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CO 2 ‐Based Dual‐Tone Resists for Electron Beam Lithography
Author(s) -
Lu XinYu,
Luo Hao,
Wang Kai,
Zhang YaoYao,
Zhu XiaoFeng,
Li Dongxue,
Ma Bingze,
Xiong Shisheng,
Nealey Paul F.,
Li Qiang,
Wu GuangPeng
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.202007417
Subject(s) - resist , materials science , electron beam lithography , lithography , photoresist , optoelectronics , nanotechnology , optics , physics , layer (electronics)
The increasing global environmental and energy crisis has urgently motivated the advancement of sustainable materials. Significant effort has been focused on developing new materials to replace the fossil‐based resists in the semiconductor industry based on greener sources such as ice, dry ice, small organic molecules, and proteins. Such resist materials, however, have yet to meet the stringent requirements of high sensitivity, high resolution, reliable repeatability, and good compatibility with the current protocols. To this end, CO 2 ‐based polycarbonates (CO 2 ‐PCs) obtained from the copolymerization of CO 2 and epoxides are demonstrated as sustainable dual‐tone (positive & negative tone) resists for electron beam lithography. By adjusting the chemical structure, developing agent, and molecular weight, the CO 2 ‐PCs present high sensitivities to electron beam (1.3/120 µ C cm −2 ), narrow critical dimensions (29/58 nm), and moderate line edge roughness (4.6/26.7 nm) for negative and positive resists, respectively. A deep understanding of the exposure mechanism of CO 2 ‐PC resists is provided on the basis of the Fourier transform infrared, Raman, and electron ionization mass spectroscopy. 2D photonic crystal devices are fabricated using the negative and positive CO 2 ‐PC resists, respectively, and both devices show distinct colors derived from their well‐defined nanostructures, indicating the great practical potential of CO 2 ‐derived electron beam resists.

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