Nanoscale Patterning of Zinc Oxide from Zinc Acetate Using Electron Beam Lithography for the Preparation of Hard Lithographic Masks

Ahmad Chaker, Hayden Alty, Peng Tian, Anastasios Evangelos Kotsovinos, Grigore Timco, Christopher Muryn, Scott Lewis, Richard Winpenny

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

An approach is presented to nanoscale patterning of zinc oxide (ZnO) using electron beam (e-beam) lithography for the future nanoelectronics devices and for hard lithographic masks. Zinc acetate (Zn4O(CH3COO)6) films were exposed using a scanning electron microscope (SEM), causing decomposition of Zn4O(CH3COO)6 into ZnO. The exposure of Zn4O(CH3COO)6 using an electron beam was successfully utilized to fabricate 12 nm zinc oxide lines with a 40 nm pitch on silicon. The chemical composition of zinc acetate (film before e-beam exposure) and ZnO (film after e-beam exposure) was investigated using X-ray spectroscopy (XPS). The Zn2p shift peaks and the O1s contribution confirm the decomposition of zinc acetate into zinc oxide after exposure. To confirm this transformation into ZnO the optical band gap of the film was determined and the electrical resistivity of the film was measured. The electrical resistivity and the optical band gap results revealed that the transformation into ZnO film with a band gap of 3.31 eV at room temperature and electrical resistivity of 91.5 Ωcm. The ZnO patterns were used as a hard mask to etch silicon and shows a good selectivity of 27:1 for dry etching silicon using SF6 and C4F8.
Original languageEnglish
JournalACS Applied Nano Materials
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 3 Dec 2020

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