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The
challenge of determining whether thin films---some
no thicker than a single molecule---are strong enough
for a growing number of important technology jobs
just got easier and quicker thanks to an inexpensive
testing method reported in the upcoming issue of Nature
Materials by a team led by researchers at the Commerce
Department's National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST).
Useful for evaluating all types and combinations of
materials, the new method measures and analyzes the
strength and stiffness of a thin-film sample in about
2 seconds, as compared with several minutes for indentation
and other conventional approaches. In addition, the
NIST-developed technique accommodates high-throughput
testing, so that hundreds or even a few thousand systematically
varying samples can be tested in rapid succession.
Accelerated testing could spur progress in a large
variety of existing and emerging technology areas
that rely on thin-film advances for improved performance
or enhanced protection. Examples include semiconductors,
solar cells, fuel cells, coatings, magnetic storage
devices and prospective nanotechnology devices.
For films less than 1 micrometer thick, mechanical-property
measurements made with existing tools often yield
relative values, which can blur predictions of how
different films will perform. In contrast, the new
method yields quantitative measurement results that
permit definitive comparisons between samples.
In the article,* NIST and IBM collaborators report
on how they used the innovative "measurement
platform" to assess the strength of polymer and
ceramic films ranging from a few nanometers to a micrometer
in thickness. One pilot-tested film was a ceramic
material dotted with nanometer-scale pores. Such nanoporous
films are being developed to insulate devices and
layers on future-generation integrated circuits.
While the nanopores in the so-called low-dielectric-constant
(low-k) films improve their effectiveness as electrical
insulators, the tiny holes also can compromise the
films' strength. A major concern is whether the nanoporous
films can withstand the rigors of the chemical mechanical
polishing process used to smooth each layer in a chip.
Using the desk-top testing platform, smaller than
a box of tissues, the team evaluated a battery of
low-k films that varied in porosity, from samples
with no pores to samples in which pores made up half
the volume. After comparing the results with those
obtained with the widely used nanoindentation method,
the team concluded that the NIST-developed approach
"provides an inexpensive, fast, and highly effective
technique" for evaluating new varieties of low-k
materials.
"We expect that this technique will find application
in addressing a variety of questions ranging from
fundamental materials science to applied discovery
in the field of films and coatings," they write.
Christopher Stafford, a NIST polymer scientist, suggests
other applications include evaluations of new photoresist
masks that will be used to print chips with the smaller-wavelength
ultraviolet light sources that the semiconductor industry
is now implementing. It also should be useful for
assessing the mechanical properties of nanotechnology
devices made with still-experimental methods, such
as nanoimprint lithography in which nanometer-scale
features are stamped into a substrate.
"This simple technique can provide invaluable
information concerning the mechanics of nanostructured
materials and ultrathin polymer films," said
Stafford.
Called SIEBIMM (for strain-induced elastic buckling
instability for mechanical measurements), the new
method builds on the science of buckling, which for
most of its 400 years has been concerned with crumbling
buildings or crumpling of the Earth's crust.
The method entails mounting a postage-stamp-sized
assortment of incrementally varying thin films on
a strip of silicone rubber about the size of a Band-Aid.
The combination of sample array and soft substrate
are placed on a custom-built stage that can be stretched
or compressed.
Subjected to a gradually increasing force that stretches
or squeezes, a sample becomes unstable and buckles,
wrinkling like a piece of corrugated cardboard. Situated
beneath the stage, a laser beams through the sample
and a camera captures the light scattered at this
critical point of instability.
From the resulting diffraction pattern, the buckling
wavelength, or distance between the peaks of adjacent
wrinkles, is determined. Through a series of mathematical
calculations, the buckling wavelength can be related
directly to the elastic modulus of the sample, which
corresponds to the strength of the material.
The SIEBIMM method was developed at the NIST Combinatorial
Methods Center (http://www.nist.gov/combi), which
develops rapid, high-throughput technologies to accelerate
the discovery and application of new materials.
As a non-regulatory agency of the U.S. Department
of Commerce's Technology Administration, NIST develops
and promotes measurement, standards and technology
to enhance productivity, facilitate trade and improve
the quality of life.
* "A buckling-based metrology for measuring the
elastic moduli of polymeric thin films," available
at Nature Materials, Advance Online Publication (AOP):
http://www.nature.com/naturematerials.
Contact: Mark Bello
mark.bello@nist.gov
301-975-3776
National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST)
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