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A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography

Silicon nanostructuring imparts unique material properties including antireflectivity, antifogging, anti-icing, self-cleaning, and/or antimicrobial activity. To tune these properties however, a good control over features’ size and shape is essential. Here, a versatile fabrication process is presente...

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Autores principales: Michalska, Martyna, Laney, Sophia K., Li, Tao, Tiwari, Manish K., Parkin, Ivan P., Papakonstantinou, Ioannis
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9115640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35040848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1nr07024j
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author Michalska, Martyna
Laney, Sophia K.
Li, Tao
Tiwari, Manish K.
Parkin, Ivan P.
Papakonstantinou, Ioannis
author_facet Michalska, Martyna
Laney, Sophia K.
Li, Tao
Tiwari, Manish K.
Parkin, Ivan P.
Papakonstantinou, Ioannis
author_sort Michalska, Martyna
collection PubMed
description Silicon nanostructuring imparts unique material properties including antireflectivity, antifogging, anti-icing, self-cleaning, and/or antimicrobial activity. To tune these properties however, a good control over features’ size and shape is essential. Here, a versatile fabrication process is presented to achieve tailored silicon nanostructures (thin/thick pillars, sharp/truncated/re-entrant cones), of pitch down to ∼50 nm, and high-aspect ratio (>10). The approach relies on pre-assembled block copolymer (BCP) micelles and their direct transfer into a glass hard mask of an arbitrary thickness, now enabled by our recently reported regenerative secondary mask lithography. During this pattern transfer, not only can the mask diameter be decreased but also uniquely increased, constituting the first method to achieve such tunability without necessitating a different molecular weight BCP. Consequently, the hard mask modulation (height, diameter) advances the flexibility in attainable inter-pillar spacing, aspect ratios, and re-entrant profiles (= glass on silicon). Combined with adjusted silicon etch conditions, the morphology of nanopatterns can be highly customized. The process control and scalability enable uniform patterning of a 6-inch wafer which is verified through cross-wafer excellent antireflectivity (<5%) and water-repellency (advancing contact angle 158°; hysteresis 1°). The implementation of this approach to silicon nanostructuring is envisioned to be far-reaching, facilitating fundamental studies and targeting applications spanning solar panels, antifogging/antibacterial surfaces, sensing, amongst many others.
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spelling pubmed-91156402022-06-13 A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography Michalska, Martyna Laney, Sophia K. Li, Tao Tiwari, Manish K. Parkin, Ivan P. Papakonstantinou, Ioannis Nanoscale Chemistry Silicon nanostructuring imparts unique material properties including antireflectivity, antifogging, anti-icing, self-cleaning, and/or antimicrobial activity. To tune these properties however, a good control over features’ size and shape is essential. Here, a versatile fabrication process is presented to achieve tailored silicon nanostructures (thin/thick pillars, sharp/truncated/re-entrant cones), of pitch down to ∼50 nm, and high-aspect ratio (>10). The approach relies on pre-assembled block copolymer (BCP) micelles and their direct transfer into a glass hard mask of an arbitrary thickness, now enabled by our recently reported regenerative secondary mask lithography. During this pattern transfer, not only can the mask diameter be decreased but also uniquely increased, constituting the first method to achieve such tunability without necessitating a different molecular weight BCP. Consequently, the hard mask modulation (height, diameter) advances the flexibility in attainable inter-pillar spacing, aspect ratios, and re-entrant profiles (= glass on silicon). Combined with adjusted silicon etch conditions, the morphology of nanopatterns can be highly customized. The process control and scalability enable uniform patterning of a 6-inch wafer which is verified through cross-wafer excellent antireflectivity (<5%) and water-repellency (advancing contact angle 158°; hysteresis 1°). The implementation of this approach to silicon nanostructuring is envisioned to be far-reaching, facilitating fundamental studies and targeting applications spanning solar panels, antifogging/antibacterial surfaces, sensing, amongst many others. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC9115640/ /pubmed/35040848 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1nr07024j Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Michalska, Martyna
Laney, Sophia K.
Li, Tao
Tiwari, Manish K.
Parkin, Ivan P.
Papakonstantinou, Ioannis
A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title_full A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title_fullStr A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title_full_unstemmed A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title_short A route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
title_sort route to engineered high aspect-ratio silicon nanostructures through regenerative secondary mask lithography
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9115640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35040848
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1nr07024j
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