Brought to you by:

Self-similarity and finite-size effects in nano-indentation of highly cross-linked polymers

, , , and

Published 29 October 2008 IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation T Altebaeumer et al 2008 Nanotechnology 19 475301 DOI 10.1088/0957-4484/19/47/475301

0957-4484/19/47/475301

Abstract

The scalability of thermomechanical polymer deformations in the sub-10 nm regime is of particular importance for nano-imprint techniques, hardness measurements of thin films by nano-indentations, and scanning-probe-based thermomechanical data storage. We investigate nano-indentation in the sub-10 nm regime performed on highly cross-linked polymer films of different thicknesses. It is shown that the lateral and vertical geometric characteristics of the indents independently scale down to an indent depth of 1 nm and that the scaling parameters are functions of the film thickness and the temperature of the indenter. However, in the limit of shallow indents the scaling of the cross-coupling between lateral and vertical dimensions is lost. It is argued that the breakdown of self-similarity is due to a minimum strain requirement originating from the co-operative nature of the polymer response induced by α transitions which lock the indent in the deformed state. The results shed new light on the fundamental processes and size effects involved in nanoscale plastic replication, in general.

Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

Please wait… references are loading.
10.1088/0957-4484/19/47/475301