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Success in matchmaking depends on
choosing partners with just the right character traits. If the
parties are incompatible, the union won't succeed. The same is
true of materials. Scientists who combine materials to make
complex structures are mindful of materials compatibility
issues and often are limited by them. But those limitations
have now become less restrictive, thanks to a new study.
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EXPERIMENTALISTS Hebrew
University chemists Asscher (left) and Kerner combine
surface science and laser methods to pattern materials
with nanoscale features. COURTESY OF MICHA
ASSCHER |
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| Researchers at Hebrew University
of Jerusalem have devised a versatile method for forming
nanometer-scale patterns using pairs of materials that don't
lend themselves to patterning via other methods. The technique
may form the basis for future nanofabrication strategies and
provides new opportunities for fundamental investigations.
When one material is deposited on top of another--for
example, through vapor deposition methods, which are common in
semiconductor processing--the behavior of the top layer
depends on the strength of its interactions with the bottom
layer. If the two materials interact only weakly, then the top
material will form bonds to other atoms or molecules in the
top layer, causing the material to ball up. But if the top
material prefers to associate with the bottom material, the
top layer will wet the layer below and remain firmly
attached.
The upshot is that weakly interacting materials are easily
manipulated by a variety of methods and can be coaxed into
forming complex patterns. But materials that interact
strongly, such as pairs of metals, or metals and
semiconductors, bond tightly to one another and resist
patterning.
What the Israeli team has demonstrated is a technique for
forming complex patterns of one metal on top of another. By
combining the use of a gaseous buffer layer to sidestep strong
metal-metal interactions and a laser-patterning technique,
chemistry professor Micha
Asscher and graduate student Gabriel Kerner prepared
periodic designs (parallel stripes) of monolayer-thick
potassium on ruthenium [Surf. Sci., 557, 5
(2004)].
And in recent follow-up experiments, the team patterned
ruthenium surfaces with long parallel lines of gold with
widths and periodicities as narrow as a few hundred
nanometers. Ultimately, the technique should be capable of
patterning surfaces with closely spaced lines of metal less
than 50 nm wide and 5 mm long, the group says.
To form the patterns, the researchers cool the support
metal and expose it first to xenon and then to the second
metal, which results in a sandwich of weakly interacting
layers. Then they use a pair of low-intensity laser beams to
create a bright-and-dark diffraction pattern of parallel lines
on the surface. In the bright areas, just enough energy is
pumped into the system to remove the xenon layer and the metal
above it without damaging the surface. Then, by warming the
surface slightly, the remainder of the gas desorbs, allowing
the metal to be deposited gently, thereby maintaining the
pattern.
In a commentary in the same issue of Surface
Science, John H.
Weaver and Vassil N. Antonov, materials scientists at the
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, describe the work as
"novel and exciting." Weaver, who developed the buffer-layer
procedure to prepare metal clusters on semiconductors, remarks
that the laser-plus-buffer approach is a general technique
useful for "synthesis and patterning of nanostructures of
almost anything on anything."
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LINE UP Narrow parallel lines of gold
on ruthenium demonstrate a new technique's control in
forming patterns using pairs of strongly interacting
materials that cannot be patterned using other
methods. | |
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