Abstract
When poly(isopropylidene diallylmalonate) rich in threo-disyndiotactic sequences (strich-2) was utilized as a cross-linkable ink for microcontact printing, the resultant submicrometer-scale patterns featuring 700 and 300 nm wide stripes were successfully insolubilized while maintaining their high dimensional integrity by heat-induced cross-linking with elimination of CO2 and acetone. In sharp contrast, although the thermal properties and reactivities of a polymer rich in threo-diisotactic sequences (it rich-2) and a polymer having low stereoregularity (2low) are little different from those of strich-2, the patterns printed with these reference polymers collapsed considerably upon heating as a result of a volume shrinkage effect. The striking difference between strich-2 and the other two polymers most likely arises from the nanofiber-forming character of strich-2, where the printed stripes are porous and much less affected by the volume shrinkage of individual nanofibers. © 2011 American Chemical Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Miyamura, Y., Park, C., Kinbara, K., Leibfarth, F. A., Hawker, C. J., & Aida, T. (2011). Controlling volume shrinkage in soft lithography through heat-induced cross-linking of patterned nanofibers. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 133(9), 2840–2843. https://doi.org/10.1021/ja110901h
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