8 research outputs found
Entrepreneurs and Labours: Chinese New Migrants in Cambodia
The scanning electron microscope (SEM) has unique capabilities for high resolution examination of surface structure and composition. Due to the resolution limits of optical inspection techniques, the semiconductor manufacturing industry has become a rapidly expanding field for SEM applications. As microcircuit groundrules (minimum feature sizes) continue to shrink below one micrometer non-optical measurement methods such as scanning electron microscopy must play an increasingly important role in the inspection of semiconductor device structures at various stages during their fabrication [1,2]. The measurement of structure dimensions such as circuit linewidths (or the spaces between lines) [3] and the measurement of circuit overlay [4] requires a minimum resolution of better than 1/10 groundrule dimensions. In fact, many manufacturing line managers state their resolution requirement as less than 1/20 groundrule dimensions, particularly during the development of a new process. Similarly, it is now apparent from device failure analysis that defects as small as 1/10 groundrule dimensions must also be detected and measured
Catalytic subsurface etching of nanoscale channels in graphite
Catalytic hydrogenation of graphite has recently attracted renewed attention,
as a route for nano-patterning of graphene and to produce graphene
nano-ribbons. These reports show that metallic nanoparticles etch surface
layers of graphite, or graphene anisotropically along the crystallographic
zigzag or armchair directions. On graphene the etching direction
can be influenced by external magnetic fields or the substrate. Here we report
the sub-surface etching of highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) by Ni
nanoparticles, to form a network of tunnels, as seen by SEM and STM. In this
new nanoporous form of graphite, the top layers bend inward on top of the
tunnels, while their local density of states remains fundamentally unchanged.
Engineered nanoporous tunnel networks in graphite allow further chemical
modification and may find applications in storage or sensing