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  4. Ion Beam Etching: Replication of Micro Nano-structured 3D Stencil Masks
 
conference paper

Ion Beam Etching: Replication of Micro Nano-structured 3D Stencil Masks

Weber, P.
•
Guibert, E.
•
Mikhailov, S.
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2008
20th International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry (CAARI)
20th International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry (CAARI)

Ion beam LIGA allows the etching of 3D nano-structures by direct writing with a nano-sized beam. However, this is a relatively time consuming process. We propose here another approach for etching structures on large surfaces and faster, compared to the direct writing process. This approach consists of replicating 3D structured masks, by scanning an unfocused ion beam. A polymer substrate is placed behind the mask, as in UV photolithography. But the main advantage is that the 3D structure of the mask can be replicated into the polymer. For that purpose, the masks (developped at LMIS1, EPFL) are made of a silicon nitride membrane 100 nm thick, on which 3D gold structures up to 200 nm thick, are deposited. The 3D Au structures are made with the nanostencil method, based on successive gold deposition. The IMA institute, from HE-Arc, owns a High Voltage Engineering 1.7 MV Tandetron with both solid and gaseous negative ion sources, able to generate ions from almost every chemical element in a broad range of energies comprised between 400 keV and 6.8 MeV. The beam composition and energy are chosen in such a way, that ions lose a significant fraction of their energy when passing through the thickest regions of the mask. Ions passing through thinner regions of the mask loose a smaller fraction of their energy and etch the polymer with larger thicknesses, allowing a replication of the mask into the polymer. For our trials, we have used a carbon beam with an energy of 500 keV. The beam was focussed to a diameter of 5 mm with solid slits, in order to avoid border effects and thus ensure a homogeneous dose distribution on the beam diameter. The feasibility of this technique has been demonstrated, allowing industrial applications for micro-mould fabrication, micro-fluidics and micro-optics.

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Type
conference paper
DOI
10.1063/1.3120093
Author(s)
Weber, P.
•
Guibert, E.
•
Mikhailov, S.
•
Brugger, Jürgen  
•
Villanueva, Guillermo  
Date Issued

2008

Published in
20th International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry (CAARI)
Volume

1099

Start page

539

End page

541

Note

Times Cited: 0, McDaniel, FD Doyle, BL, 20th International Conference on Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry, AUG 10-15, 2008, Ft Worth, TX

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
NEMS  
LMIS1  
Event nameEvent placeEvent date
20th International Conference on the Application of Accelerators in Research and Industry (CAARI)

Fort Worth, USA

2008

Available on Infoscience
August 6, 2013
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/93879
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