Ordering and reverse ordering mechanisms of triblock copolymers in the presence of solvent

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Abstract

Self-consistent field theory is used to study the self-assembly of a triblock copolymer melt. Two different external factors (temperature and solvent) are shown to affect the self-assembly. Either one or two-step self-assembly can be found as a function of temperature in the case of a neat triblock melt, or as a function of increasing solvent content (for non-selective solvents) in the case of a triblock-solvent mixture. For selective solvents, it is shown that increasing the solvent content leads to more complicated self-assembly mechanisms, including a reversed transition where order is found to increase instead of decreasing as expected, and re-entrant behavior where order is found to increase at first, and then decrease to a previous state of disorder.

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Maniadis, P., Rasmussen, K., Thompson, R. B., & Kober, E. M. (2009). Ordering and reverse ordering mechanisms of triblock copolymers in the presence of solvent. International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 10(3), 805–816. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms10030805

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