| Literature DB >> 22428096 |
Woo-Kyung Lee1, Minchul Yang, Arnaldo R Laracuente, William P King, Lloyd J Whitman, Paul E Sheehan.
Abstract
Polymer nanostructures were directly written onto substrates in ultra-high vacuum. The polymer ink was coated onto atomic force microscope (AFM) probes that could be heated to control the ink viscosity. Then, the ink-coated probes were placed into an ultra-high vacuum (UHV) AFM and used to write polymer nanostructures on surfaces, including surfaces cleaned in UHV. Controlling the writing speed of the tip enabled the control over the number of monolayers of the polymer ink deposited on the surface from a single to tens of monolayers, with higher writing speeds generating thinner polymer nanostructures. Deposition onto silicon oxide-terminated substrates led to polymer chains standing upright on the surface, whereas deposition onto vacuum reconstructed silicon yielded polymer chains aligned along the surface.Entities:
Keywords: additive lithography; polymer; scanning probe lithography; ultra high vacuum
Year: 2012 PMID: 22428096 PMCID: PMC3304329 DOI: 10.3762/bjnano.3.6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Beilstein J Nanotechnol ISSN: 2190-4286 Impact factor: 3.649
Figure 1(a) Schematic of the tDPN process which uses a heated scanning probe microscope tip to deposit polymer from a moving tip. (b) Leaving the tip in contact, deposition is started and stopped by turning the heat on and off as shown by writing “UHV”. The poly(3-dodecylthiophene) (PDDT) was written on SiO2 (non-UHV prepared) in UHV (~10−10 Torr). The height of each polymer line was 20 nm (= 8 ML) while the polymer width was 150 nm (fwhm).
Figure 2Orientations of UHV deposited polymer. (a) PDDT typically organizes in such way that the polymer is oriented normal to the surface with a monolayer height of 2.6 nm. (b) Deposition of polymer at different speeds on a non-UHV prepared substrate showing the upright orientation in (a). By varying the tip speed, the scanning probe will deposit polymer at different thicknesses. At the relatively high speed of 20 µm/s, only a single monolayer is deposited as shown by the line average to the right of the image. Lower speeds deposit thicker polymer lines as shown by line averages in (c).
Figure 3The polymer deposit heights and widths of PDDT deposited onto Si substrate (non-UHV prepared) as a function of scanning speed. Both the height and width decrease monotonically with tip speed.
Figure 4(a) Deposition onto the UHV prepared Si substrate in UHV shows the polymer lying on its side. (b) Polymer deposited across a Si step edge an atom thick. (c) The cross section [pale blue line in (b)] shows that the polymer thickness is 0.4 nm, indicating that the polymer molecules are lying flat. (d) A second image of polymer deposited on a UHV-prepared clean silicon surface with diagonal monatomic steps that go from the upper left to the lower right. (e) Cross section from (d) that again gives a polymer thickness of 0.4 nm.