Nanolithography 

Part of a series of articles on
Nanoelectronics

Single-molecule electronics
Molecular electronics
Molecular logic gate
Molecular wires

Solid-state nanoelectronics
Nanocircuitry
Nanowires
Nanolithography
NEMS
Nanosensor

Other approaches
Nanoionics
Nanophotonics
Nanomechanics

See also
Nanotechnology

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Nanolithography refers to the fabrication of nanometer-scale structures, meaning patterns with at least one lateral dimension between the size of an individual atom and approximately 100 nm. Nanolithography is used during the fabrication of leading-edge semiconductor integrated circuits or nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS).

As of 2007, nanolithography is a very active area of research in academia and in industry.

Contents

Optical lithography

Main article: Photolithography

Optical lithography, which has been the predominant patterning technique since the advent of the semiconductor age, is capable of producing sub-100-nm patterns with the use of very short wavelengths (currently 193 nm). Optical lithography will require the use of liquid immersion and a host of resolution enhancement technologies (phase-shift masks (PSM), optical proximity correction (OPC)) at the 32 nm node. Most experts feel that traditional optical lithography techniques will not be cost effective below 22 nm. At that point, it may be replaced by a next-generation lithography (NGL) technique.

Other nanolithography techniques

Bottom-up Methods

It is possible that molecular self-assembly methods will take over as the primary nanolithography approach, due to ever-increasing complexity of the top-down approaches listed above. Self-assembly of dense lines less than 20 nm wide in large pre-patterned trenches has been demonstrated.3 The degree of dimension and orientation control as well as prevention of lamella merging still need to be addressed for this to be an effective patterning technique. The important issue of line edge roughness is also highlighted by this technique.

See also

References

  1. ^ R. C. Davis et al. (2003). "Chemomechanical surface patterning and functionalization of silicon surfaces using an atomic force microscope". Appl. Phys. Lett. 82 (5): 808–810. doi:10.1063/1.1535267.  Related article
  2. ^ A. Hatzor-de Picciotto, A. D. Wissner-Gross, G. Lavallee, P. S. Weiss (2007). "Arrays of Cu(2+)-complexed organic clusters grown on gold nano dots". Journal of Experimental Nanoscience 2: 3–11. doi:10.1080/17458080600925807, http://www.alexwg.org/JExpNanosci2007.pdf. 
  3. ^ Sundrani D, Darling SB, Sibener SJ (June 2004). "Hierarchical assembly and compliance of aligned nanoscale polymer cylinders in confinement". Langmuir 20 (12): 5091–9. doi:10.1021/la036123p. PMID 15984272, http://sibener-group.uchicago.edu/pubs/106.pdf. 

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