Electrodynamic-contact-line-lithography with nematic liquid crystals for template-less E-writing of mesopatterns on soft surfaces†
Abstract
We report the development of a single-step, template-less and fast pathway, namely, Electrodynamic-Contact-Line-Lithography (ECLL), to write micro to nanopatterns on the surface of a soft polymer film. As a model system, a layer of nematic liquid crystals (NLC), resting on a polymer thin film, was sandwiched between a pair of electrodes emulating the electrowetting on a dielectric (EWOD) setup. Upon the application of electric field, the Maxwell stresses thus generated at the NLC–polymer interface due to the high dielectric contrast stimulated an unprecedented fingering instability at the advancing NLC–polymer–air contact line. In the process, the advancing electrospreading front of NLC left the footprint of an array of micro to nanoscale wells on the polymer surface with a long-range ordering thus unveiling a pathway for maskless patterning of a soft elastic film. Unlike the conventional electric field induced lithography (EFL), the meso-scale morphology was found to follow the short wavelength-scales as the periodicity of the patterns (λc) varied linearly with the thickness of the film (h), (λc ∝ h). The high dielectric contrast at the NLC–polymer interface and the local fluctuation of the NLC directors ensured a time scale much faster than the same observed for the polymer–air systems.