Nanoparticle-templated lithographic patterning of nanoscale electronic components
09548180 ยท 2017-01-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J1/308
ELECTRICITY
H10F77/14
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Some embodiments of vacuum electronics call for nanoscale field-enhancing geometries. Methods and apparatus for using nanoparticles to fabricate nanoscale field-enhancing geometries are described herein. Other embodiments of vacuum electronics call for methods of controlling spacing between a control grid and an electrode on a nano- or micron-scale, and such methods are described herein.
Claims
1. A method of forming an array of field emitters on a substrate, the method comprising: assembling an array of nanoparticles on the substrate; and depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters, wherein depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters includes: depositing a first material on the array of nanoparticles to form an array of nanotips; and depositing an electron-emissive material on the array of nanotips to form the array of field emitters.
2. The method of claim 1 further comprising: removing the nanoparticles via one of dry or wet etching, milling, mechanical abrasion, and solution-phase sonication.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters includes: depositing an electron emissive material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the first material includes at least one of gold (Au), titanium (Ti), tungsten (W), tantalum (Ta), and molybdenum (Mo).
5. The method of claim 1 wherein the electron-emissive material includes cerium hexaboride (CeB.sub.6).
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the array of field emitters is characterized by a sharpness, the method further comprising: controlling the sharpness of the field emitters by controlling an angle of incidence of the deposited material.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the nanoparticles are substantially spherical, and the array of field emitters form a substantially hexagonal sub-array around each nanoparticle.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the electron-emissive material includes lanthanum hexaboride (LaB.sub.6).
9. The method of claim 1, further comprising: depositing a dielectric material on the array of nanoparticles and on the array of field emitters; and removing the nanoparticles.
10. The method of claim 9, further comprising depositing a grid on the dielectric material, wherein the distance between the substrate and the grid is on a sub-micron scale.
11. The method of claim 10 wherein depositing the grid includes depositing at least one of graphene and carbon nanotube mesh.
12. A method of forming an array of field emitters on a substrate, the method comprising: assembling nanoparticles on the substrate, wherein the nanoparticles forms an etch mask; etching the substrate according to the etch mask; and depositing an electron-emissive material on the etched substrate.
13. The method of claim 12 wherein depositing the electron-emissive material on the etched substrate forms an array of field emitters characterized by a shape, and wherein etching the substrate according to the etch mask occurs over an etch time, and further comprising: selecting the etch time according to a field emitter shape.
14. The method of claim 12 wherein depositing the electron-emissive material on the etched substrate forms an array of field emitters characterized by a shape, and wherein etching the substrate according to the etch mask occurs at an angle and rotation of the substrate, and further comprising: selecting the angle and rotation of the substrate according to a field emitter shape.
15. The method of claim 12 wherein the electron-emissive material includes lanthanum hexaboride (LaB.sub.6).
16. The method of claim 12 wherein the electron-emissive material includes cerium hexaboride (CeB.sub.6).
17. The method of claim 12 wherein the electron-emissive material includes a refractory material.
18. A method comprising: assembling a superlattice of nanoparticles on a substrate; depositing a film on each of the nanoparticles in the superlattice before assembling the superlattice of nanoparticles on the substrate; etching the nanoparticles in the superlattice to produce an inverse opal; and cleaving the inverse opal to produce an array of field emitters.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein cleaving includes at least one of cutting, milling, ablating, etching, and chemical-mechanical polishing.
20. The method of claim 18 wherein the superlattice of nanoparticles has a crystal structure, and further comprising: selecting a crystal direction corresponding to the inverse opal; and cleaving the inverse opal along the selected crystal direction.
21. The method of claim 18 wherein the film includes lanthanum hexaboride (LaB.sub.6).
22. The method of claim 18 wherein the film includes cerium hexaboride (CeB.sub.6).
23. The method of claim 18 wherein the film includes a refractory material.
24. The method of claim 18 wherein the inverse opal has a shell thickness that is between 5 nm and 50 nm.
25. The method of claim 18 wherein at least a portion of the nanoparticles in the superlattice of nanoparticles are spherical.
26. The method of claim 18 wherein at least a portion of the nanoparticles in the superlattice of nanoparticles are cubic.
27. A method comprising: fabricating an array of dielectric supports on a substrate, wherein fabricating the array of dielectric supports includes: depositing an array of nanoparticles on a substrate, wherein the array of nanoparticles is arranged with an array of gaps between the nanoparticles; depositing a dielectric material on the substrate in the array of gaps; and removing the nanoparticles; and depositing a grid on the array of dielectric supports, wherein a distance between the substrate and the grid is on a sub-micron scale.
28. A method comprising: depositing an array of nanoparticles on a substrate, wherein the array of nanoparticles includes a dielectric that is selected according to its dielectric breakdown strength; and depositing a grid on the array of nanoparticles, wherein the grid includes at least one of graphene and a carbon nanotube mesh, wherein a distance between the substrate and the grid is on a sub-micron scale.
29. The method of claim 28 wherein the array of nanoparticles is substantially closely packed, and wherein depositing a grid on the array of nanoparticles includes: depositing or growing a film on the array of nanoparticles.
30. A method of forming an array of field emitters on a substrate, the method comprising: assembling an array of nanoparticles on the substrate; and depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters; wherein the array of field emitters is characterized by a sharpness, the method further comprising: controlling the sharpness of the field emitters by controlling an angle of incidence of the deposited material.
31. The method of claim 30 further comprising: removing the nanoparticles via one of dry or wet etching, milling, mechanical abrasion, and solution-phase sonication.
32. The method of claim 30 wherein depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters includes: depositing an electron emissive material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters.
33. The method of claim 30 wherein depositing a material on the array of nanoparticles to form the array of field emitters includes: depositing a first material on the array of nanoparticles to form an array of nanotips, wherein the first material includes at least one of gold (Au), titanium (Ti), tungsten (W), tantalum (Ta), and molybdenum (Mo); and depositing an electron-emissive material on the array of nanotips to form the array of field emitters.
34. The method of claim 33 wherein the electron-emissive material includes cerium hexaboride (CeB.sub.6) or lanthanum hexaboride (LaB.sub.6).
35. The method of claim 30 wherein the nanoparticles are substantially spherical, and the array of field emitters form a substantially hexagonal sub-array around each nanoparticle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(23) In the following detailed description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings, which form a part hereof. In the drawings, similar symbols typically identify similar components, unless context dictates otherwise. The illustrative embodiments described in the detailed description, drawings, and claims are not meant to be limiting. Other embodiments may be utilized, and other changes may be made, without departing from the spirit or scope of the subject matter presented here.
(24) Some embodiments of vacuum electronics call for nanoscale field-enhancing geometries. Methods and apparatus for using nanoparticles to fabricate nanoscale field-enhancing geometries (i.e., electron emitters) are described herein. Other embodiments of vacuum electronics call for methods of controlling spacing between a control grid and an electrode on a nano- or micron-scale, and such methods are described herein.
(25) In many vacuum electronic devices, charged particle flux to or from emitters (henceforth known as cathodes) or collectors (anodes) is modulated by a grid (e.g. control grid) positioned some distance (from nm to macroscale) from an electrode. One example of such an embodiment is described in U.S. Pat. No. 8,575,842 to Hyde et al. entitled FIELD EMISSION DEVICE, which is incorporated herein by reference. The distance between the electrode and grid influences the performance of such devices. Methods and apparatus for positioning a grid within sub-micron distances from an electrode and/or from field enhancing features on the electrode are described herein.
(26) Many techniques as described herein employ nanosphere lithography, which involves casting layers of nanoparticles on a substrate and using them as a mask for subsequent etching or deposition. Though many of the figures included herein depict cross sections of close-packed 2D monolayers of spherical nanoparticles for simplicity, the descriptions herein are general to size, morphology, and composition of nanoparticles as well as the geometry of the nanoparticle mask. The techniques described herein involving nanoparticles are not limited to single layers of spherical NWs of uniform composition and size. Generally, the spacing between particles is tunable by, for example, adjusting their surface coatings, by post-deposition etching of the particles to smaller size (for example, oxygen plasma etching of polystyrene nanoparticles), or by other means. Nanoparticles can be of various morphologies, including spheres, rods, tetrapods, wires, dogbones, nanoboxes, nanocages, dendrites, cubes, polyhedra, discs, platelets, nanoreefs, nanostars, etc. Nanoparticles can also be of various compositions, including polystyrene, quantum dots, gold (Au), silicon (Si), etc. Oriented or randomly assembled nanowires, nanocubes, carbon nanomaterials, etc. of different sizes, morphologies, and materials, for example, afford a vast possibility of potential geometries. This rich range of possibilities for assembly, deposition and fabrication methods, nanoparticle size, nanoparticle surface coating, nanoparticle morphology, nanoparticle composition yields a multitude of unique field enhancing geometries, examples of which are described herein.
(27) While nanosphere lithography indicates that the nanoparticles serve as templates for etching and/or deposition of substrate/electrode materials (e-absorbers and emitters), grid materials, etc., nanoparticles of appropriate composition can themselves serve as field enhancers or spacers between grids and electrodes given their inherent nanoscale dimensions and radii of curvature.
(28) For illustrative purposes, examples of assemblies of nanoparticles of various compositions, sizes, and morphologies on a substrate are shown in
(29) In one embodiment of a nanoscale field-enhancing geometries, an example of which is shown in
(30) In one embodiment of a method of fabricating nanoscale field-enhancing geometries, shown in
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(32) If the evaporation material 408 is deposited by ideal line-of-sight deposition, it will penetrate between the nanoparticles, giving the geometry shown in
(33) In an embodiment for fabricating nanoscale field-enhancing geometries, shown in
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(35) In an embodiment for fabricating nanoscale field-enhancing geometries shown in
(36) Although many of the figures previously presented herein show spherical nanoparticles, the techniques as described are not limited to spherical nanoparticles but may include, for example: oriented or randomly assembled nanowires; nanocubes; two sizes of spherical nanoparticles; and/or other shapes, geometries, and/or combinations thereof. For example, as shown in
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(38) The grid 1204 is then applied in one of a number of ways illustrated by steps 1260 and 1280, where in both cases, the dielectric layer 1210 insulates the grid 1204 from the electrode 1202. In step 1260, the grid is deposited as a self-supporting sheet such as graphene. In step 1280, the grid is deposited as a conformal layer, where in this embodiment a pulsed CVD or ALD might be used to deposit a layer of a conformal conductor such as a metal nitride (NiN, WN, TiN, etc.) or a metal (Cu, Pt, W), where in some embodiments the layer has a nanoscale thickness.
(39) In some embodiments, the dielectric layer 1210 is deposited in the same chamber, such as in an e-beam evaporator, as the field emitters 1208. In such an embodiment the dielectric layer 1210 acts as a protective capping layer for reactive/non-air-stable materials such as Cs, BaO, Na, etc. In some embodiments where the field emitter 1208 is oxygen sensitive, the dielectric layer 1210 includes silicon nitride or another dielectric whose composition is selected so that the field emitter 1208 does not react with the dielectric layer 1210.
(40) In an embodiment shown in
(41) In
(42) In some embodiments the sacrificial layer 1302 in
(43) In step 1360, where the sacrificial layer 1302 is removed, the layer 1302 can be removed by wet or dry etching. In some embodiments, such as if the layer 1302 is not conductive, has high dielectric breakdown strength (e.g. HSQ>SiO.sub.2), and/or will not interfere with device performance, the layer 1302 is not removed. Removal of the layer 1302 is facilitated in some embodiments by pinholes in the grid 1304 that allow the sacrificial layer etchant to penetrate the grid to reach the layer 1302.
(44) An embodiment illustrated in
(45) The method described with respect to
(46) In one embodiment shown in
(47) In another embodiment shown in
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(49) In embodiments in which nanoparticles that are used as a mask or template for deposition of field-enhancing nanotexture are not removed, in some embodiments they can be used to control electrode-grid spacing. In an embodiment shown in
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(52) In an embodiment shown in
(53) In an embodiment shown in
(54) In an embodiment shown in
(55) While various aspects and embodiments have been disclosed herein, other aspects and embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art. The various aspects and embodiments disclosed herein are for purposes of illustration and are not intended to be limiting, with the true scope and spirit being indicated by the following claims.