Litcius/Paper detail

DNA Origami for Silicon Patterning

Guillaume Thomas, Cheikh Tidiane Diagne, Xavier Baillin, T. Chevolleau, T. Charvolin, Raluca Tiron

2020ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces16 citationsDOI

Abstract

Desoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) origami architectures are a promising tool for ultimate lithography because of their ability to generate nanostructures with a minimum feature size down to 2 nm. In this paper, we developed a method for silicon (Si) nanopatterning to face up current limitations for high-resolution patterning with standard microelectronic processes. For the first time, a 2 nm-thick 2D DNA origami mask, with specific design composed of three different square holes (with a size of 10 and 20 nm), is used for positive pattern transfer into a Si substrate using a 15 nm-thick silicon dioxide (SiO2) layer as an intermediate hard mask. First, the origami mask is transferred onto the SiO2 underlayer, by an HF vapor-etching process. Then, the Si underlayer is etched using an HBr/O2 plasma. Each hole is transferred in the SiO2 layer and the 20 nm-sized holes are transferred into the final stack (Si). The resulting patterns exhibited a lateral resolution in the range of 20 nm and a depth of 40 nm. Patterns are fully characterized by atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, focused ion beam–transmission electron microscopy, and ellipsometry measurements.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceSiliconMicroelectronicsSubstrate (aquarium)Focused ion beamNanotechnologyEtching (microfabrication)LithographyOptoelectronicsElectron-beam lithographyDNA origamiReactive-ion etchingStack (abstract data type)Scanning electron microscopeLayer (electronics)NanostructureResistIonChemistryOceanographyComputer scienceProgramming languageOrganic chemistryComposite materialGeologyAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesRNA Interference and Gene DeliveryPlasmonic and Surface Plasmon Research