Evanston,
IL, August 09, 2005 --- Since the invention of the
atomic force microscope (AFM) in 1986 by Nobel laureate
Gerd Binnig, the tool has been employed to advance
the science of materials in many ways, from nanopatterning
(dip-pen nanolithography) to the imaging of surfaces
and nano-objects such as carbon nanotubes, DNA, proteins
and cells. In all these applications, the quality
and integrity of the tip used to obtain the images
or interrogate materials is paramount.
A common problem in atomic force microscopy is the deterioration of the tip
apex as surfaces are scanned. To overcome this problem, a team of scientists
from Northwestern University and Argonne
National Laboratory report the microfabrication of monolithic ultra-nano-crystalline
diamond (UNCD) cantilevers with tips exhibiting properties similar to single-crystal
diamond. Their results are published in the Aug. 9 issue of Small ,
a journal dedicated to breakthroughs in nanoscience and engineering ( link ).
Diamond, the hardest known material, is probably the optimal tip material for
many applications. In addition to hardness, diamond is stiff, biocompatible
and wear resistant. Until now, commercially available diamond AFM tips are
either glued to a microcantilever (a very slow and non-scalable manufacturing
approach) or made by coating a silicon tip manufactured using conventional
microfabrication techniques. Chemical vapor deposition (CVD) techniques for
growing thin films of synthetic diamond typically do not produce single-crystal
films, in which atoms are all oriented in a regular lattice. UNCD, a material
discovered at Argonne in the 1990s, is the closest diamond atomic structure
in which the material is organized in very small grains (a few nanometers in
size) leading to smooth surfaces easy to mold and shape by microfabrication
techniques. The similarity of UNCD to single-crystal diamond and its superiority
to silicon, silicon carbide and other micro- and nanoelectromechanical systems
(MEMS and NEMS) materials, in the context of strength, toughness and wear performance,
has been established.
The standard MEMS microfabrication techniques used for the diamond tips --
an important feature of this development -- provides scalability to massively
parallel arrays of probes for high throughput.
“This technology offers tremendous potential for the large-scale production of
single- and two-dimensional tip arrays of doped and undoped diamond exhibiting
superior wear resistance and functionality,” said team leader, Horacio D. Espinosa,
professor of mechanical engineering at Northwestern's McCormick School of Engineering
and Applied Science. “The approach can be easily integrated with the AFM Nanofountain
Probe (NFP) recently developed by our group and, in this way, achieve the merging
of two unique technologies.
“The demonstrated low wear and writing capability of UNCD tips with chemical
inks is very promising. Moreover, the possibility of doping the material to make
it conductive is very exciting and opens a large number of opportunities for
scientific discovery. We believe the processing technology will likely lead to
many novel applications not only in AFM tips but also in MEMS and NEMS.”
Potential products range from single UNCD AFM tips for use in commercial AFMs
to massively parallel probe systems for high-throughput scanning and nanoscale
manufacture. The technology can be employed for a variety of AFM scanning modes,
from regular surface scanning in air or fluids to conductive AFM. It can also
be employed as a nanofabrication tool. Examples include nanolithography (inorganic
ink dispensing), detecting and repairing failure of micro- and nano- electronic
devices, nanopatterning of biomolecules (for sequencing, synthesis and drug
discovery) and scanning probe electrochemistry (scanning electrode imaging,
localized electrochemical etching or deposition of materials and nanovoltametry).
Potential markets include those industries where it is pivotal to preserve
the performance of the tips or that require two-dimensional arrays for high
throughput in which the cost of manufacturing is such that minimum possible
tip wear is paramount. Examples include the microelectronics industry (novel
random-access memories based on AFM technology, such as IBM's Millipede), the
semiconductor industry (photomask repair) and the chemical and biological sensor
industry where high throughput and spatial resolution are important.
Northwestern is seeking a licensing partner to commercialize the microfabrication
processes and methods to produce arrays of the device. A patent application
has been filed by the University.
In addition to Espinosa, other authors on the Small paper are graduate student
Keun-Ho Kim and research assistant professor Nicolaie A. Moldovan from Northwestern
and post-doctoral fellow Xingcheng Xiao and research scientists John Carlisle
and Orlando Auciello from Argonne National Laboratory (ANL). This research
has been supported in part by the National Science Foundation through two initiatives:
Nanoscale Interdisciplinary Research Team Award No. CMS00304472 and Nanoscale
Science and Engineering Center Award No. EEC0118025. The ANL team effort
has been supported by the Department of Energy's Office of Science under Award
No. W-31-109-ENG-38.
Contact:
Megan Fellman
(847) 491-3115
fellman@northwestern.edu
Source contact:
Horacio Espinosa
847-467-5989
espinosa@northwestern.edu
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