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Impact of Electron-Beam Heating during 3D Nanoprinting
Author(s) -
Eva Mutunga,
Robert Winkler,
Jürgen Sattelkow,
Philip D. Rack,
Harald Plank,
Jason D. Fowlkes
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs nano
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.554
H-Index - 382
eISSN - 1936-086X
pISSN - 1936-0851
DOI - 10.1021/acsnano.8b09341
Subject(s) - nanowire , materials science , heat sink , deposition (geology) , chemical physics , dissipation , electron beam induced deposition , heat transfer , focused ion beam , substrate (aquarium) , nanotechnology , optoelectronics , molecular physics , mechanics , chemistry , thermodynamics , transmission electron microscopy , ion , scanning transmission electron microscopy , paleontology , physics , oceanography , organic chemistry , sediment , biology , geology
An artifact limiting the reproduction of three-dimensional (3D) designs using nanoprinting has been quantified. Beam-induced heating was determined through complementary experiments, models, and simulations to affect the deposition rate during the 3D nanoprinting of mesh objects using focused electron beam induced deposition (FEBID). The mesh objects are constructed using interconnected nanowires. During nanowire growth, the beam interaction driving deposition also causes local heating. The temperature at the beam impact region progressively rises as thermal resistance increases with nanowire growth. Heat dissipation resembles the classical mode of heat transfer from extended surfaces; heat must flow through the mesh object to reach the substrate sink. Simulations reveal that beam heating causes an increase in the rate of precursor desorption at the BIR, causing a concomitant decrease in the deposition rate, overwhelming an increase in the deposition rate driven by thermally enhanced precursor surface diffusion. Temperature changes as small as 10 K produce noticeable changes in deposit geometry; nanowires appear to deflect and curve toward the substrate because the vertical growth rate decreases. The 3D FEBID naturally ensues from the substrate surface upward, inducing a vertical temperature gradient along the deposit. Simulations, experiments, temperature-controlled studies, and process current monitoring all confirm the cause of nanowire distortion as beam-induced heating while also revealing the rate-determining physics governing the final deposit shape.

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