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Photoplastic near-field optical probe with sub-100 nm aperture made by replication from a nanomould

Authors :
Kim, Gm
Kim, Bj
Ten Have, Es
Segerink, F.
Niek van Hulst
Brugger, J.
Optical Sciences
Source :
ResearcherID, Journal of microscopy, 209(3), 267-271. Wiley-Blackwell

Abstract

Polymers have the ability to conform to surface contours down to a few nanometres. We studied the filling of transparent epoxy-type EPON SU-8 into nanoscale apertures made in a thin metal film as a new method for polymer/metal near-field optical structures. Mould replica processes combining silicon micromachining with the photo-curable SU-8 offer great potential for low-cost nanostructure fabrication. In addition to offering a route for mass production, the transparent pyramidal probes are expected to improve light transmission thanks to a wider geometry near the aperture. By combining silicon MEMS, mould geometry tuning by oxidation, anti-adhesion coating by self-assembled monolayer and mechanical release steps, we propose an advanced method for near-field optical probe fabrication. The major improvement is the possibility to fabricate nanoscale apertures directly o­n wafer scale during the microfabrication process and not o­n free-standing tips. Optical measurements were performed with the fabricated probes. The full width half maximum after a Gaussian fit of the intensity profile indicates a lateral optical resolution of approximate to 60 nm.

Details

ISSN :
00222720
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ResearcherID, Journal of microscopy, 209(3), 267-271. Wiley-Blackwell
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..e6641c5b3d7f68a0a5b2a10e7a3d72c3