1. The fabrication of carbon nanostructures using electron beam resist pyrolysis and nanomachining processes for biosensing applications
- Author
-
Se Il Park, Kwang-Cheol Lee, Seung S. Lee, and Jung A Lee
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Oxide ,Nanowire ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Bioengineering ,Nanotechnology ,General Chemistry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Nanolithography ,chemistry ,Resist ,Mechanics of Materials ,Etching (microfabrication) ,General Materials Science ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Carbon ,Pyrolysis ,Electron-beam lithography - Abstract
We present a facile, yet versatile carbon nanofabrication method using electron beam lithography and resist pyrolysis. Various resist nanopatterns were fabricated using a negative electron beam resist, SAL-601, and they were then subjected to heat treatment in an inert atmosphere to obtain carbon nanopatterns. Suspended carbon nanostructures were fabricated by the wet-etching of an underlying sacrificial oxide layer. Free-standing carbon nanostructures, which contain 130 nm wide, 15 nm thick, and 4 µm long nanobridges, were fabricated by resist pyrolysis and nanomachining processes. Electron beam exposure dose effects on resist thickness and pattern widening were studied. The thickness of the carbon nanostructures was thinned down by etching with oxygen plasma. An electrical biosensor utilizing carbon nanostructures as a conducting channel was studied. Conductance modulations of the carbon device due to streptavidin–biotin binding and pH variations were observed.
- Published
- 2011