Manipulating the ABCs of self-assembly via low-χ block polymer design

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Abstract

Block polymer self-assembly typically translates molecular chain connectivity into mesoscale structure by exploiting incompatible blocks with large interaction parameters (χij). In this article, we demonstrate that the converse approach, encoding low-χ interactions in ABC bottlebrush triblock terpolymers (χAC ≤ 0), promotes organization into a unique mixed-domain lamellar morphology, which we designate LAMP. Transmission electron microscopy indicates that LAMP exhibits ACBC domain connectivity, in contrast to conventional three-domain lamellae (LAM3) with ABCB periods. Complementary small-angle X-ray scattering experiments reveal a strongly decreasing domain spacing with increasing total molar mass. Self-consistent field theory reinforces these observations and predicts that LAMP is thermodynamically stable below a critical χAC, above which LAM3 emerges. Both experiments and theory expose close analogies to ABA' triblock copolymer phase behavior, collectively suggesting that low-χ interactions between chemically similar or distinct blocks intimately influence self-assembly. These conclusions provide fresh opportunities for block polymer design with potential consequences spanning all self-assembling soft materials.

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APA

Chang, A. B., Bates, C. M., Lee, B., Garland, C. M., Jones, S. C., Spencer, R. K. W., … Grubbs, R. H. (2017). Manipulating the ABCs of self-assembly via low-χ block polymer design. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 114(25), 6462–6467. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1701386114

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