A micro-spectroscopy study on the influence of chemical residues from nanofabrication on the nitridation chemistry of Al nanopatterns
Journal article, 2012

We applied spatially resolved photoelectron spectroscopy implemented with an X-ray photoemission electron microscopy (XPEEM) using soft X-ray synchrotron radiation to identify the compositional and morphological inhomogeneities of a SiO2/Si substrate surface nanopatterned with Al before and after nitridation. The nanofabrication was conducted by a polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)-based e-beam lithography and a fluorine-based reactive ion etching (RIE), followed by Al metalization and acetone lift-off. Three types of chemical residues were identified before nitridation: (1) fluorocarbons produced and accumulated mainly during RIE process on the sidewalls of the nanopatterns; (2) a thick Al-bearing PMMA layer and/or (3) a thin PMMA residue layer owing to unsuccessful or partial lift-off of the e-beam unexposed PMMA between the nanopatterns. The fluorocarbons actively influenced the surface chemical composition of the nanopatterns by forming Al-F compounds. After nitridation, in the PMMA residue-free area, the Al-F compounds on the sidewalls were decomposed and transformed to AIN. The PMMA residues between the nanopatterns had no obvious influence on the surface chemical composition and nitridation properties of the Al nanopatterns. They were only partially decomposed by the nitridation. The regional surface morphology of the nanopatterns revealed by the secondary electron XPEEM was consistent with the scanning electron microscopy results.

photoelectron spectromicroscopy

nanotubes

resist residues

thin-films

electron-microscopy

Micro-spectroscopy

e-Beam lithography

Nitridation

fabrication

growth

X-ray photoemission electron microscopy

speleem

surface

Nanopatterns

substrate

Author

B. Qi

University Science Institute Reykjavik

S. Olafsson

University Science Institute Reykjavik

A. A. Zakharov

Lunds Universitet

Björn Agnarsson

Chalmers, Applied Physics, Biological Physics

H. P. Gislason

University Science Institute Reykjavik

M. Gothelid

The Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Applied Surface Science

0169-4332 (ISSN)

Vol. 258 10 4497-4506

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Chemical Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.apsusc.2012.01.015

More information

Created

10/7/2017