1 research outputs found
Direct Patterning of Zinc Sulfide on a Sub-10 Nanometer Scale <i>via</i> Electron Beam Lithography
Nanostructures of metal sulfides
are conventionally prepared <i>via</i> chemical techniques
and patterned using self-assembly. This poses a considerable amount
of challenge when arbitrary shapes and sizes of nanostructures are
desired to be placed at precise locations. Here, we describe an alternative
approach of nanoscale patterning of zinc sulfide (ZnS) directly using
a spin-coatable and electron beam sensitive zinc butylxanthate resist
without the lift-off or etching step. Time-resolved electron beam
damage studies using micro-Raman and micro-FTIR spectroscopies suggest
that exposure to a beam of electrons leads to quick disappearance
of xanthate moieties most likely <i>via</i> the Chugaev
elimination, and further increase of electron dose results in the
appearance of ZnS, thereby making the exposed resist insoluble in
organic solvents. Formation of ZnS nanocrystals was confirmed by high-resolution
transmission electron microscopy and selected area electron diffraction.
This property was exploited for the fabrication of ZnS lines as small
as 6 nm and also enabled patterning of 10 nm dots with pitches as
close as 22 nm. The ZnS patterns fabricated by this technique showed
defect-induced photoluminescence related to sub-band-gap optical transitions.
This method offers an easy way to generate an ensemble of functional
ZnS nanostructures that can be arbitrarily patterned and placed in
a precise way. Such an approach may enable programmable design of
functional chalcogenide nanostructures