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Cited 132 time in webofscience Cited 129 time in scopus
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Hierarchical patterns of three-dimensional block-copolymer films formed by electrohydrodynamic jet printing and self-assembly

Authors
Onses, M. SerdarSong, ChihoWilliamson, LanceSutanto, ErickFerreira, Placid M.Alleyne, Andrew G.Nealey, Paul F.Ahn, HeejoonRogers, John A.
Issue Date
Sep-2013
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Citation
NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY, v.8, no.9, pp.667 - 675
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NATURE NANOTECHNOLOGY
Volume
8
Number
9
Start Page
667
End Page
675
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/hanyang/handle/2021.sw.hanyang/26657
DOI
10.1038/NNANO.2013.160
ISSN
1748-3387
Abstract
Self-assembly of block-copolymers provides a route to the fabrication of small (size, <50 nm) and dense (pitch, <100 nm) features with an accuracy that approaches even the demanding specifications for nanomanufacturing set by the semiconductor industry. A key requirement for practical applications, however, is a rapid, high-resolution method for patterning block-copolymers with different molecular weights and compositions across a wafer surface, with complex geometries and diverse feature sizes. Here we demonstrate that an ultrahigh-resolution jet printing technique that exploits electrohydrodynamic effects can pattern large areas with block-copolymers based on poly(styrene-block-methyl methacrylate) with various molecular weights and compositions. The printed geometries have diameters and linewidths in the sub-500 nm range, line edge roughness as small as similar to 45 nm, and thickness uniformity and repeatability that can approach molecular length scales (similar to 2 nm). Upon thermal annealing on bare, or chemically or topographically structured substrates, such printed patterns yield nanodomains of block-copolymers with well-defined sizes, periodicities and morphologies, in overall layouts that span dimensions from the scale of nanometres (with sizes continuously tunable between 13 nm and 20 nm) to centimetres. As well as its engineering relevance, this methodology enables systematic studies of unusual behaviours of block-copolymers in geometrically confined films.
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