Field-directed sputter sharpening for tailored probe materials and atomic-scale lithography

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Abstract

Fabrication of ultrasharp probes is of interest for many applications, including scanning probe microscopy and electron-stimulated patterning of surfaces. These techniques require reproducible ultrasharp metallic tips, yet the efficient and reproducible fabrication of these consumable items has remained an elusive goal. Here we describe a novel biased-probe field-directed sputter sharpening technique applicable to conductive materials, which produces nanometer and sub-nanometer sharp W, Pt-Ir and W-HfB 2 tips able to perform atomic-scale lithography on Si. Compared with traditional probes fabricated by etching or conventional sputter erosion, field-directed sputter sharpened probes have smaller radii and produce lithographic patterns 18-26% sharper with atomic-scale lithographic fidelity. © 2012 Macmillan Publishers Limited. All rights reserved.

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Schmucker, S. W., Kumar, N., Abelson, J. R., Daly, S. R., Girolami, G. S., Bischof, M. R., … Lyding, J. W. (2012). Field-directed sputter sharpening for tailored probe materials and atomic-scale lithography. Nature Communications, 3. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1907

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