Access
To read this article in full you may need to log in, make a payment or gain access through a site license (see right).
Letter
Nature Nanotechnology 2, 545–548 (1 September 2007) | doi:10.1038/nnano.2007.264
Self-formation of sub-60-nm half-pitch gratings with large areas through fracturing
&
Abstract
Periodic micro- and nanostructures (gratings) have many significant applications in electronic, optical, magnetic, chemical and biological devices and materials. Traditional methods for fabricating gratings by writing with electrons, ions or a mechanical tip are limited to very small areas and suffer from extremely low throughput. Interference lithography can achieve relatively large fabrication areas, but has a low yield for small-period gratings. Photolithography, nanoimprint lithography, soft lithography and lithographically induced self-construction all require a prefabricated mask, and although electrohydrodynamic instabilities can self-produce periodic dots without a mask, gratings remain challenging. Here, we report a new low-cost maskless method to self-generate nano- and microgratings from an initially featureless polymer thin film sandwiched between two relatively rigid flat plates. By simply prising apart the plates, the film fractures into two complementary sets of nonsymmetrical gratings, one on each plate, of the same period. The grating period is always four times the thickness of the glassy film, regardless of its molecular weight and chemical composition. Periods from 120|[nbsp]|nm to 200|[nbsp]||[micro]|m have been demonstrated across areas as large as two square centimetres.
To read this article in full you may need to log in, make a payment or gain access through a site license (see right).
