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Sub 20 nm Silicon Patterning and Metal Lift-Off Using Thermal Scanning Probe Lithography

Published 18 Nov 2014 in cond-mat.mtrl-sci | (1411.4833v1)

Abstract: The most direct definition of a patterning process' resolution is the smallest half-pitch feature it is capable of transferring onto the substrate. Here we demonstrate that thermal Scanning Probe Lithography (t-SPL) is capable of fabricating dense line patterns in silicon and metal lift-off features at sub 20 nm feature size. The dense silicon lines were written at a half pitch of 18.3 nm to a depth of 5 nm into a 9 nm polyphthalaldehyde thermal imaging layer by t-SPL. For processing we used a three-layer stack comprising an evaporated SiO2 hardmask which is just 2-3 nm thick. The hardmask is used to amplify the pattern into a 50 nm thick polymeric transfer layer. The transfer layer subsequently serves as an etch mask for transfer into silicon to a nominal depth of 60 nm. The line edge roughness (3 sigma) was evaluated to be less than 3 nm both in the transfer layer and in silicon. We also demonstrate that a similar three-layer stack can be used for metal lift-off of high resolution patterns. A device application is demonstrated by fabricating 50 nm half pitch dense nickel contacts to an InAs nanowire.

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