FABRICATION OF PERIODIC NANOSCALE AG-WIRE ARRAYS ON VICINAL CAF2 SURFACES

Citation
M. Batzill et al., FABRICATION OF PERIODIC NANOSCALE AG-WIRE ARRAYS ON VICINAL CAF2 SURFACES, Nanotechnology, 9(1), 1998, pp. 20-29
Citations number
30
Categorie Soggetti
Engineering,"Physics, Applied","Material Science
Journal title
ISSN journal
09574484
Volume
9
Issue
1
Year of publication
1998
Pages
20 - 29
Database
ISI
SICI code
0957-4484(1998)9:1<20:FOPNAA>2.0.ZU;2-G
Abstract
We report the fabrication of 20-50 nm period uniform arrays of 1.7-3.6 nm high, 5-7 nm wide, 500 nm long silver wires on ion-beam polished 4 degrees-miscut CaF2 (111) vicinal surfaces. The wire separation excee ds the substrate mean step separation of 4.5 nm by a factor of 4-10. T he arrays are formed under ambient conditions by scanning the tip of a n atomic force microscope across a dense (similar to 10(12) clusters/c m(2)) electron beam evaporated deposit of 3-9 nm diameter, similar to 3 nm high Ag-clusters. Such periodic array structures are not formed o n cleaved (111) surfaces of CaF2. The wires are oriented along a prefe rential direction defined by the substrate. We assume this direction c orresponds to the mean orientation of the 0.315 nm high surface steps defined by the Ca sublattice of the (111) CaF2 vicinal surface. We pro pose that the friction force experienced by cluster agglomerates, form ed by scanning the tip, increases in a step-wise fashion as further cl usters are added to the agglomerate and that this force increases mark edly at crystal step edges. Transport of the agglomerate ceases when t he friction force exerted by the substrate and other nearby adparticle structures exceeds that exerted on the agglomerate by the microscope lip. At our cluster densities, this is most likely to occur when the c luster agglomerate has grown sufficiently to intersect more than one s ubstrate step.