Direct laser patterning of ruthenium below the optical diffraction limit

  • Lorenzo Cruciani
  • , Marnix Vreugdenhil
  • , Stefan van Vliet
  • , Ester Abram
  • , Dries van Oosten
  • , Roland Bliem
  • , Klaasjan van Druten
  • , Paul Planken

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)
9 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

We describe a method that can be used to produce ruthenium/ruthenium oxide patterns starting from a ruthenium thin film. The method is based on highly localized oxidation of a small surface area of a ruthenium film by means of exposure to a pulsed laser under ambient conditions. Laser exposure is followed by dissolution of the un-exposed ruthenium in a NaClO solution, which leaves the conductive, partially oxidized ruthenium area on the substrate. Spatially selective oxidation, material removal, and, by implication, patterning, are, therefore, achieved without the need for a photoresist layer. Varying the exposure laser parameters, such as fluence, focus diameter, and repetition rate, allows us to optimize the process. In particular, it enables us to obtain circular Ru/RuO2 islands with a sub-diffraction-limited diameter of about 500 nm, for laser exposure times as short as 50 ms. The capability to obtain such small islands suggests that heat-diffusion is not a limiting factor to pattern Ru by laser heating on a (sub-)micron scale. In fact, heat diffusion helps in that it limits the area where a sufficiently high temperature is reached and maintained for a sufficiently long time for oxidation to occur. Our method provides an easy way to produce metallic Ru/RuO2 (sub-)micron structures and has possible applications in semiconductor manufacturing.
Original languageEnglish
Article number171902
JournalApplied physics letters
Volume124
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 22 Apr 2024
Externally publishedYes

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