In this paper we consider thin films of AB block copolymer melts confined
between two parallel plates. The plates are identical and may have a preference
for one of the monomer types over the other. The system is characterized by
four parameters: the Flory-Huggins chi-parameter, the fraction f of A-monomers
in the block copolymer molecules, the film thickness d, and a parameter h
quantifying the preference of the plates for the monomers of type A. In certain
regions of parameter space, the film will be microphase separated. Various
structures have been observed experimentally, each of them characterized by a
certain symmetry, orientation, and periodicity. We study the system
theoretically using the weak segregation approximation to mean field theory. We
restrict our analysis to the region of the parameter space where the film
thickness d is close to a small multiple of the natural periodicity. We will
present our results in the form of phase diagrams in which the absolute value
of the deviation of the film thickness from a multiple of the bulk periodicity
is placed along the horizontal axis, and the chi-parameter is placed along the
vertical axis; both axes are rescaled with a factor which depends on the
A-monomer fraction f. We present a series of such phase diagrams for increasing
values of the surface affinity for the A-monomers. We find that if the film
thickness is almost commensurate with the bulk periodicity, parallel
orientations of the structures are favoured over perpendicular orientations. We
also predict that on increasing the surface affinity, the region of stability
of the bcc phase shrinks.Comment: 35 pages, 20 figure