This invention relates to a method for the creation of complex structures on a micrometric or nanometric scale, using in particular a corrosion and deposition process.
In particular, the method pursuant to the invention is advantageously used to nano-and/or micro-structure a surface via the deposit of a material and/or nano- and micro-particles and/or precursors in a single step, envisaging the use of the lithographic process known as Lithographically Controlled Wetting (for the sake of brevity, LCW) by means of a corrosive solution simultaneously to the material to be deposited.
Currently, during the processing of the integrated circuits of optical, magnetic and similar devices for example, one of the most popular and well known operating methods for the creation of complex structures is the lithographic method.
One of the key steps of the lithographic method is the step that envisages the deposit of a fine layer or film on the substrate and the generation of an in-contact mask so that, during subsequent processing thereof, the mask model can be transferred by removing the material making up the substrate or by depositing another material on the substrate itself.
A standard lithography process in sub-micrometric or nanometric processing for the creation of details, consists of depositing a film on a substrate and in subsequently exposing the film, with the relevant support, to a beam of high-energy particles such as electrons, photons or ions, possibly through a mask bearing a desired model.
The aforementioned particle beam changes the chemical structure of the area exposed by the film while leaving the unexposed area unaltered.
By immersing the substrate and the film in a developer, the area of film exposed to the energy beam or, alternatively, the unexposed area, is removed, thus producing a film that mirrors the model, or the relevant negative, traced in the aforementioned mask.
The print resolution that can be achieved in lithographic procedures is limited by the wave length of the particles used to etch the film, by the properties of the film itself and by the developing process. Further processes, such as the spatially controlled deposit of other materials requires an additional independent step as well as a complex and costly mask and/or mould alignment processes.
Other known lithographic methods include the direct use of ion or electron beams. Such methods allow high spatial resolution (tens of nanometres) but are serial methods, i.e. the patterns are written one by one in series.
Such lithographic techniques are therefore limited by the scanning speed of the particle beam. Consequently, these techniques are not especially suitable for large-scale or high-scale production.
In addition, the deposition following the structuring requires the same subsequent steps that are applied in photolithography.
Alternative lithographic techniques have recently been developed, which meet the requirement of being parallel and, at the same time, allow the simple and low-cost production of sub-micrometric and nanometric details on film.
An example is provided in U.S. Pat. No. 5,772,905, which describes and proposes a lithographic method that combines standard lithographic technologies with the less costly, contact printing (embossing) method with millimetric resolutions, creating thermoplastic polymer prints in nanometric or sub-micrometric scale (nano-embossing or nano-imprinting).
The aforementioned patent describes a low-cost but high-resolution lithographic approach, which abandons the use of energy beams or particle beams.
Nano-embossing entails placing a suitably-shaped mould over a polymer film placed on a rigid support and applying pressure, possibly accompanied by suitable heating of said support.
The moulding generates a series of recesses and protrusions on the film, which correspond to the respective recesses and protrusions of said mould.
The portions of film around the recesses are then removed, with a film model that mirrors the mould recesses thus being created on the substrate; the thus moulded polymer film must then be developed by known methods in order to obtain the desired product.
However, this method is limited by the modelling of the support and the film and/or the processing of the silicon, a material that is widely used in these applications.
Another non-standard lithographic process relates to the aforementioned LWC or Lithographically Controlled Wetting, described for instance in U.S. patent 2006027117.
The process described in this US patent is based on the concept of confining a solution under the protrusions of a mould placed at a distance of a few nanometres from a surface by effect of capillary force.
LCW promotes auto-organization phenomena in confined spaces delimited by the protrusions of the mould. When the solvent evaporates, the material that was initially dissolved in the solution is deposited around the protrusions thus creating the nano-structures. By optimising the conditions, objects that are smaller in dimension than the mould's protrusions can be moulded.
Structures are etched using a corrosive solution rather than depositing new material.
The moulded structures are small in dimension (up to factor 20) compared to the dimensions of the mould's structures: nano-structures can thus be created from micro-structured moulds. A current limitation of the LCW process is that said process, applied to both corrode and deposit material, requires two separate steps with the consequent alignment of the moulds, in respect of the first application of the process, thus making it extremely complex and limiting the practical applications of the process itself.
The scope of this invention is thus to obviate the drawbacks of the prior art as set out above.
In particular, one scope of this invention is to provide a method for the creation of complex surfaces that can contribute to the production of structured patterns through the deposition of nano-structures having a different chemical nature directly on a support and in a single step.
Another scope of this invention is to provide a method for the creation of complex surfaces without the use of lithographic techniques.
A further scope is the creation of a complex surface achieved by the method pursuant to this invention.
The technical characteristics of the invention, according to said scopes, can be clearly determined from the content of the claims as set out below, and the advantages thereof will become more apparent in the detailed description which follows, with reference to the annexed drawings, which illustrate several embodiments thereof, provided by way of example, wherein:
a to 2e are examples of the complex surfaces that can be obtained using the method pursuant to this invention, in detail:
In accordance with the annexed drawings, and with particular reference to
In particular, explicit reference will be made hereunder, without this detracting from the details, to a substrate S defined by a support 1 in a corrodible material, such as silicon oxide, and a material 2, comprising gold nano particles, and a corrosive solution 3 comprising an HF solution.
Said elements, substrate S, support 1, material 2 and solution 3, can in any case be defined by a range of different materials, of both organic and inorganic origin, such as biological molecules (biopolymers, copolymers, proteins and so forth), silicon, titanium dioxide and similar molecules.
Reference will also be made to spatial nanometric scales, since this is the field of greatest interest in terms of the application of the described method, which is nevertheless also valid and effective for larger dimensions, such as micrometric dimensions.
In the example provided in
A drop of the corrosive solution 3 (hydrofluoric acid 0.4%) is then deposited on the flat surface of the support 1 at the same time as deposit of the material 2. Preferably, according to this method, said deposit of the material 2 and the solution 3 on the support 1 should take place in a single step, with the material 2 that forms through a chemical reaction during the corrosive process.
An elastomeric polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) mould 4, having a known topography is then placed above the support 1 in contact with the said material 2 and drop of the substance 3 so that distribution of the material 2 and the drop of solution 3 can be spatially guided in a controlled manner, onto the support 1.
On full or partial completion of the corrosive action of the substance 3, the mould 4 is removed and the complex structure (indicated by the number 5 in
a-2e provide various examples of the geometries of the complex surfaces 5 that have been obtained using the method pursuant to the invention, in particular: continuous, variable-dimension channels (
According to a variant of the method pursuant to the invention, an additional corrosive treatment on the substrate S (which does not however envisage the use of mould 4 in this phase) also allows the creation of structures of even smaller dimension.
More specifically, it should be highlighted that the method pursuant to this invention has been successfully tested on silicon oxide (micro and nano electronics applications), glass (biological applications) and titanium oxide (optoelectronics and photocatalysis) using nano particles of gold, cobalt/graphite, polystyrene, polythiophene and precursors to ferromagnetic materials (Crown ether of Co/Cr).
In particular, it should also be noted that if the material 2 is a conductor, e.g. metal, the method pursuant to this invention is advantageously used in the production of conducting wires and electrodes comprising a support 1 on which the conducting material 2 is duly placed; if the material 2 has magnetic properties (or is paramagnetic of ferromagnetic), the method pursuant to this invention allows magnetically readable memory elements to be produced, which when using specific dispersed materials 2, e.g. ferromagnetic materials, can be rewriteable; if the material 2 has optical properties (e.g. photo and/or electroluminescence), optically readable memory elements can be produced, which when using specific materials 2, e.g. optical switches, can be rewriteable.
In summary, a method of structuring a surface and simultaneously organising, in a spatially controlled manner and on a sub-micrometric and/or nanometric scale, a material 2 on said support 1 so that the properties of the material 2, originally dissolved in a corrosive solution 3 combined with the structuring of the substrate S, define the characteristics of the complex surface 5 as the end product of the abovementioned method.
The complex surface 5 thus obtained as the spatially controlled distribution of the material 2 on support 1, also known as the chemical pattern, is useful in various production processes, such as for example a substrate for the differential development of fine films or a step in the production process; advantageously, this method can also be used in conjunction with organic and/or inorganic and/or biological supports to obtain light emitting diodes, field-effect transistors, diodes and other similar devices.
Where the dispersed material 2 is a semiconductor, an electrode or a film or a fine layer in which the semiconductor is the active element, can be obtained.
This invention also relates to an electrode, a rewritable or non-rewriteable optically readable memory element, a rewriteable or non-rewriteable magnetically readable memory element, i.e. in summary, a spatially structured chemical pattern obtained by the abovementioned method,
The invention achieves its scopes and, in particular, this method allows patterns to be produced directly on a support without reliance on lithographic processes.
The described method is able to operate on a micrometric and nanometric scale and relates to the nanotechnology sector.
The invention thus devised is suitable for industrial application; it may also undergo a number of modifications and embodiments, all of which fall within its creative design; in addition, all the details can be replaced by technically equivalent elements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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MI2010A002295 | Dec 2010 | IT | national |