4.8 Article

Substrate effects on the electron-beam-induced deposition of platinum from a liquid precursor

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 3, Issue 7, Pages 2709-2717

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c1nr10026b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Kentucky Science and Engineering Foundation [KSEF-148-502-08-240]
  2. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) [N66001-09-1-2099]

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Focused electron-beam-induced deposition using bulk liquid precursors (LP-EBID) is a new nanofabrication technique developed in the last two years as an alternative to conventional EBID, which utilizes cumbersome gaseous precursors. Furthermore, LP-EBID using dilute aqueous precursors has been demonstrated to yield platinum (Pt) nanostructures with as-deposited metal content that is substantially higher than the purity achieved by EBID with currently available gaseous precursors. This advantage of LP-EBID-along with the ease of use, low cost, and relative innocuousness of the liquid precursors-holds promise for its practical applicability in areas such as rapid device prototyping and lithographic mask repair. One of the feasibility benchmarks for the LP-EBID method is the ability to deposit high-fidelity nanostructures on various substrate materials. In this study, we report the first observations of performing LP-EBID on bare and metal-coated silicon-nitride membranes, and compare the resulting Pt deposits to those obtained by LP-EBID on polyimide membranes in terms of nucleation, morphology, size dependence on electron dose, and purity.

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