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Portrait of Tommy Nylander. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Tommy Nylander

Professor

Portrait of Tommy Nylander. Photo: Kennet Ruona

Poly(styrene)- block-Maltoheptaose Films for Sub-10 nm Pattern Transfer : Implications for Transistor Fabrication

Author

  • Anette Löfstrand
  • Reza Jafari Jam
  • Karolina Mothander
  • Tommy Nylander
  • Muhammad Mumtaz
  • Alexei Vorobiev
  • Wen Chang Chen
  • Redouane Borsali
  • Ivan Maximov

Summary, in English

Sequential infiltration synthesis (SIS) into poly(styrene)-block-maltoheptaose (PS-b-MH) block copolymer using vapors of trimethyl aluminum and water was used to prepare nanostructured surface layers. Prior to the infiltration, the PS-b-MH had been self-assembled into 12 nm pattern periodicity. Scanning electron microscopy indicated that horizontal alumina-like cylinders of 4.9 nm diameter were formed after eight infiltration cycles, while vertical cylinders were 1.3 nm larger. Using homopolymer hydroxyl-terminated poly(styrene) (PS-OH) and MH films, specular neutron reflectometry revealed a preferential reaction of precursors in the MH compared to PS-OH. The infiltration depth into the maltoheptaose homopolymer film was found to be 2.0 nm after the first couple of cycles. It reached 2.5 nm after eight infiltration cycles, and the alumina incorporation within this infiltrated layer corresponded to 23 vol % Al2O3. The alumina-like material, resulting from PS-b-MH infiltration, was used as an etch mask to transfer the sub-10 nm pattern into the underlying silicon substrate, to an aspect ratio of approximately 2:1. These results demonstrate the potential of exploiting SIS into carbohydrate-based polymers for nanofabrication and high pattern density applications, such as transistor devices.

Department/s

  • Solid State Physics
  • NanoLund: Center for Nanoscience
  • Physical Chemistry

Publishing year

2021-05-28

Language

English

Pages

5141-5151

Publication/Series

ACS Applied Nano Materials

Volume

4

Issue

5

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

The American Chemical Society (ACS)

Topic

  • Nano Technology
  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Other Physics Topics
  • Polymer Technologies

Keywords

  • block copolymer lithography
  • carbohydrate
  • maltoheptaose
  • neutron reflectometry
  • reactive ion etching
  • sequential infiltration synthesis
  • sub-10 nm pattern transfer

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 2574-0970