CBE Seminar - Richard Register

Richard Register, Eugene Higgins Professor of Chemical and Biological Engineering and Chair, Princeton University

All dates for this event occur in the past.

207 Koffolt Lab
140 W 19th Ave
Columbus, OH 43210
United States

Block Copolymer Thin Films: Structure, Shear Alignment, and Applications in Nanofabrication

 

Richard Register

Eugene Higgins Professor and Chair
Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering
Princeton University

Abstract

Block copolymers have been extensively studied for their ability to self-assemble into microdomain morphologies such as spheres, cylinders, and lamellae, with typical periodicities of 20-60 nm. Similar structures form when block copolymers are deposited as thin films on substrates; these films can serve as excellent templates for nanofabrication, where the block copolymer’s nanodomain structure is faithfully reproduced in an inorganic material—but the final array of inorganic objects is, at best, only as good as the structure of the film from which it was derived.  Consequently, we have worked intensively to develop methods to manipulate the structure of the films.  For example, the polygrain structure which these nanodomains normally form can be transformed to a single-crystal texture, over macroscopic areas, by a simple shearing process.  Shear can also realign the domain orientation locally in films with an otherwise macroscopic orientation; create complex orientation patterns on the millimeter scale; and even transform spheres into cylinders.  We have employed these thin, substrate-supported block copolymer films to fabricate dense arrays of 20-40 nm metal or semiconductor particles:  dots (from sphere-forming block copolymers) or lines (wires, from cylinder-formers), all with a size and spacing set through block copolymer molecular weight.  Such shear-aligned thin-film templates can also be stacked to produce square or rectangular grids.  As a particular example, we have used this approach on shear-aligned films containing in-plane cylinders to fabricate centimeter-scale arrays of parallel nanowires; due to their fine pitch, such wire grids can polarize an exceptionally broad range of wavelengths extending down into the deep ultraviolet (for 193 nm photolithography), with 90% or better efficiency.

 

Bio

Richard A. Register is Eugene Higgins Professor and Chair of the Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering at Princeton University, where he previously served as Director of the Princeton Center for Complex Materials, a broad-based Materials Research Science and Engineering Center funded by the National Science Foundation.  His research interests revolve around micro- and nanostructured polymers, such as block copolymers, polymer blends, semicrystalline polymers, and ionomers, ranging across their physics, synthesis, characterization, and applications.  He was named a Fellow of the American Physical Society in 2001; received the Charles M.A. Stine Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers in 2002; was honored with the Graduate Mentoring Award from Princeton University in 2008; and was named a Fellow of the American Chemical Society in 2012.

 

Category: Seminar