Role of Defects in Achieving Highly Asymmetric Lamellar Self-Assembly in Block Copolymer/Homopolymer Blends.
2020
Lamellar
structure is a prominent state in soft condensed matter.
Swelling lamellar layers to highly asymmetric structures by a second
component is a facile, cost-effective strategy to impart materials
with adaptive size and tunable properties. One key question that remains
unsolved is how defects form and affect the asymmetric lamellar order.
This study unravels the role of defects by swelling a miktoarm block
copolymer with a homopolymer. Ordered lamellae first lose translational
order by a significant increase in the number of dislocations and
then lose orientational order by the generation of disclinations.
The homopolymers are not uniformly distributed in defective lamellae
and primarily segregate in the vicinity of disclination cores. The
free energy of defects is mainly contributed by molecular splay and
significantly alleviated by an increased radius of local curvature.
This study provides direct evidence to reveal the role of defects
and lamellar order in block copolymer/homopolymer blends and also
sheds light on understanding analogous structural transitions in other
soft systems, including lyotropic liquid crystals, phospholipid membranes,
and polymer nanocomposites.
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