Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.112, No.29, 8486-8495, 2008
Order-order and order-disorder transitions in thin films of an amphiphilic liquid crystalline diblock copolymer
In this study, we quantitatively investigated the temperature-dependent phase transition behaviors of thin films of an interesting amphiphilic diblock copolymer, poly(ethylene oxide)-b-poly(11-[4-(4-butylphenylazo)phenoxy]undecyl methacrylate) (p(EO)-b-p(MAAZ)) and the resulting morphological structures by using synchrotron grazing incidence X-ray scattering (GIXS) and differential scanning calorimetry. The quantitative GIXS analysis showed that the diblock copolymer in the homogeneous, isotropic melt state undergoes phase-separation near 190 degrees C and then forms a body-centered cubic (BCC) structure of spherical p(EO) domains in the p(MAAZ) matrix, at which point the p(EO) domains and the p(MAAZ) matrix are both in amorphous, liquid states. The BCC structure of spherical p(EO) domains is converted to a hexagonal cylinder structure near 120 degrees C, which is induced by the transformation of the isotropic phase of the p(MAAZ) matrix to the smectic A phase, which is composed of a laterally ordered structure of p(MAAZ) blocks with fully extended side groups. The resulting hexagonal cylinder structure is very stable below 120 degrees C. This microscopic hexagonal cylinder structure is retained as the smectic A phase of the p(MAAZ) matrix undergoes further transitions to smectic C near 104 degrees C and to a smectic X phase near 76 degrees C, while the amorphous, liquid phase of the p(EO) cylinders undergoes crystallization near -15 degrees C. These complicated temperature-dependent disorder-order and order-order phase transitions in the films were found to take place reversibly during the heating run. A face-centered orthorhombic structure of p(EO) domains was also found during the heating run and is an intermediate structure in the hexagonal cylinder structure to BCC structure transformation. We use these structural analysis results to propose molecular structure models at various temperatures for thin films of the diblock polymer.