While dimensional change under thermal loading dictates various device failure mechanisms in soft materials, the interplay between microstructures and thermal expansion remains underexplored. Here, we develop a novel method to… Click to show full abstract
While dimensional change under thermal loading dictates various device failure mechanisms in soft materials, the interplay between microstructures and thermal expansion remains underexplored. Here, we develop a novel method to directly probe the thermal expansion for nanoscale polymer films using an atomic force microscope as well as confining active thermal volume. In a model system, spin-coated poly(methyl methacrylate), we find that the in-plane thermal expansion is enhanced by 20-fold compared to that along the out-of-plane directions in confined dimensions. Our molecular dynamics simulations show that the collective motion of side groups along backbone chains uniquely drives the enhancement of thermal expansion anisotropy of polymers in the nanoscale limit. This work unveils the intimate role of the microstructure of polymer films on its thermal-mechanical interaction, paving a route to judiciously enhance the reliability in a broad range of thin-film devices.
               
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