Langmuir, Vol.22, No.26, 10898-10903, 2006
Surface-induced morphologies in thin films of a rod-coil diblock copolymer
A block copolymer containing a rodlike block is studied for its adsorption and formation of nanostructured thin films on the substrate surface. The block copolymer is poly(styrene-b-3-triethoxysilylpropylisocyanate) (PS-b-PIC) of which the PIC chain consists of repeating amide units with triethoxysilyl side groups. As the copolymer chains are adsorbed onto silica surfaces, the PIC blocks pack laterally on the plane in a smectic manner, and the PS chains segregate along the ordered PIC chains, resulting in stripe patterns. The width of the stripes formed on the silica surface appeared to be much larger that on the carbon surface. This was accounted for by the bilayered smectic packing of the rod blocks that is induced by rod-surface attractive interaction. The periodicity of the stripe pattern on the carbon surface indicates that interdigitated packing is preferred by the copolymers on the hydrophobic surface in a manner similar to those in the bulk state of rod-coils. Excess rod-coils on the bilayered smectic layer resulted in a terraced morphology due to large difference in the periodicity between the bilayered smectic layer at the substrate surface and the interdigitated smectic layer in the bulk.