The subject matter described herein relates to imprinting structures in a substrate. More particularly, the subject matter described herein relates methods and systems for fast imprinting of nanometer scale features in a workpiece.
Bio-inspired nanostructured surfaces are covered with nanometer scale features which, depending on their size and spacing, can produce valuable properties [1]. Nanofeatures found on the surface of moth eyes create an anti-reflective (AR) property which can serve as a defense mechanism for this nocturnal insect by blending the index of refraction from the air to the eye surface [2, 3]. Similar tapered features can be placed on a surface creating a gradual change in index of refraction from the air to the surface preventing a sharp change in index of refraction at the air-surface interface reducing Fresnel reflection [4-7]. For nanofeatures to produce the AR property the period of the features must be less than the wavelength in the visible spectrum (380-750 nm) [8, 9]. These types of surfaces can be useful in photovoltaic applications because of their ability to perform over multiple wavelengths of light and large viewing angles [10-14]. Structures found on the surface of the lotus leaf produce a superhydrophobic effect where water droplets sit on the surface with a very high contact angle (>150°) [15, 16]. Water droplets roll off the leaf surface easily due to this high contact angle and pick up debris along the way to clean the surface. This property would also be attractive for photovoltaic cell coatings where build-up from operating in an outdoor environment is inevitable. While both properties are desirable, the main focus of this research has been on generating AR (optical) nanofeatures.
The use of nanostructured surfaces like the ones found on moth eyes has become increasingly popular in consumer and commercial applications. The advantages of structured surfaces have been recognized and the demand for inexpensive coatings is high. The limitation of these nanostructured surfaces is the length of time required to produce a usable quantity. Current techniques for generating nanostructured surfaces have been successful but are not feasible because of long manufacturing times. Lithography methods are popular and can produce a limited area of high quality features, but suffer from a large number of manufacturing steps (spin coating, baking, etching, . . . ) as well as long duration (the baking can take 10 h) [17, 18].
Accordingly, there exists a need for methods and systems for fast imprinting of nanometer scale features in a workpiece.
The subject matter described herein relates to methods and systems for fast imprinting of nanometer scale features in a workpiece. According to one aspect, a system for producing nanometer scale features in a workpiece is disclosed. The system includes a die having a surface with at least one nanometer scale feature located thereon. A first actuator moves the die with respect to the workpiece such that the at least one nanometer scale feature impacts the workpiece and imprints a corresponding at least one nanometer scale feature in the workpiece.
The subject matter described herein may be implemented in hardware, software, firmware, or any combination thereof. As such, the terms “function” “node” or “module” as used herein refer to hardware, which may also include software and/or firmware components, for implementing the feature being described. In one exemplary implementation, the subject matter described herein may be implemented using a computer readable medium having stored thereon computer executable instructions that when executed by the processor of a computer control the computer to perform steps. Exemplary computer readable media suitable for implementing the subject matter described herein include non-transitory computer-readable media, such as disk memory devices, chip memory devices, programmable logic devices, and application specific integrated circuits. In addition, a computer readable medium that implements the subject matter described herein may be located on a single device or computing platform or may be distributed across multiple devices or computing platforms.
The subject matter described herein will now be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings of which:
A new process called nanocoining was developed to address the limitation in production time. Nanocoining uses a micro-scale diamond die with a nanostructured area attached to a high speed actuator to transfer the features to a mold surface. The process of nanocoining, as seen in
Die 100 is forced until the work-piece material fills the voids of the mold. Die 100 is then withdrawn and the plastically deformed shape remains on the mold surface. The surface of workpiece 104 would be completely covered with features. In one embodiment, workpiece 104 comprises a drum, which is subsequently used to mass produce sheets of nanostructured surfaces by rolling the drum across the sheets such that the structures imprinted on the surface of the drum produce corresponding structures in the sheets of material. These sheets of nanostructures could then be attached to surfaces depending on the property produced by the features. Areas of precisely indexed nano-indents have been created with nanofeatures exhibiting high fidelity using the nanocoining process.
There are three main elements to one embodiment of a nanocoining process: (1) the diamond die, (2) the 2D actuator and (3) the precision lathe. In one exemplary implantation illustrated in
In
In one exemplary implementation, the diamond dies used in nanocoining had 20 μm×20 μm areas of nanofeatures. Each cone-like nanofeature was 330 nm wide at the base and 360 nm tall with a 160 nm radius at the tip. The spacing between features was 530 nm. An exemplary die 100 and features imprinted by the die can be seen in
To create anti-reflective (AR) surfaces it is critical that the spacing of the features on the die is less than the wavelength of visible light (380-700 nm). Because the property of the overall surface is dictated by the size and spacing of the features, it would be possible to have a collection of dies which could be mounted on the actuator depending on the desired effect.
For superhydrophobic or other applications, it may be desirable to create features having at least one dimension in the range of 10 nm to 10 microns. For other applications, the feature scale may range between 400 nm and 600 nm.
The features on the die shown in
Because the nanostructured area on the die is small relative to the desired total mold area (⅕ the diameter of human hair), the indentation rate must be high. This also implies that the mold must constantly be moving since stopping and starting would slow the process. The mold is defined as the part that is indented with the die and used to create replicates. A moving mold poses a problem to a traditional tool-path where the die is thrust into and out of the mold orthogonal to the direction of motion. If the die is pressed into a moving mold in this manner, the features will smear by a distance dictated by the mold speed and contact time. Smearing cannot only distort the features transferred to the mold, but also cause material to become lodged in-between the nanofeatures on the die which further hampers the indenting process. In some severe cases, velocity mis-match between the die and mold (causing smear) has resulted in individual nanofeatures breaking away from the die indentation face. Without the ability to match speed the indentation process will not work at high rates making the process ineffective.
To avoid the issue of smear and match the die and mold velocity it was necessary to introduce a second component of motion to the tool-path in the direction of the mold motion. There are a number of 2D tool-path shapes that can have simultaneous vertical and horizontal motion. A geometry that has easily adjusted parameters and is already used in some precision machining processes is the ellipse. An illustration of an elliptical tool-path like the one used in the nanocoining experiments is shown in
x(t)=a sin(ωt) (1)
y(t)=b cos(ωt) (2)
where a is the amplitude of the ellipse in the x-direction, b is the amplitude in the y-direction, ω is the indentation frequency in rad s−1 and t is the time. The purpose of adding motion in the x-direction was to match the die velocity with the mold velocity at the time of contact. The velocity of the die (in the x-direction) during the indentation cycle was found by differentiating equation (1) with respect to time
v
die(t)=ωa cos(ωt) (3)
According to equation (3), the velocity of die 100 in the x-direction is constantly changing throughout the indentation cycle and because contact between the die and mold takes some amount of time, the velocities cannot theoretically match during the entire contact. The solution to this problem is to decrease the time the die and mold are in contact which decreases smear. To minimize the velocity mis-match, the ellipse is made to be tall (b as large as possible) so that the contact time is small. A simulation of smear versus b amplitude was performed and the results are shown in
The smear length is calculated using the difference in velocities multiplied by the contact time. Making the b dimension larger will produce a narrow ellipse and decrease the contact time, thus decreasing the smear, as seen in
Knowing that matching the speed of the die with the speed of the mold during contact is not possible, the best approximation was to set the velocity of the die equal to the maximum x-direction of velocity given by
v
die,max
=ωa (4)
The horizontal a dimension (
where l is the length of the die and T is the period of the indentation frequency. Finally the a dimension of the ellipse can be found by setting equation (4) equal to equation (5) and re-arranging to produce
For the die used in these experiments (l=20 μm) the a dimension was equal to 3:2 μm.
In one exemplary implementation, actuator designed for elliptical vibration assisted machining (EVAM) called the Ultramill was used to generate the elliptical tool-path.
Nanocoining experiments were performed using the Ultramill actuator mounted to the y-axis of a Nanoform 600 four-axis DTM as illustrated in
One of the more challenging aspects of the nanocoining process is aligning the die with respect to the mold surface. The die must be aligned about three axes of rotation, as shown in
Any rotation of the die about the Y(θxz) or X(θyz) axes will cause the die to be tilted with respect to the mold surface. If the tilt is significant, as shown in
error=20 μm tan(0.01°)=3.5 nm (7)
An alignment fixture capable of rotating the die about the X and Y axes was built to compensate for tilt of the die. Initial indents were performed to measure how much tilt was present. After examining the indents in an optical microscope, adjustments were made to the alignment fixture and more indents were created. This process was repeated until the Ultramill produced complete indents (the entire indentation face had made contact) implying that the actuator had been aligned so that the die was parallel to the mold upon contact.
The first test image (
Rotation about the Z-axis (θXY) was important for locating indents with respect to others and is called indent registration. The goal is indents created with no gaps to form a seamless area of nanofeatures. This is not possible if the die is rotated in the θXY direction which will result in gaps that can only be accounted for by overlapping. While it is not known whether overlapping the features will have a negative impact on the desired property of the surface, the goal was to avoid the need to overlap. Alignment of θXY was handled by ensuring that locating features on the tool-holder were square and adjustments were made by rotating the PZT stacks in the Ultramill housing.
It is desirable to ensure full imprinting of a mold surface to have depth control to create a continuous region of indents. Without control, the die may come into and out of contact with the mold leaving un-indented regions. Also, if the die is pushed so far into the mold that the border surrounding the features hits (die ‘bottomed out’) a mark will appear around the perimeter of each indent caused by plastic deformation from edge stress concentration.
Another undesirable result of bottoming out the die is the large volume of displaced material. When only features are indenting the deformation is localized around each nanofeature but as soon as the border touches the entire die begins to displace material resulting in a surface which is no longer flat. An example of this effect can be seen in
The flat die used to create the indents in
A form of feedback control has not yet been developed for this process so depth control is handled in two ways. First, steps were taken to ensure the DTM had come to thermal equilibrium by running the spindle at machining conditions for at least 1 hour before the finishing machining pass so that the mold had minimal form error. The diamond turned mold was measured in an interferometer to make sure that the form error was less than 100 nm. The second method of depth control is to maintain piezo stack temperature. The Ultramill's piezo stacks are liquid cooled using a dielectric heat transfer fluid and a PID controlled thermoelectric chiller. The gains for the thermoelectric cooler were tuned for the particular fluid, flow rate and Ultramill operating conditions and were tested by running the Ultramill for 1 h and measuring the temperature change of the heat transfer fluid inside the actuator as well as the mean displacement of the die. The result was temperature control of the piezos to within 0.1° C. and less than 100 nm of thermal expansion and contraction of the Ultramill tool.
In future experiments where the outside surface of a cylinder is indented, it may be necessary to compensate for run-out errors of the part. A cap gage could be used to measure the run-out of the cylindrical surface and an auxiliary axis could be used to move the Ultramill for compensation.
Before an indentation experiment could be performed, it was critical to have the die centered with respect to the mold. This was carried out by indenting two concentric rings and measuring the error in the two radii from the expected ones using a Zygo New View SWLI. The measured error was then used to set the center position of the mold. This method is used frequently in diamond turning and proved equally effective during nanocoining.
The depth at which indents will occur is set as a z-axis offset on the Nanoform DTM. Setting of the depth is performed after the die has been centered by indenting rings at various depths and keeping track of which ring was indented at which depth using the z-axis positions on the Nanoform DTM. The part is removed from the vacuum chuck taking care to note the angular orientation and vacuum pressure and examined under a microscope (500×). The nanocoined rings are examined and the one which can produce the best features without die border marks is chosen. The depth associated with this ring is then set as the depth at which the die will indent for the experiment.
Machine code was written to move the Ultramill using the axes of the Nanoform so that large rings of indents could be created. The mold was a rotating flat so the best type of geometry to indent was a ring; future indentation experiments will use the outside surface of a rotating cylinder. Indenting on a rotating flat posed some issues because the speed of the mold will change as the radial position changes (for a constant spindle speed). This was a problem because the actuation frequency of the die (and thus die velocity) remained constant and the goal was to match the velocity of the mold. The solution was to change the spindle speed as a function of the radial position of the die using
where ω is the spindle speed in rpm, f is the actuator frequency in Hz, l is the die length in mm and r is the radial position in mm. Equation (8) was used in the machine code to update the spindle speed and keep the mold velocity constant and equal to the die velocity. The feed-rate of the die (velocity of radial motion of the actuator) must also be updated since the spindle speed is not constant throughout the process. It is desired to move the Ultramill one die width per revolution of the spindle to ensure total coverage. The expression used in the machine code was
where vfeed is the feed-rate in mm min−1 and w is the width of the die in mm. Use of equation (9) in the machine code ensured that each ring of indents would be created at the outside edge of the previous ring. Indent registration was controlled using equations (8) and (9) with the goal of completely tiling the target indentation area. Overlap was introduced by changing either the w or the l variable in equations (8) and (9). Changing the l or w parameter would introduce overlap in the stamping or cross-feed directions respectively. For example, if 1 μm of overlap was desired in the cross-feed direction, w was changed to 19 μm instead of 20 μm. This method was identical for overlap in the stamping direction except that l was changed.
The nanocoin process was used to indent a 6 mm wide ring on a 1.25″ diameter electroless nickel sample at a rate of 1 kHz. The sample was stainless steel plated with a 380 μm thick layer of nickel and had a Vickers hardness of Hv=457. The ring started at a radius of 6 mm and ended at a radius of 12 mm, resulting in an indented area of 339 mm2. Based on this area and the area of the die the total number of indents was approximately 1.12 million created in 20 min. Once the part had been machined replicates were made using a UV curable material. An image of the indented part and replicates can be seen in
The part and replicates shown in
The nanofeatures shown in
Although only nanocoining results on an electroless nickel mold material are presented in this work, other materials such as hard plated copper and brass have also been used. The use of different materials defined an effect called ‘pick-up’ which resulted from material from the mold surface becoming lodged between the nanofeatures on the diamond die. The material filled the voids on the die ultimately making it ineffective in the feature transfer process. After examining the Vickers hardness of the materials, it was found that harder materials exhibited less pick-up. Thus, electroless nickel was the preferred material with hard plated copper also exhibiting favorable results. The nanocoining results showed that materials with Vickers hardness values of 250 or higher were less likely to adhere to the nanofeatures on the die.
The replicates shown in
The large arrays and shape of the features in
It was desired to quantify the behavior of the material around each nanofeature shown in
The AFM measurement in
The replicates created in
Ideally, the mold would be a drum which would have nanofeatures imprinted on the outside surface which would then be used to roll-transfer structures such as those seen in
Nanocoining is a new process that could be used to mass produce large areas of nanostructured coatings economically. A diamond die was attached to a 1 kHz actuator which had an elliptical path that matched the die's velocity with the mold velocity. Equations were developed to define the shape of the elliptical tool-path and the actuator was calibrated to produce this shape. Alignment techniques were used to make the die parallel to the mold by rotating the die about two axes of rotation to within 0.01°. Depth was maintained throughout the indentation process by ensuring that the diamond turned mold had very little form error (much less than the height of the features) and by using a closed loop thermoelectric chiller to keep the actuator's PZT stacks' temperature constant to within 0.1° C. These measures were then used to create areas of indents on a rotating electroless nickel sample at 1 kHz using the Nanoform 600 DTM. The indented nickel mold and replicates created using a UV curable epoxy were examined in an SEM and AFM and the results showed that the mold was able to successfully transfer features to replicates. The replicates also transferred the shape of the material displaced around each nanofeature which may or may not be an issue but still must be studied.
In the example described above with respect to
In the examples illustrated in
Desirable properties of an actuator are that the actuator be a resonant structure that is free and move in two directions, the movement in the two directions has common modes or flexing points, the resonant frequency of the actuator is substantially the same in the two directions, and the resonant frequency is about 50 kHz. In one embodiment, the actuator comprises a piezoelectric material and a beam where the piezoelectric material is excited to move the beam at a resonant frequency of the beam in two directions.
From Table 1, it can be seen that the actuator achieved a resonant frequency of about 45 kHz in the bending direction and about 50 kHz in the longitudinal direction.
In
The disclosure of each of the following references is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
It will be understood that various details of the presently disclosed subject matter may be changed without departing from the scope of the presently disclosed subject matter. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limitation.
This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/431,348, filed Mar. 26, 2015, which is a national stage application under 35 U.S.C. § 371 of PCT Patent Application No. PCT/US2013/062218 filed Sep. 27, 2013, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/706,738, filed Sep. 27, 2012; the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
This invention was made with government support under Grant No. NM-1000055 awarded by the National Science Foundation. The government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61706738 | Sep 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 14431348 | Mar 2015 | US |
Child | 15863849 | US |