092, 2003. 10.1021/ma0217581 S0024-9297(02)01758-8
Web Release Date: May 1, 2003

Copyright © 2003 American Chemical Society

Study on the Origin of Inverted Phase in Drying Solution-Cast Block Copolymer Films

Haiying Huang, Fajun Zhang, Zhijun Hu, Binyang Du, and Tianbai He*

State Key Laboratory of Polymer Physics and Chemistry, Changchun Institute of Applied Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun, 130022, P. R. China

Fuk Kay Lee, Yongjian Wang, and Ophelia K. C. Tsui*

Physics Department, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Hong Kong, P. R. China

Received December 13, 2002

Abstract:

In a previous study, we reported observation of the novel inverted phase (the minority blocks comprising the continuum phase) in kinetically controlled phase separating solution-cast poly(styrene-b-butadiene-b-styrene) (SBS) triblock copolymer films [Zhang et al. Macromolecules 2000, 33, 9561-7]. In this study, we adopt the same approach to investigate the formation of inverted phase in a series of solution-cast poly(styrene-b-butadiene) (SB) asymmetric diblock copolymers having nearly equal polystyrene (PS) weight fraction (about 30 wt %) but different molecular weights. The microstructure of the solution-cast block copolymer films resulting from different solvent evaporation rates, R, was inspected, from which the kinetically frozen-in phase structures at qualitatively different block copolymer concentrations and correspondingly different effective interaction parameter, eff, can be deduced. Our result shows that there is a threshold molecular weight or range of molecular weight below which the unusual inverted phase is accessible by controlling the solvent evaporation rate. In comparing the present result with that of our previous study on the SBS triblock copolymer, we find that the formation of the inverted phase has little bearing on the chain architecture. We performed numerical calculations for the free energy of block copolymer cylinders and found that the normal phase is always preferred irrespective of the interaction parameter and molecular weight, which suggests the formation of the inverted phase to have a kinetic origin. A mechanism based on kinetic effects is proposed to account for the observed threshold in molecular weight.


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