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Synergistic Impact of Intra- and Interchain...
Journal article

Synergistic Impact of Intra- and Interchain Dispersity on Block Copolymer Self-Assembly

Abstract

The effect of chain length dispersity on self-assembly behaviors of block copolymers was quantitatively investigated. Two sets of binary blends with precisely controlled compositions were prepared by mixing A-homopolymers into AB2 linear-branched block copolymers, where the two B branches were of either equal or unequal lengths. The added A-homopolymers swell the corona A domain, resulting in a generic phase transition sequence as the volume fraction varies. The distribution of the A-homopolymers depends critically on their length relative to that of the A-block of the copolymers. Longer homopolymers tend to localize at the vertices of the Voronoi cells, while shorter ones distribute more evenly in the corona domain. While blends consisting of A-homopolymers and symmetric linear-branched block copolymers exhibit exclusively the cylindrical phase, the addition of A-homopolymers to asymmetric counterparts leads to a richer array of ordered structures, including the Frank–Kasper phases, quasicrystalline phases, and the hexagonally close-packed phase. The combination of architectural asymmetry in the core (intrachain dispersity) and the presence of A-homopolymers in the corona (interchain dispersity) synergistically stabilizes these exotic structures, which could not be achieved when these two effects were present individually.

Authors

Li J; Xie J; Gan Z; Ma Z; Shi A-C; Dong X-H

Journal

Macromolecules, Vol. 58, No. 8, pp. 3860–3871

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

April 22, 2025

DOI

10.1021/acs.macromol.5c00433

ISSN

0024-9297

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