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Published September 11, 2019 | public
Journal Article

Plasma-etched pattern transfer of sub-10 nm structures using a metal–organic resist and helium ion beam lithography

Abstract

Field-emission devices are promising candidates to replace silicon fin field-effect transistors as next-generation nanoelectronic components. For these devices to be adopted, nanoscale field emitters with nanoscale gaps between them need to be fabricated, requiring the transfer of, for example, sub-10 nm patterns with a sub-20 nm pitch to substrates like silicon and tungsten. New resist materials must therefore be developed that exhibit the properties of sub-10 nm resolution and high dry etch resistance. A negative tone, metal–organic resist is presented here. It can be patterned to produce sub-10 nm features when exposed to helium ion beam lithography at line doses on the order of tens of picocoulombs per centimeter. The resist was used to create 5 nm wide, continuous, discrete lines spaced on a 16 nm pitch in silicon and 6 nm wide lines on an 18 nm pitch in tungsten, with line edge roughness of 3 nm. After the lithographic exposure, the resist demonstrates high resistance to silicon and tungsten dry etch conditions (SF_6 and C_4F_8 plasma), allowing the pattern to be transferred to the underlying substrates. The resist's etch selectivity for silicon and tungsten was measured to be 6.2:1 and 5.6:1, respectively; this allowed 3 to 4 nm thick resist films to yield structures that were 21 and 19 nm tall, respectively, while both maintained a sub-10 nm width on a sub-20 nm pitch.

Additional Information

© 2019 American Chemical Society. Received: May 9, 2019; Revised: July 20, 2019; Published: August 19, 2019. We acknowledge the EPSRC (U.K.) for funding (grant EP/R023158/1). The University of Manchester also supported this work. We gratefully acknowledge the critical support and infrastructure provided for this work by the Kavli Nanoscience Institute at Caltech. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
March 5, 2024