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Making nanostructures: Top down Approach • Photolithography • Electron beam lithography • Micromechanical structures • Thin films, including MBE • Self-assembled masks • Focused Ion Beam milling • Stamp technology • Nanojunctions
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Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Making nanostructures: Top down Approach

• Photolithography• Electron beam lithography• Micromechanical structures• Thin films, including MBE• Self-assembled masks• Focused Ion Beam milling• Stamp technology• Nanojunctions

Page 2: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

PhotolithographyPhotolithography

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

Ex. PPMA

Ex. HF

Page 3: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

• OxidationOxidation: place a protective layer (100-2000 nm) on the surface

• MaskingMasking: features are open in the layer window by light

• ImplantationImplantation: doping step of the exposed sites

• EtchingEtching: remove the protective layer

• MetalizationMetalization: contacting by metal deposition

• Lift-offLift-off: complement of etching. Deposition of layers on a patterned photoresist

Page 4: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

NAr

2

Photolithography with micron-scale resolution is a useful precursor tool for generating nanostructures by other methods.

Optical lenses resolution: 0.5 μ

Current top resolution of photolithography: ≈ 50 nm

Numerical Aperture of the optical lens

Incident wavelength

Resolution

Page 5: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Evolution of ElectronicsEvolution of Electronics

Bell LabsFirst

Transistor

1959 Texas Instrs.First Integrated Circuit

(Intel)

1947

65 nm

Page 6: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Excimer Laser StepperExcimer Laser Stepper

248-157 nm

(Reprinted with permission of ASML Corporate Communications)

Stepper Motor: Scanning the wafer with nanometer scale accuracy

Page 7: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Electronics made by LithographyElectronics made by Lithography

(Reprinted with permission John Wiley and Sons)

CMOSCMOS: Complementary Metal Oxide on Silicon

Diffusion through holes /masking/metal coating

Page 8: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

E-beam LithographyE-beam Lithography

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

The E-beam is turned on/off and directed in a prearranged pattern over the surface of the resist.

Page 9: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

Page 10: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Monte Carlo simulation of spatially distributed beams in electron-beam lithography, D.F. Keyser, N.S. Viswanathan, J. Vac. Sci. Technol. Vol. 12, 1975

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

The resolution is limited by the scattering of secondary electrons, that cause damage of the photoresist even at energies as low as a few eVs.

10 kV 20 kV

Page 11: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Micro-electro-mechanical structuresMicro-electro-mechanical structures(MEMS)(MEMS)

• Micron-scale free standing structures made by undercutting

Ex. AFM Probes

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

Page 12: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Complete Cantilever FabricationComplete Cantilever Fabrication

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

(Reprinted with permission from IOP Publishing Ltd.,And courtesy of Professor Anja Boisen)

Page 13: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

MEMS mirror projection array

Optical switch made from a silicon mirror, composed by 800,000 electronically tiltable mirrors. Electronics and transducers are located under each mirror.

Each mirror is separated by 0.5μ

Page 14: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Thin Film TechnologiesThin Film Technologies

• From the kinetic theory of gases:

M

Tv 42 1058.1 RMS speed in cm/s from the

equipartition theorem

2

32

1vN s

For O2 at 300K this is ca. 1015 molecules·cm-2 at 10-6 Torr:

≈ a monolayer of adsorbed molecule per second.

A vacuum of 10-9 torr is required.

Number of molecules hitting a surface per unit time

Page 15: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Modes of epitaxial growthModes of epitaxial growth

Epitaxial growthEpitaxial growth: in a homogeneous system, element x is deposited onto a surface of a single crystal of the same element.

Layer-by-layer uniform growth

2D-growth favourite with respect to 3D-growth.

3D-growth favourite with respect to 2D-growth.

Page 16: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Vacuum depositionVacuum deposition

• SputteringSputtering Bombardment of the material by an energetic ion

beam

• Thermal evaporationThermal evaporation

• Chemical Vapour DepositionChemical Vapour Deposition (CVDCVD) Creation of reactive chemical species close to the

surface.

Ex. SiH4 Si + 2H2

Page 17: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

UHV Thin Film Deposition SystemUHV Thin Film Deposition System

(Courtesy of Professor Robert Lad, Laboratory for Surface Science and Technology, University of Maine)

Page 18: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE)Molecular Beam Epitaxy (MBE)MBE: Epitaxial growth of atomic layers on a substrate

Page 19: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Strain energy limits thickness Kinetic factors

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

(Courtesy of Professor Jeff Drucker, Department and School of Materials, Arizona State University)

• trapping of adatoms at special sites• diffusion on the surface• association/dissociation rate of small clusters• formation rate of stable clusters

Page 20: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Semiconductor superlattice

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

(Reprinted from Journal of Crystal Growth, Volume 271, T. Aoki, M. Takeguchi, P. Boieriu, R. Singh, C. Grein, Y. Chang, S. Sivananthan and David J. Smith, "Microstructural characterization of HgTe/HgCdTe superlattices" Pages 29-36, Copyright 2004, with permission from Elsevier. )

Page 21: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Block copolymer masksBlock copolymer masks• Phase separation of incompatible block copolymers

Immiscible polymers phase-separate into a quite ordered domain structure

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

Page 22: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Self-assembled masksSelf-assembled masks

Polystyrene/polybutadiene 36/11

Spontaneously forms nanometer scale phase-separated domains.

Polybutadiene is selectively etched by ozone treatment.

Page 23: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Structures made with block-copolymer masksStructures made with block-copolymer masks

TEM images showing (A) a spherical micro-domain monolayer film after removal of poly butadiene by ozone treatment, (B) the resulting array of holes in silicon nitride after RIE, (C) cylindrical microdomains in which the darker regions are osmium stained poly butadiene domains and (D) the resulting cylindrical pattern etched into the silicon nitride surface.

Page 24: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Focused Ion BeamFocused Ion Beam

Page 25: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Focused Ion BeamFocused Ion Beam

Gallium liquid metal ion source. Typical energies of ion beams are 5-30 kV.

Page 26: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Copyright Stuart Lindsay (2008)

• collection of the scattered ions (ion beam imaging)

• collection of secondary electrons

• implantation of Gallium ions

Ions are thousands of times heavier than electrons:Electrostatic fields are more efficient than magnetic fields(electrostatic focusing)

Page 27: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Focused Ion BeamFocused Ion Beam

Resolution: few tens of nanometers

Ion beam irradiation of a gold film

SEM image of an insulator defect.The sample was prepared by a FIB.

Page 28: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Stamp TechnologyStamp Technology

Chemical patterning by soft imprint lithography.

Thermoplastic

Page 29: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

““Stamped” MOSFET with 60nm gateStamped” MOSFET with 60nm gate

Fabrication of 60 nm transistors on 4-in wager using nanoimprint at all lithography levels

Page 30: Making nanostructures: Top down Approach Photolithography Electron beam lithography Micromechanical structures Thin films, including MBE Self-assembled.

Nanoscale JunctionsNanoscale Junctions

Strachan D.R. et al., 2008 Phys. Rev. Lett., 100, 056805

Gold nanowire broken by conventional nanolitography.

High current densities lead to substantial local heating, causing electromigration.