Web Release Date: August 15,
Nonlamellar Phases in Asymmetric Rod-Coil Block Copolymers at Increased Segregation Strengths
Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720
Received April 27, 2007
Revised Manuscript Received June 12, 2007

Abstract:
A new phase consisting of rectangular rod nanodomains packed onto a hexagonal lattice is observed
in rod-coil block copolymers at the limit of both large volume fraction asymmetry and large geometrical asymmetry
between the rod and coil. In moderately segregated poly(alkoxyphenylenevinylene-b-isoprene) (PPV-b-PI), an
order-order transition is observed between hexagonal and lamellar phases for polymers near the phase boundary,
and the lamellar phase is observed at high temperatures. The domain spacings of polymers in the lamellar phase
collapse on to a simple scaling relationship where domain spacing is proportional to molecular weight. The
proportionality constant is equal to the statistical segment length of the PPV rod block, suggesting that the angle
between the rod director and the lamellar interface is nearly 90
. At higher temperatures, the block copolymers
transition from ordered to nematic to isotropic states, with the intermediate nematic phase being observed for all
coil fractions studied. A three-dimensional phase diagram shows the microphase and liquid crystalline transitions
in rod-coil block copolymers as a function of temperature, geometrical asymmetry, and coil fraction.
Download the full text: PDF | HTML