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Tailored molecular glass resists for scanning probe lithography

Authors :
Jean-Francois de Marneffe
Hans-Werner Schmidt
Marcus Kaestner
Yana Krivoshapkina
Andreas Erich Schedl
Urs Dürig
Vincent Fokkema
Tristan Kolb
Peter Strohriegl
Ziad el Otell
Mike Cooke
Colin Rawlings
Marijn G. A. van Veghel
Andreas Ringk
Ivo W. Rangelow
Christian Neuber
Armin W. Knoll
Matthias Budden
Source :
Advances in Patterning Materials and Processes XXXII.
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
SPIE, 2015.

Abstract

In the presented work solvent-free film preparation from tailored molecular glass resists, their thermal analysis, the characterization of etch resistance for plasma etching transfer processes, and the evaluation of the patterning performance using scanning probe lithography (SPL) tools, in particular electric field and thermal based SPL, are demonstrated. Therefore a series of fully aromatic spiro-based and tris-substituted twisted resist materials were systematically investigated. The materials feature very high glass transition temperatures of up to 173 °C, which allows solvent-free thin film preparation by physical vapor deposition (PVD) due to their high thermal stability. The PVD prepared films offer distinct advantages compared to spin coated films such as no pinholes, defects, or residual solvent domains, which can locally affect the film properties. In addition, PVD prepared films do not need a post apply bake (PAB) and can be precisely prepared in the nanometer range layer thickness. An observed sufficient plasma etching resistance is promising for an efficient pattern transfer even by utilizing only 10 nm thin resist films. Their lithographic resolution potential is demonstrated by a positive and a negative tone patterning using electric field, current controlled scanning probe lithography (EF-CC-SPL) at the Technical University of Ilmenau or thermal scanning probe lithography (tSPL) investigations at the IBM Research - Zurich. High resolution tSPL prepared patterns of 11 nm half pitch and at 4 nm patterning depth are demonstrated.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Advances in Patterning Materials and Processes XXXII
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........106badb59925ae1b91159b6e16e94247
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2085734