PITTSBURGH--Carnegie
Mellon University scientists have harnessed an
experimental technology to produce polymer films
with long-range-ordered nanostructure and easily
convert them into highly ordered "nanocarbon arrays." Called
zone casting, this technology could revolutionize
the way industrial nanoelectronic components are
made. The research findings are in press with the
Journal of the American Chemical Society.
"We've found that zone casting produces highly organized
polymer films that could serve as templates for creating
ordered nanopatterns with other materials," said
Tomasz Kowalewski, an assistant professor of chemistry
who is leading the Carnegie Mellon team. "The technique
could, for example, help produce data storage arrays
with increased density and reliability." Kowalewski
also expects that zone casting could produce materials
for other nanoelectronic devices, like field emission
arrays.
To
create long-range-ordered films, Kowalewski's team
used "block copolymers," which are made of long-chain
molecules with distinct "blocks" of chemically different
repeating units. To create self-assembling nanostructures
from block copolymers, Kowalewski used molecules
with blocks that naturally repel one another, like
oil and water. Such copolymer strands spontaneously
assume energetically favorable structures, like balls,
cylinders or sheets.
In recent years, scientists and engineers have sought
to use these unusual structures in electronics and
data storage settings. In the latter case, thin block
copolymer films are used as lithographic masks to
pattern ultra-high density data storage media. However,
nanostructures spontaneously formed by block copolymers
usually lack long-range order necessary for such
applications. Thus, numerous labs are pursuing various
strategies to encourage block copolymers into ordering
themselves over a large scale.
"Zone casting appears to be particularly well-suited
to achieve this goal with a variety of block copolymers," Kowalewski
said. In zone casting, a nozzle ejects a solution
onto an advancing surface, or moving support. By
modifying the temperature, the speed of the advancing
surface and other factors, researchers already have
been able to control the alignment and solidification
of molecular crystals used to make organic electronic
devices. The zone-casting technique was originally
developed by scientists from the Polish Academy of
Sciences.
The Carnegie Mellon team hypothesized that a similar
approach also could help establish and control long-range
order of block copolymer domains. Using this technique,
doctoral student Chuanbing Tang produced thin films
of block copolymers made of polyacrylonitrile (PAN)
and poly(n-butyl acrylate) (PBA) on a moving chip.
The films consisted of alternating layers of PAN
and PBA, and these layers were oriented perpendicular
to the surface and to the direction of the advancing
chip. Then, using a method developed earlier in the
Kowalewski lab, Tang used a high-temperature treatment
to convert the long-range-ordered polymer films into
nanostructured carbon, while remarkably preserving
the long-range order.
"Zone casting offers the perfect way to direct higher
order assembly so that we can pre-organize carbon
precursor structures," Kowalewski said. "More important,
our ongoing work indicates that we will be able to
use it with other copolymer systems, forming different
structures, such as hexagonally packed arrays of
vertical cylinders."
These latter systems are of particular interest
as masks for lithographic patterning of magnetic
materials for data storage arrays. The research was
supported by the National Science Foundation and
the Controlled Radical Polymerization Consortium
at Carnegie Mellon.
MCS maintains innovative research and educational
programs in biological sciences, chemistry, physics,
mathematics and several interdisciplinary areas.
For more information, visit www.cmu.edu/mcs .
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