High-Fidelity 3D-Nanoprinting via Focused Electron Beams: Computer-Aided Design (3BID)

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Abstract

Currently, there are few techniques that allow true 3D-printing on the nanoscale. The most promising candidate to fill this void is focused electron-beam-induced deposition (FEBID), a resist-free, nanofabrication compatible, direct-write method. The basic working principles of a computer-aided design (CAD) program (3BID) enabling 3D-FEBID is presented and simultaneously released for download. The 3BID capability significantly expands the currently limited toolbox for 3D-nanoprinting, providing access to geometries for optoelectronic, plasmonic, and nanomagnetic applications that were previously unattainable due to the lack of a suitable method for synthesis. The CAD approach supplants trial and error toward more precise/accurate FEBID required for real applications/device prototyping.

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Fowlkes, J. D., Winkler, R., Lewis, B. B., Fernández-Pacheco, A., Skoric, L., Sanz-Hernández, D., … Plank, H. (2018). High-Fidelity 3D-Nanoprinting via Focused Electron Beams: Computer-Aided Design (3BID). ACS Applied Nano Materials, 1(3), 1028–1041. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsanm.7b00342

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