On-Demand Selection of the Latent Domain Orientation in Spray-Deposited Block Copolymer Thin Films

ACS Nano. 2025 Jan 10. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.4c14499. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

With their ability to self-assemble spontaneously into well-defined nanoscale morphologies, block copolymer (BCP) thin films are a versatile platform to fabricate functional nanomaterials. An important challenge to wider deployment of BCPs in nanofabrication is combining precise control over the nanoscale domain orientation in BCP assemblies with scalable deposition techniques that are applicable to large-area, curved, and flexible substrates. Here, we show that spray-deposited smooth films of a nominally disordered BCP exhibit latent orientations, which can be prescriptively selected by controlling solvent evaporation during spray casting. Subsequent solvent vapor annealing triggers assembly toward highly ordered cylindrical morphologies along the pathway determined by solvent evaporation in the prior spray deposition stage. Faster evaporation promotes assembly of vertically oriented cylinders spanning the entire film thickness (100-300 nm). In comparison, slow solvent evaporation permits intermicellar aggregation and incipient cylinder formation in solution, which induces horizontal cylinder assembly upon annealing. The evaporatively controlled latent orientation mechanism presented herein elucidates how nonequilibrium phenomena during casting govern successive self-assembly pathways and facilitates a versatile method to dictate the domain orientation of BCP thin films on demand on flexible and highly curved substrates or in distinct pattern areas on the same substrate.

Keywords: block copolymer thin films; domain orientation; droplet evaporation; morphology; nanofabrication; spray deposition.