4.8 Article

5 nm Nanogap Electrodes and Arrays by Super-resolution Laser Lithography

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 20, Issue 7, Pages 4916-4923

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00978

Keywords

5 nm; laser direct writing; photothermal principle; nanogap electrodes and arrays; nanosensing devices

Funding

  1. National Key Research Program of China [2016YFA0200403]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62875222, 11874390, 51971070]
  3. Eu-FP7 Project [247644]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2017M612182]

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The development of reliable, mass-produced, and cost-effective sub-10 nm nanofabrication technology leads to an unprecedented level of integration of photonic devices. In this work, we describe the development of a laser direct writing (LDW) lithography technique with similar to 5 nm feature size, which is about 1/55 of the optical diffraction limit of the LDW system (405 nm laser and 0.9 NA objective), and the realization of 5 nm nanogap electrodes. This LDW lithography exhibits an attractive capability of well-site control and mass production of similar to 5 x 10(5) nanogap electrodes per hour, breaking the trade-off between resolution and throughput in a nanofabrication technique. Nanosensing chips have been demonstrated with the as-obtained nanogap electrodes, where controllable surface enhancement Raman scattering of rhodamine 6G has been realized via adjusting the gap width and, especially, the applied bias voltages. Our results establish that such a low-cost and high-efficient lithography technology has great potential to fabricate compact integrated circuits and biochips.

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