The invention relates to a method for producing a grating structure having an approximately sinusoidal profile on the surface of a substrate for use in surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy.
Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy makes use of the interaction of light with the surface plasmons of a solid and makes it possible to investigate the interaction between immobile receptors and analytes in a liquid film. To this end, the liquid film flows along the profiled surface of a substrate. It is known from the theory that the best results are achieved when the surface has a grating structure with an approximately sinusoidal profile.
It is difficult to produce such a grating structure with grating spacings and structural heights in the nanometer to micrometer range. Production of individual items typically requires two days according to dissertation by A. H. Nicol, “Grating Coupled Surface Plasmon Enhanced Fluorescence Spectroscopy,” chapter 3.1, September 2005, Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz A clean glass substrate is coated with a photoresist on which holographic interference lines are produced, exposing the photoresist to varying extents. After developing and curing the photoresist, the surface has a sinusoidal profile, which is transferred by means of ionic etching to the surface of the glass substrate, which is then covered with a gold film by vapor deposition. To be reused, the gold film must be removed and a new gold film applied to the glass substrate.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,550,663 A describes an optical low-pass filter having an essentially sinusoidal surface profile. To produce this profile, a thermoplastic photoresist material is applied to a substrate and then exposed through a mask. After developing, the remaining photoresist material has a crenellated surface profile, i.e., it has a sequence of rectangular blocks in cross section and rectangular or square grooves or trenches. Next the photoresist material is heated to its melting point until a surface having an approximately sinusoidal curve has formed due to the blocks fusing with the grooves or trenches.
The object of the invention is to create a method of the generic type described in the introduction which will make it possible to produce a large number of substrates with a grating structure having an approximately sinusoidal profile inexpensively.
This object is achieved according to the invention by a method having the following steps:
Although the steps (a), (c) and (d) are known from the dissertation cited above, the method proposed here differs from the method described in the dissertation in the direct exposure of a photoresist in step (b), the metallization of the developed surface profile without the intermediate step of transfer of the surface profile to the surface of the flat plate in step (e) and taking an impression of a template galvanically in step (f), which in turn permits the production of any number of substrates according to step (g).
Advantageous details of the method according to the invention are given in claims 2 through 10.
The method according to the invention is explained below with reference to the drawings, which illustrate individual steps of the method in schematically simplified form and in particular are not drawn to scale. They show:
After drying the photoresist layer 2 is exposed with a laser beam 3 to later produce the most sinusoidal structure possible, this laser beam initially having a diameter of a few millimeters, limited by an aperture (not shown here). This laser beam is focused by means of a lens 4 on a diffraction-limited diameter which depends in particular on the selected wavelength of the laser beam. In the range of visible light, this focus diameter may be in the range of 1 μm, for example. The focus is preferably approximately in the plane of the surface of the plate 1. The numeric aperture NA, which is a measure of the acceptance angle a of the focused laser beam, determines the distance between the lens 4 and the surface of the photoresist layer 2 and also determines the diameter of the diffraction-limited focus.
To create the grating structure, the photoresist layer 2 is exposed in tracks such as 5.1, 5.2, whose spacing is on the order of magnitude of the wavelength used in the context of surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy, in accordance with the subsequent grating constant, i.e., in the range of 100 nm to at least 10 μm. The next track still to be produced by exposure is shown with dotted lines. To produce the tracks, the plate 1 and the laser beam 3 are moved in relation to one another, preferably by rotating the plate 1 about an axis parallel to the central axis of the focus laser beam and by translatory displacement of the laser beam according to the arrow P, either incrementally after a full rotation or continuously during the rotation by an amount which is equal to the desired grating constant. Macroscopically concentrated tracks are produced in the former case, whereas a spiral track is produced in the latter case. Microscopically both cases result in approximately parallel tracks with a track spacing equal to the predetermined value of the grating constant and a diffraction-limited track width which is adjusted by means of the lens 4 to approximately half of this track spacing.
Since the radial intensity profile of the focused laser beam does not have a sinusoidal curve, the intensity of the laser beam is reduced as a function of the relative velocity between the plate 1 and the laser beam 4 to the extent that the photoresist is not completely exposed. Furthermore, the optical properties of the lens 4 are selected, so that, in combination with at least one aperture, the intensity distribution in the photoresist is approximately sinusoidal over the width of the track(s). The parameters are determined case by case empirically and taking into account the nonlinear development process, which is described with reference to
If the tracks are written in a circle or spiral, then it is possible to work either at a constant angular velocity or at a constant linear velocity. In the former case the intensity of the laser beam must be regulated as a function of the distance from the axis of rotation so that the intensity of the exposure of the photoresist remains constant locally. In the latter case the intensity need not be altered once it has been set. For the photoresist coating described above and a linear velocity of the beam of approximately 1.2 m/s, for example, it is possible to work with a beam intensity of approximately 2.3 mW.
The areas 6.1, 6.2 shown with hatching in
After being exposed, the photoresist is developed with a 0.05 to 5% NaOH solution. The photoresist is positive, i.e., the exposed areas are dissolved in developing. The more intense the exposure, the more rapidly the development process proceeds. As indicated by the profile 8 in
This surface is then metallized. To do so, a film a few nanometers thick, preferably of nickel, alternatively of copper, silver or gold, is applied by essentially known methods such as sputtering, vapor deposition (CVD) or deposition from solution. In an essentially known manner, the plate 1 having the sinusoidally profiled and now electrically conductive surface of the photoresist layer 2 is electroplated with a metal layer, preferably nickel, which is both inexpensive and has a high stability. This is shown in
The metal layer 10 produced in this way can now be used as a stable template for producing almost any number of substrates 20 according to
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2009 047 922.8 | Oct 2009 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/063042 | 9/6/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/11/2012 |