Swelling-Induced Delamination
Causes Folding of Surface-Tethered
Polymer Gels
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Abstract
When a polymer film that is weakly attached to a rigid
substrate
is exposed to solvent, swelling-induced compressive stress nucleates
buckle delamination of the film from the substrate. Surprisingly,
the buckles do not have a sinusoidal profile, instead, the film near
the delamination buckles slides toward the buckles causing growth
of sharp folds of high aspect ratio. These folds do not result from
a wrinkle-to-fold transition; instead, the film goes directly from
a flat state to a folded state. The folds persist even after the solvent
evaporates. We propose that patterned delamination and folding may
be exploited to realize high-aspect ratio topological features on
surfaces through control of a set of boundary constraints arising
from the interrelation of film-surface adhesion, film thickness and
degree of swellabilty