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Nanopore fabrication in amorphous Si: Viscous flow model and comparison to experiment
Author(s) -
H. George,
Yuye Tang,
Xi Chen,
Jiali Li,
John W. Hutchinson,
J. A. Golovchenko,
Michael J. Aziz
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of applied physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.699
H-Index - 319
eISSN - 1089-7550
pISSN - 0021-8979
DOI - 10.1063/1.3452390
Subject(s) - nanopore , radius , materials science , amorphous solid , finite element method , silicon , fluence , diffusion , amorphous silicon , deformation (meteorology) , fabrication , mechanics , molecular physics , ion , nanotechnology , composite material , chemistry , thermodynamics , crystallography , physics , optoelectronics , medicine , computer security , organic chemistry , alternative medicine , pathology , crystalline silicon , computer science
Nanopores fabricated in free-standing amorphous silicon thin films were observed to close under 3 keV argon ion irradiation. The closing rate, measured in situ, exhibited a memory effect: at the same instantaneous radius, pores that started larger close more slowly. An ion-stimulated viscous flow model is developed and solved in both a simple analytical approximation for the small-deformation limit and in a finite element solution for large deformations. The finite-element solution exhibits surprising changes in cross-section morphology, which may be extremely valuable for single biomolecule detection, and are untested experimentally. The finite-element solution reproduces the shape of the measured nanopore radius versus fluence behavior and the sign and magnitude of the measured memory effect. We discuss aspects of the experimental data not reproduced by the model, and successes and failures of the competing adatom diffusion model.

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