Epitaxial self-assembly of block copolymers on lithographically defined nanopatterned substrates

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Parallel processes for patterning densely packed nanometre- scale structures are critical for many diverse areas of nanotechnology. ;Thin films of diblock copolymers(1-11) can self-assemble into ordered periodic structures at the molecular scale (similar to5 to 50 nm), and have been used as templates to fabricate quantum dots(1,2), nanowires(3-5), magnetic storage media(6), nanopores(7) and silicon capacitors(8). Unfortunately, perfect periodic domain ordering can only be achieved over micrometre-scale areas at best(12,13) and defects exist at the edges of grain boundaries. These limitations preclude the use of block-copolymer lithography for many advanced applications(14). Graphoepitaxy(12,15), in-plane electric fields(3,16), temperature gradients(17), and directional solidification(14,18) have also been demonstrated to induce orientation or long-range order with varying degrees of success. Here we demonstrate the integration of thin films of block copolymer with advanced lithographic techniques to induce epitaxial self-assembly of domains. The resulting patterns are defect-free, are oriented and registered with the underlying substrate and can be created over arbitrarily large areas. These structures are determined by the size and quality of the lithographically defined surface pattern rather than by the inherent limitations of the self-assembly process. Our results illustrate how hybrid strategies to nanofabrication allow for molecular level control in existing manufacturing processes.
Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
Issue Date
2003-07
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

NATURE, v.424, no.6947, pp.411 - 414

ISSN
0028-0836
DOI
10.1038/nature01775
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/22829
Appears in Collection
MS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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