Sluggish growth of poly(ε-caprolactone) leads to petal-shaped aggregates packed with thick-stack lamellar bundles

2021 
Kinetically sluggish growth of poly(e-caprolactone) at high Tc = 50 °C leads to a peculiar banding morphology, where thick-stacked lamellae self-assemble into camellia-petal-like bands with their outer rims divided into a ca. 10 lobs of round-shaped petals. The sluggish growth at Tc = 50 °C thick films is inductive and the thickened lamellae self-assemble into aggregates of peculiar and novel camellia-petal-shaped ring bands. Using novel morphology analyses via 3D-dissection approaches, the lamellae underneath the ridge bands are shown to be all perpendicular to the substrate plane, i.e. normally-oriented with respect to the substrate surface; whereas, the interior lamellae underneath the valley band are all flat-on and horizontal to the substrate plane. Stereo-depiction clearly demonstrates that the interior lamellae are periodically grating architectures with a fixed crossbar pitch of 20–30 μm of the interior lamellar assembly, matching with the optical inter-ring spacing of optical bands. The mechanisms of growth and assembly are probed in detail.
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