Self-assembly of Nano-rods in Photosensitive Phase Separation
ORAL
Abstract
Computer simulations reveal how photo-induced chemical reactions in polymeric mixtures can be exploited to create long-range order in materials whose features range from the sub-micron to the nanoscale. The process is initiated by shining a spatially uniform light on a photosensitive AB binary blend, which thereby undergoes both a reversible chemical reaction and phase separation. When a well-collimated, higher intensity light is rastered over the sample, the system forms defect-free, spatially periodic structures. We now build on this approach by introducing nanorods that have a preferential affinity for one the phases in a binary mixture. By rastering over the sample with the higher intensity light, we can create ordered arrays of rods within periodically ordered materials in essentially one processing step.
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Authors
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Ya Liu
University of Pittsburgh, Lehigh University
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Olga Kuksenok
University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA, Chemical Engineering Dept, University of Pittsburgh
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Egor Maresov
University of Pittsburgh
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Anna C. Balazs
Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh, Chemical Engineering Department, University of Pittsburgh, Chemical Engineering Department, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA, Chemical Engineering Dept, University of Pittsburgh