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Patterning of Octadecylsiloxane Self-assembled Monolayers on Si(100) using Ar(3P0,2) Atoms
Published
Author(s)
Shannon B. Hill, C Haich, F Dunning, G Walters, Jabez J. McClelland, Robert Celotta, H Craighead, J Han, D Tannenbaum
Abstract
We report the use of metastable (Ar3P0,2) atoms and a physical mask to pattern octadecylsiloxane self-assembled monolayers grown directly onsilicon surfaces. The damage to the monolayer is confirmed using lateral force microscopy, changes in hydrophilicity and XPS analysis. Metastable atom exposuressufficient to uniformily damage the monolayer should allow pattern transfer to the underlying Si (100) substrate following chemical and plasma etching. With opticalmanipulation of the incident metastable atoms, this technique could provide the basis for massively-parallel nanoscale fabrication on silicon.
atom lithography, lithography, metastable atoms, octadecylsiloxane, self-assembled nanolayers
Citation
Hill, S.
, Haich, C.
, Dunning, F.
, Walters, G.
, McClelland, J.
, Celotta, R.
, Craighead, H.
, Han, J.
and Tannenbaum, D.
(1999),
Patterning of Octadecylsiloxane Self-assembled Monolayers on Si(100) using Ar(<sup>3</sup>P<sub>0</sub>,2) Atoms, Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology B, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=620509
(Accessed October 22, 2025)