August
18, 2005 --- Scientists will announce next month
a new technique called microdisplacement printing,
which makes possible the highly precise placement
of molecules during the fabrication of nanoscale
components for electronic and sensing devices. The
new technique, which also extends the library of
molecules that can be used for patterning, will be
described in the 14 September issue of the journal Nano
Letters by
a team led by Paul S. Weiss, professor of chemistry
and physics at Penn State.
The new microdisplacement technique is based on a
widely used patterning method known as microcontact
printing -- a simple way of fabricating chemical
patterns that does not require clean rooms and other
kinds of special and expensive environments. Both
methods involve "inking" a patterned rubber-like
stamp with a solution of molecules, then applying
the inked stamp to a surface
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"Microdisplacement
gives us more control over the precision with which
the patterns are placed and retained, and also allows
us to use a wider range of molecules," Weiss says.
One of the limitations of microcontact printing is
that its precision is limited at the edges of a stamped
pattern by the tendency of the applied molecules
to skitter across the stamped surface, blurring or
obliterating the applied pattern and destroying its
usefulness. Weiss's improved microdisplacement technique
solves this problem by applying a self-assembled-monolayer
film -- a single ordered layer of spherical adamantanethiolate
molecules -- to keep the stamped molecules in place
on the surface. "We specifically engineered the adamantanethiol molecule
to have a very weak chemical bond with the surface so that it would detach easily
when bumped by a stronger-bonding molecule," Weiss explains. The molecules inked
on the stamp replace the adamantanethiolate molecules wherever they touch the
monolayer film, but the surrounding molecules in the film remain attached to
the surface to prevent the applied molecules from wandering.
"Microdisplacement printing uses many of the same procedures as microcontact
printing except one first prepares the substrate by coating it with a self-assembled
monolayer of adamantanethiolate, which is inexpensive and easy to apply," Weiss
explains. "You dip the substrate in a solution of these molecules, pull it out,
and they assemble themselves into an ordered film one molecule thick."
In addition to providing more control over the precision of stamped patterns,
the new microdisplacement technique also relaxes the requirements in precisely
positioning a series of stamps used to apply consecutive patterns with different
molecular inks. "You don't have to be extremely precise about the exact placement
of the stamps as long as you apply the molecular inks in order of their bonding
strengths," Weiss explains. Each successive layer of molecules either will displace
or will not displace the already-applied molecules, depending on their relative
bonding strengths with the underlying surface.
The research was aided by the Weiss lab's unusual collection of microscopes,
which enable the scientists to get a clear picture of the results of their experiments,
both at the broad scale of a stamped pattern and at the narrow scale of just
a single molecule. One scanning tunneling microscope that Weiss and his group
designed and built themselves, for example, has 1,000 times more resolution than
is needed to image an individual atom.
Adamantanethiol is related to the family of alkanethiol molecules, which have
been studied extensively as a model systems for their ability to form well-ordered
monolayer films on gold. Weiss and his team were studying the adamantanethiolate-on-gold
system when graduate student Arrelaine Dameron discovered that stronger-bonding
molecules easily displaced the adamantanethiolate molecules. Her discovery has
led to further studies of this system by the Weiss team, including how the displacement
can be applied in a broad range of applications using a variety of materials.
"We have mapped out strategies in this model system and are now investigating
how we can apply these strategies more broadly as the chemistry is developed
for self-assembled monolayers on other substrates, especially semiconductors," Weiss
says. "Our goals are to see how far we can take these kinds of simple techniques,
along with our knowledge of intermolecular interactions, to bridge the 1-to-100-nanometer
length scale in nanofabrication, which even at the high end currently requires
very difficult, slow, and expensive techniques."
In addition to Weiss and Dameron, the Penn State research team includes postdoctoral
fellows Jennifer Hampton and Susan Gillmor and graduate students Rachel Smith
and T. J. Mullen. The research was supported by the Air Force Office of Scientific
Research, the Army Research Office, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency,
the National Science Foundation, the Office of Naval Research, and the Semiconductor
Research Corporation. The work was performed as a part of both the Center for
Nanoscale Science and the National Nanofabrication Infrastructure Network.
Contacts:
Paul Weiss
stm@psu.edu
(+1) 814-865-3693
Barbara Kennedy (PIO)
science@psu.edu
(+1) 814-863-4682
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