Keith M. Carroll, Armin W. Knoll, et al.
Langmuir
Thermal scanning probe lithography (t-SPL) is a direct-write patterning method that creates high-resolution features with a heated scanning probe tip in an organic resist material. It is able to produce dense high-resolution patterns with sub-20 nm half-pitch at ambient conditions which can be transferred into silicon substrates using a hard-mask patterning stack and reactive ion etching (RIE). Feature sizes of transferred lines can be as small as 7 nm. Linear write speeds of up to 20 mm/s can be achieved. Different from e-beam lithography (EBL), in t-SPL proximity effects are absent and substrate damage of sensitive materials caused by high energy electrons is avoided. A direct inspection of the patterned area is provided during the writing process. Overlay patterning without additional alignment marks onto pre-existing structures is another feature of the t-SPL method. Existing device structures can be located precisely under a resist stack with the local probe tip and the additional target structures can then be generated with < 5 nm-precise overlay alignment. One further strength of tSPL is the capability of producing 3D patterns. The process can be controlled to produce 3D structures with approx 1 nm (1 \sigma) depth accuracy. Examples of unique devices fabricated by tSPL will be discussed.
Keith M. Carroll, Armin W. Knoll, et al.
Langmuir
Antje Rey, Guillaume Billardon, et al.
Nanoscale
Philipp Mensch, Siegfried Karg, et al.
Applied Physics Letters
F. Menges, Fabian Motzfeld, et al.
IEDM 2016