4.6 Article

Fabrication of SiC nanopillars by inductively coupled SF6/O2 plasma etching

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICS D-APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 45, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0022-3727/45/23/235204

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In this paper, we demonstrate a top-down fabrication technique for nanometre scale silicon carbide (SiC) pillars using inductively coupled plasma etching. A set of experiments in SF6-based plasma was carried out in order to realize high aspect ratio SiC nanopillars. The etched SiC nanopillars using a small circular mask pattern (115 nm diameter) show high aspect ratio (7.4) with a height of 2.2 mu m at an optimum bias voltage (300 V) and pressure (6mTorr). Under the optimal etching conditions using a large circular mask pattern with 370 nm diameter, the obtained SiC nanopillars exhibit high anisotropy features (6.4) with a large etch depth (> 7 mu m). The etch characteristic of the SiC nanopillars under these conditions shows a high etch rate (550 nm min(-1)) and a high selectivity (over 60 for Ni). We also studied the etch profile of the SiC nanopillars and mask evolution over the etching time. As the mask pattern size shrinks in nanoscale, vertical and lateral mask erosion plays a crucial role in the etch profile of the SiC nanopillars. Long etching process makes the pillars appear with a hexagonal shape, coming from the crystallographic structure of alpha-SiC. It is found that the feature of pillars depends not only on the etching process parameters, but also on the crystallographic structure of the SiC phase.

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