3.1. Interior Crystal Assembly in Birefringence-Banded PDT Spherulite
The crystallization temperature (T
c) kinetically influences the mechanisms of nucleation and growth. For PDT, two dramatically different types of ring-banded patterns were present at high versus low T
c [
30,
32]. For appreciating the difference between these two types of ring bands formed at medium T
c (90–95 °C) versus high T
c (120–125 °C),
Figure 1 demonstrates two dramatically different banding patterns of PDT spherulites, with the film thickness being kept at constant 15–20 μm.
Figure 1a illustrates the single extinction-band pattern crystallized at relatively high T
c = 115 °C or above, while interestingly,
Figure 1b shows an intermediate pattern between these two types at an intermediate T
c = 110 °C, which was composed of “dual-ring bands” in the central core but extinction bands at the outer rims with a unique core–shell pattern. That is, the spherulitic aggregate was actually a composite core–shell morphology of two discrete types of optical birefringence patterns.
Figure 1c shows dual-birefringence ring bands crystallized at T
c = 90–95 °C or lower. The mechanisms of the crystal assembly in the dual-birefringence ring-banded PDT at T
c = 90 °C of thicker films were therefore different from that in the epicycloid-extinction PDT at higher T
c = 110–125 °C and in thinner films. As discussed in an earlier work [
32], another type of ring band, termed epicycloid-extinction-banded PDT spherulites, at higher T
c = 110–125 °C is sensitively dependent on the film thickness, with the epicycloid-extinction band patterns disappearing completely at film thickness >10 μm, and the inter-band spacing increasing dramatically with respect to the increasing film thickness. Note that the inter-band spacing of the PDT spherulite was 3–5 μm at T
c = 95 °C (
Figure 1c), which means that the film thickness should not be lower than 3–5 μm if dual-birefringence bands are to be packed in the PDT specimens. When the film thickness was lower than this critical value (inter-band spacing), then no dual-birefringence bands were observed in the crystallized films; instead, only bands with an optical extinction border (termed “extinction band”) were present. This is easy to understand, as thin films constrain lamellae to be normal oriented in cross-hatch patterns.
Thus, in dramatic contrast to the extinction-banded spherulites (with successive bands bordered with a sharp extinction ring) crystallized at high Tc (120 °C or above), the crystallization of the same PDT films at low to intermediate Tc, such as Tc = 90–95 °C, led to optically dual-birefringent spherulites of distinct alternating blue/orange rings in the spherulites, where the ring bands were not bordered with optical extinction but were featured with alternate birefringence colors in POM with tint plates. This behavior of no dual-birefringence bands in PDT at Tc = 90 °C was opposite to that of PDT at higher Tc = 120 °C, where only extinction bands could be present, as discussed. This fact suggests that the nature of the extinction PDT bands might be significantly different from that in the dual-birefringence PDT bands. Although both extinction bands and dual-birefringent bands were featured with distinct periodicity in the circular rings, the dramatic differences in the optical birefringence properties in these two types of PDT spherulites suggest that the interior crystal-lamellae assembly may significantly differ with respect to their respective optical birefringence patterns. The effect of the film thickness (3–20 μm) did not appear to influence the morphological patterns of the birefringent spherulites with blue/orange bands. Note that for thick PDT films with too high optical retardation (τ), the optical light does not penetrate easily; thus, the blue/orange birefringence could not be contrasted in visible patterns. However, the birefringent ring bands of PDT spherulites at Tc = 90 °C remained similar in pattern and displayed same inter-band spacing (ca. 3–4 μm) for PDT film samples, which did not change much with the increase in the film thickness (from ca. 5–20 μm).
Not only T
c but also confinement by film thickness might influence the lamellar assembly and, thus, birefringence patterns, as seen in POM. A preliminary investigation revealed that a minimum film thickness (3–5 μm) of PDT specimens was required to display dual-birefringence ring bands.
Supplementary Materials Figure S1 shows POM graphs of PDT spherulites of four different levels of film thickness: (a) ultra-thin at 300~500 nm, (b) 3~5 μm, (c) 8~10 μm, and (d) 15~20 μm, all at T
c = 90 °C. The very thin PDT film (ca. 300–500 nm) did not exhibit any discernible dual-birefringence ring bands upon crystallization at T
c = 90 °C. The PDT films of all other higher thickness levels (5–20 μm) displayed optically similar dual-birefringent alternating blue/orange bands, with similar inter-band spacing. The effects of the variation of the melt-exposure time (from 1–120 min) at T
max = 165 °C on the birefringent PDT spherulites were also investigated. For comparison,
Supplementary Materials ESI
Figure S2 shows POM graphs for the PDT films (thickness kept constant at 2–3 µm) all melt crystallized at T
c = 95 °C with different times (t
max) held at T
max for melting to erase the prior thermal histories: (a) 1 min, (b) 15 min, (c) 30 min, (d) 60 min, (e) 90 min, and (f) 120 min. The results show that all PDT birefringent spherulites remained the same or similar with alternate blue/orange bands, with the same inter-band spacing (4 μm). All spherulites remained similar in size with a radius = 30~50 μm. This fact suggests that the melt/thermal exposure at T
max = 165 °C had no effect of altering the birefringent bands and that exposure at this temperature caused no degradation. In addition, it should also be commented here that the birefringent spherulites were not influenced by the top-cover confinement on the films during the crystallization at T
c = 95 °C; by contrast, the crystallization of the PDT at T
c = 120 °C with top-cover confinement led to no periodic bands (i.e., ringless), yet extinction bands were visibly present if no top-cover was placed on the PDT films.
Prior to the SEM analysis of the interior lamellae assembly, AFM analysis was performed to reveal the nanopatterns on the top surface of 90 °C crystallized PDT spherulites that displayed dual-birefringent colors with blue/orange bands.
Figure 2 shows AFM images of the PDT samples (films of thickness ca. 3–5 μm) crystallized at T
c = 90 °C. The ring bands with the alternate optical birefringence (blue/orange) is shown as an inset in
Figure 2A. Note that the pattern of the PDT dual-birefringent PDT spherulites (at T
c = 90 °C) differed completely from those for the extinction-banded PDT spherulites in thin films at T
c = 120 °C, earlier disclosed in a concurrent work on PDT [
32]. The zoomed in AFM analysis on the top surface (
Figure 2A1,A2) shows a nanograiny feature with alternating low and high bands. The top surface of the 90 °C crystallized birefringent-banded PDT spherulite was composed of apparently grainy polycrystals. Such dual-morphology ring bands are dramatically in contrast to the single-crystalline terrace-like packing on the top surfaces of the 120 °C crystallized PDT extinction-banded spherulite. All these features further reinforce that the nature and mechanisms of the crystals building the birefringent spherulites of the alternating blue/orange bands crystallized at T
c = 95 °C or lower should differ widely from those governing the extinction-banded PDT spherulites crystallized at T
c = 120 °C or higher. However, the detailed lamellae assembly in the interior of the banded spherulites could still not be discerned from the POM patterns or the AFM analysis on the top surface. The circular dot-like grains on the top surfaces of the PDT dual-birefringence bands suggest that they might be the individual terminal ends of the interior lamellae, as they emerge from the inner bulk to top surface. Note also that the darker bands in
Figure 2A1,A2 represent the valley, where the grainy dots are oriented in a different direction in contrast to the elongated crystals in the neighboring brighter bands (ridges). This further suggests that the interior lamellae emerge to the top surface in correspondingly different orientations depending on the valley or ridge bands. A later section unveils the interior crystal assembly responsible for such dual-birefringence PDT bands. Interior dissection into the assembly of the interior lamellae crystals in the birefringent PDT spherulites (crystallized at T
c = 90 °C) may shed new light on answering these critical questions. From the AFM phase images, the inter-band spacing = 3–4 μm.
The band patterns on the top surfaces of the blue/orange birefringent PDT spherulites (at T
c = 90 °C) could mislead in the interpretation of the mechanisms of periodic banding if the interior lamellae were not analyzed. Interior dissection by examining the fractured PDT spherulites was performed by SEM characterization.
Figure 3A,B show SEM micrographs of the PDT melt crystallized at 90 °C, and
Figure 3C,D show schemes illustrating alternate tangential-to-radial lamellae with discontinuity. The PDT films were kept at thickness = ca. 15 μm. All PDT samples were first melted at T
max = 165 °C (1 min), then quenched to T
c = 90 °C, and held till full crystallization. Both the top surfaces and interior fractured surfaces of the crystallized PDT specimens were examined. The SEM graphs for the top surfaces revealed similar grainy crystal aggregates on the “ridge region”, which is similar to the AFM images discussed earlier. The valley bands on the top surface were of a flat and lower region in comparison to the ridge bands. Apparently, lamellae assembly is not possible by simply examining the top surfaces using either SEM or AFM analysis. As the nucleus center of the spherulite is located near the top surface, the onion-like interior morphology appears like a multi-shell concave-up bowl (i.e., a hemispheroid). The fracture–dissection SEM results in
Figure 3B also reveal very critical pieces of evidence showing that the ridge bands on the top surfaces actually correspond to regions where the interior tangential lamellae emerge to the top surfaces; by contrast, the valley bands on the top surfaces correspond to where radial lamellae evolving or bending from the tangential ones. Both the top surface and interior grating-like array clearly reveal that the inter-band spacing was consistently ca. ~3 μm. From the above SEM results for the interiors of the banded PDT (T
c = 90 °C), the correlations between the top periodic bands vs. the interior lamellae assembly can be feasibly constructed. The schemes in
Figure 3C show the interior lamellae assembled as a mutually intersecting grating. Apparently, the interior lamellae, as revealed in the SEM result for the interior of the banded PDT, are assembled as a cross-hatch grating structure, whose cross-bar pitch = 3 μm and equal to the optical inter-band spacing in the POM images. Except for the interfacial layer, the radial lamellae were always roughly a 90° angle perpendicularly intersecting with the tangential ones; therefore, the top-surface valley band region appeared to be a submerged “U-shape”, where the interior radial lamellae were located directly underneath. In addition, according to the SEM results, the interior tangential lamellae (or their bundles) were connected to the top-ridge region, while the interior radial lamellae were situated underneath the valley region of the top surface. Upon POM characterization with tint plates, if the interior tangential lamellae (crystals oriented in the perpendicular direction) have an orange color, then the interior radial lamellae (crystals oriented mostly in the horizontal direction) have a blue color. The periodicity repeated to produce optical patterns of orange/blue color rings according to the lamellae’s mutual cross-hatching intersections, as shown in
Figure 3D.
The dual-birefringence banded PDT spherulites (T
c = 90 °C) can be nucleated on the top surface or interiors of films.
Figure 4 shows SEM micrographs of fractured cross-section of top-initiated banded PDT spherulites displaying a distinct layered corrugate-board structure. Of the topology, the interior lamellae with corrugate-board (i.e., multi-shell) assembly reached upward to the top surface to form the periodic banding of inter-band spacing ca. 4 μm that exactly matched with the optical spacing. Each of the interior tangential lamellar bundles corresponded to the “ridge region” of the top band patterns. Finer branching lamellae grew roughly perpendicular to the tangential lamellae; thus, these branching lamellae were aligned in the radial directions. The tangential lamellae in the 3D growth were aligned as multi-shelled hemispheroids of increasing radii, which can be clearly seen in
Figure 4A. The interior lamellae of hemispheroid geometry, as revealed in the fractured PDT spherulites, can also be viewed as an “onion-like” structure cut into halves, as illustrated in the inset on the bottom of
Figure 4A. The SEM graphs also show that the inter-shell distance (~4–5 μm) equaled exactly the inter-ring spacing (~4–5 μm) in the POM graphs for the PDT at T
c = 90 °C. The perfect match between the morphology and optical birefringence evidence suggests the validity of the proposed assembly mechanism, leading to the final aggregate’s banding periodicity. These series of schemes for step-by-step growth in
Figure 4B–D illustrate three stages of growth: from initiation of nuclei on or near the top surface to complete 3D growth to form a corrugate-board architecture with a hemispheroid geometry. The 90° angle intersection of two species of lamellae accurately accounts for the periodic optical blue–orange birefringence colors, as illustrated. With the nucleus center on the top surface of the thick PDT films, the alternately concentric shells all took a hemispheroid shape. Regardless of the film thickness or location of the nucleus centers, the analyses yielded consistent results that the interiors of the birefringent-banded PDT spherulites (T
c = 90 °C) were filled with alternate cross-hatch lamellae mutually intersecting at an oblique or nearly perpendicular angle, where the interior tangential lamellae correspond to the ridge region and interior radial lamellae to the valley region on the top surface.
3.3. Top-Surface Morphology Versus Interior Lamellar Assembly
The fracture of samples might randomly cut across various sections of a banded spherulite, which might yield slightly different patterns of assembly. For proof of the universality of the alternating tangential/radial structures in the banded PDT spherulites, alternative fractured interior surfaces were further examined.
Figure 6a,b display SEM graphs for the fractured interiors of birefringent-banded PDT spherulites (all at T
c = 90 °C), which clearly revealed a common multi-shelled hemispheroid or spheroid structure (depending on the location of the nucleation sites being near the top surface or middle of the films). In the interior of the birefringent-banded PDT spherulites, the tangential lamellae curved into a bowl shape (i.e., hemispheroid). The interior tangential lamellae were connected to the “ridge region” on the top surface. From the tangential lamellae, some lamellae either flip-twisted at a 90° angle or branch evolved in a perpendicular direction to fill the space between two neighboring tangential shells. The schemes in
Figure 6c,d illustrate that the curved tangential shells were attached with a 90° angle bending/twisting or perpendicular branching. The perpendicularly twisted or branched lamellae generally oriented their long axes toward the radial direction of the spherulite. Thus, there were alternative tangential/radial lamellae layers, with each layer being shaped as multi-shelled hemispheroids (i.e., when the curved spheroids are flattened, they become “corrugate-boards”). The radial-oriented lamellae in the banded aggregates were not flat but shaped generally as a concave-up U-shape, forming a valley. From the scheme, the dark wide stripes indicated the “valley region” optical patterns that apparently were situated on top of the interior radial-oriented lamellar plates. The thin, narrow, and solid lines on the top of the scheme indicate the “ridge region” on the top surfaces, which correspond to the protruded spots of the interior tangential-oriented lamellae. The ridge bands on the top surfaces actually correspond to regions where the interior tangential-oriented lamellae emerged to the top surfaces. By contrast, the valley bands on the top surfaces correspond to where the radial lamellae evolved or bent from the tangential-oriented ones.
Apparently, if the analysis was confined to thin films without 3D inner views, investigators might have been misled by the lamellae’s superficial assembly on the top surface, while the majority bulk of the assembly in the 3D interiors would have remained hidden. On the top surface of the thin film specimens, investigators might observe some occasional twisting and bending of lamellae from ridge to valley band. However, the interior lamellae (accounting for 8–9 μm of the bulk), accounting for the majority 90% of the entire bulk, would be buried and skipped. The schematic shows how the interior lamellae might emerge and twist while going to the top surface, wherein the interiors were actually composed of discontinuous shells of crystal plates and branches mutually oriented at some oblique angles.
It has been proved that no continuous helix-twist of single-crystal lamellae is present in the extinction-banded PDT spherulites (crystallized at high T
c = 110–120 °C) [
30]. For the birefringent (blue/orange)-banded PDT spherulites crystallized at lower T
c = 90 °C, the interiors were filled with multi-shell concentric spheroids composed of alternating tangential lamellae that periodically 90° angle twisted and/or branched out to form the radial lamellae. During growth, the tangential lamellae first evolved initially from the sheaf-like nucleus center, which subsequently produced branches in perpendicular orientations to fill the expanding space as they grew outward from the nucleus center to the periphery. Toward growth termination, the periphery of the increasingly larger spherulites started to impinge on neighboring spherulites, where the growth terminated. Eventually, a multi-shell hemisphere aggregate formed in the interiors; on the top surface of the films, concentric multi-bands of a fixed inter-band spacing formed. Furthermore, doubly-birefringent banded PDT spherulites were always filled progressively with periodic branching during growth by starting from quasi-single crystals (lamellar sheaf-bundles) at the nucleus center to a final complex hierarchical aggregations of multiple lamellae. Again, in the architecture of the birefringent PDT spherulites (T
c = 90 °C), no continuous helix-twist of the single crystal lamellae was evident, although a sharp 90° twist from the tangential- to radial-oriented lamellae bordering at the discontinuous interfaces was seen in each of the hemi-spheroid shells.
Altogether, the tangential-oriented lamellae and periodically-spawned branches filled the expanding spherulite’s space during growth, which increased with the increasing radius as cubic R (i.e., R3). As the tangentially oriented lamellae emerged to the top surfaces of the spherulites, they protruded upward to become the “ridge band”, while the interior radially oriented lamellae, being branches themselves growing at 90° angle from the tangential ones, remained to be submerged but curved up to form a “U-shape” valley band with a flat/smooth texture on the top surface. Furthermore, the tangential-oriented lamellae accounted for the optically blue birefringent ring, while the radial lamellae accounted for the orange rings, as viewed in the POM graphs; vice versa, in the neighboring next quadrant of the POM graphs, the opposite was true.
3.4. Universal Features of 3D Interior Assembly in Arylate Polyesters
For the universal comparison of a series of homologous arylate polyesters with PDT (m = 10), the other polyesters (m = 3, 9, 12) were similarly analyzed and compared [
19].
Figure 7 shows the dissected morphology results for the interior assemblies in (A) PDoT (m = 12), (B) PTT (m = 3), and (C) PNT (m = 9), respectively. All specimens of the three arylate polyesters were crystallized as bulks at T
c = 96, 165, and 85 °C, respectively, to develop distinct ring bands (double birefringence). These three (PDoT, PTT and PNT) were fractured in similar ways as PDT (P10T), sputter-coated with gold, and characterized using SEM. Note that all arylate specimens (PDoT, PTT, PNT) for comparative purposes were recharacterized using the same SEM techniques in this work, although similar interior morphologies for them have been earlier reported in the literature [
15,
33,
34]. One can see that these three arylate polyesters all displayed similar cross-hatch architectures (tangential-radial lamellae perpendicularly intersecting at 90° angle), differing only in the inter-layer shell thickness: 4 μm for PDoT, 10 μm for PTT, and 8 μm for PNT Type-1 band, in comparison to the same cross-hatch structure of PDT with an inter-layer shell thickness of ~5 μm in this work. Note here that PNT is more complex in the banding architecture, as it displays not just one but two entirely different types of ring bands (labeled as Type 1 and Type 2, respectively) [
15]; for comparison, only Type-1 PNT was used here. All four arylate polyesters displayed similar interior architectures of cross-hatch tangential/radial intersections, proving the universality of the proposed model being fit with all the ring-banded arylate polyesters investigated here. For most arylate polyesters (from PTT to PDT) crystallized at respectively suitable temperature ranges, their banded assemblies all displayed similar periodic birefringence patterns in the interior crystal assemblies, differing mainly in the inter-band spacing and some trivial details of the assemblies.
The 3D assembly of PDoT has been analyzed in an earlier work [
30]. Polymeric spherulites are 3D aggregates of complex lamellar architectures with periodic branching, sporadic bending, twisting, or scrolling; thus, the interior assembly from inner lamellae to top-surface morphology should not be overlooked in investigating full mechanisms.
Figure 8 illustrates three possible assemblies of lamellae in the aggregates of PDT into periodic bands.
Figure 8a shows the proposition that the polymeric spherulites are 3D aggregates composed of multi-shells with cross-hatch grating architectures, with complex lamellae of periodic branching and sporadic bending. In this grating architecture, all tangential lamellae are aligned in the same direction and sandwiched in the interfacial layers of two radial-lamellar shells; similarly, the radial-oriented lamellae in the shells are all aligned in the “radial direction”. Thus, the tangential-oriented lamellae display a certain birefringence pattern differing from that of the radial-oriented lamellae and collectively displaying alternate double-ring-banded pattern optically in polarized light. Subsequently, another proposition of continuous helix-twist lamellae is checked and proved by contradiction.
Figure 8b shows that if all helix-twist lamellae were synchronized in helix pace, then they would have displayed alternate birefringence-to-extinction bands—an expected phenomenon that certainly contradicts with the experimental proofs according to the POM patterns with the dual-birefringence rings (i.e., both valley and ridge bands are packed with crystals but of different orientations). Finally, in a situation where the synchronized pace of these helix-twist screws is not warranted, then the total optical extinction is a result, which again contradicts with the experiment-observed optical patterns.
Figure 8c shows a scheme where if all helix-twist lamellae are not in a synchronized pace but offset a fraction of the pitch from one to another in nonsynchronized alignment, then full optical extinction is the result. This of course would oppose with the POM experimental results for PDT at T
c = 90 °C.
By philosophical articulation for verifying these mutually opposite propositions (shown in Graphs-a–d in
Figure 8), the classical Aristotle’s proof-by-contradiction for examining the propositions of nanoassembly leading to final hierarchical periodicity was then utilized to testify these propositions by summarizing the results of these three arylate polymers. By deleting the latter two obvious cases of contradiction to the experimental results, naturally, the periodically grating assembly mechanism can be proven to be the only feasible mechanism. In summary, if investigations were conducted only by characterizing the top surfaces of crystallized polymer film specimens, as conventionally done in the long past, then one would see only the patterns of rings and lamellae on top surface but miss the most critical pieces of bulk evidence hidden in the submerged interiors under the top surface. The ridge bands on the top surfaces actually correspond to regions where the interior tangential-oriented lamellae emerge to the top surfaces; by contrast, the valley bands on the top surfaces correspond to zones where radial-oriented lamellae evolving or bending from the tangential-oriented ones. Oppositely, these discussed results collectively show that either 2D or 3D continuous screw-like helices from a nucleus center inevitably result in contradictory cases of nonsynchronized pace in thick films (20 μm), as the helix-twist lamellae, bound in a common center, cannot be physically aligned in perfect pitch pace in 2D or 3D space as they extend outward [
30]
In the interior of the dual-birefringence ring-banded PDT spherulites (
Figure 9), it is clear that no single-crystalline lamellae continuously helix-twist such as the double-helix conformation of DNA macromolecules from a common nucleation center are seen anywhere in the banded PDT spherulites. Instead, each of the hemispheroid shells in the banded PDT spherulites is bordered with discontinuous tangential/radial interfaces, where the interior lamellae mutually intersect like a cross-hatch grating. Note that some of the tangential-oriented lamellae may either branch out or occasionally twist by ca. 90° angles to merge with the radial lamellae. If investigators had focused their analyses only on the top surfaces of the crystallized polymer films but overlooked the lamellae assembly in the interiors or how the top-surface morphology correlates with interior lamellae, it would be easy to confuse the occasional branching/bending/twisting on the top surfaces with lamellae undergoing 360° continuous helices.
The optical bands in polymer spherulites can appear as a double-birefringence ring patterns or rings with extinction. Crystal assembly mechanisms in the optical extinction bands versus double birefringence rings are inherently different, and their assembled architectures are due to the completely different crystal packing mechanisms.
Figure 10a shows POM micrograph of double-banded PTT spherulites’ (POM for ring patterns as inset) dissected interior (3~5 μm film thickness melt-crystallized at 165 °C), with schematics in
Figure 10b revealing the interfaces and crevices between successive bands. The Interfacial discontinuity, as proved by the narrow crevices between the bands, clearly support that lamellae in the double-banded PTT were not continuously helix-twist. The interior lamellae and banded PTT were assembled as periodic gratings, with twist occurring in the interfacial boundary, signaling a discontinuity. It is worth comparing the assembly in the double-banded PTT to the dramatically different morphology of extinction-banded morphology, as represented by PDT crystallized at T
c = 120 °C, as shown in
Figure 10c,d. The epicycloid extinction-banded PDT spherulites crystallized at high T
c (>110 °C) were composed of terrace-like single crystals packed along the circumferential direction of the ridge band, whereas the extinction region was due to the periodic growth precipitation [
27]. The evidence in this comparative study has collectively reached an advancement of the 3D depiction of PDT dual-birefringence-banded spherulites, which differs significantly from extinction-banded ones.
Figure 11a,b show the general schemes depicting the interior and top-surface vs. interior, respectively, of the universal grating assembly in the periodically assembled crystals.
Figure 11c is the SEM micrograph for PDoT revealing both the top-surface bands and interior lamellae directly underneath these periodic bands.
Figure 11d shows an enlarged scheme of the fractured interior along the radial direction on the top surface, as well as the interior. The dimensions of the interior radial-oriented lamellae approximately matches with that of the ridge band on the top surface. The exact measures of these two dimensions may differ slightly, which is due to the fact that as the interior tangential lamellae emerge upward to the top surface, they have to bend downward to become radial-oriented lamellae. By contrast, the interior radial lamellae simply branch out horizontally till impinging with the next tangential layer. Thus, the interior radial lamellae tend to be slightly longer (2.6–2.8 μm) than the top-surface radial-oriented lamellae on the ridge band (ca. 2.1 μm). Note that the tangential layer was ca. 1.5–2.0 μm; thus, the total thickness of radial+tangential shells would be roughly 4–5 μm, which is the cross-bar pitch of the corrugate-board structure in PDoT at T
c = 96 °C.
Further dissection–morphology details are justified in constructing the general periodic assembly mechanism for top-surface bands and interior cross-hatch lamellae. The main features in the cyclic growth are that branches are inevitable in growing to fill an ever-expanding space (increasing with respect to cubic radius in 3D or squared radius in 2D) from a tiny nucleus sheaf to final fully grown spherical entity.
Figure 12a–c shows the cut blocks of the lamellar stacks in one cycle from ridge to valley, exposing (a) the lateral side of the stacked lamellae, (b) circumferential side of stacked lamellae, and (c) top and lateral views of banded spherulites. It would be erroneous if one sees that the interior lamellae are monotonous single stalks and continuous in growing from nucleus to periphery of spherulites. Branching is a universal feature, as the lamellae self-assemble to fill the aggregated spherulites.
Figure 12d shows that the branches are made of crystal-by-crystal assembly both on the top surface and interior. “Brick-by-brick” (single crystal-by-crystal) assembly means that the lamellae are not continuous and there actually is discontinuity in crystal boundaries when final periodic aggregates are formed.