Fabricating Nanoscale Chemical Gradients with ThermoChemical
NanoLithography
- Publication date
- Publisher
Abstract
Production
of chemical concentration gradients on the submicrometer
scale remains a formidable challenge, despite the broad range of potential
applications and their ubiquity throughout nature. We present a strategy
to quantitatively prescribe spatial variations in functional group
concentration using ThermoChemical NanoLithography (TCNL). The approach
uses a heated cantilever to drive a localized nanoscale chemical reaction
at an interface, where a reactant is transformed into a product. We
show using friction force microscopy that localized gradients in the
product concentration have a spatial resolution of ∼20 nm where
the entire concentration profile is confined to sub-180 nm. To gain
quantitative control over the concentration, we introduce a chemical
kinetics model of the thermally driven nanoreaction that shows excellent
agreement with experiments. The comparison provides a calibration
of the nonlinear dependence of product concentration versus temperature,
which we use to design two-dimensional temperature maps encoding the
prescription for linear and nonlinear gradients. The resultant chemical
nanopatterns show high fidelity to the user-defined patterns, including
the ability to realize complex chemical patterns with arbitrary variations
in peak concentration with a spatial resolution of 180 nm or better.
While this work focuses on producing chemical gradients of amine groups,
other functionalities are a straightforward modification. We envision
that using the basic scheme introduced here, quantitative TCNL will
be capable of patterning gradients of other exploitable physical or
chemical properties such as fluorescence in conjugated polymers and
conductivity in graphene. The access to submicrometer chemical concentration
and gradient patterning provides a new dimension of control for nanolithography