Macromolecules, Vol.50, No.15, 5767-5778, 2017
Synthesis of Micropillar Arrays via Photopolymerization: An in Situ Study of Light-Induced Formation, Growth Kinetics, and the Influence of Oxygen Inhibition
We report a study-on the growth kinetics and resultant structures' of arrays of pillars in photo-cross-linkable films during irradiation with a periodic array of microscale optical beams under ambient conditions. The optical beams experience a self-focusing nonlinearity owing to the photopolymerization-induced changes in refractive index, thereby concentrating light and driving the concurrent, parallel growth of microscale pillars along their path length. We demonstrate control. over the: pillar spacing and pillar height with the irradiation intensity, film thickness, and the size and spacing of the optical beams. The growth of individual pillars in a periodic array arises from the combination of intense irradiation in the beam regions and oxygen inhibition afforded by the open, ambient conditions under which growth is carried out. We propose a kinetic model for pillar growth that includes free-radical generation and oxygen inhibition in thick films of photoinitiated media in order to interpret the experimental results. The model effectively correlates micropillar array structure to the oxygen inhibition effects. This approach of growing micropillar arrays through photopolymerization is straightforward and scalable and opens opportunities for the design of textured surfaces for applications.