Thermal Scanning-Probe Lithography for Broad-Band On-Demand Plasmonic Nanostructures on Transparent Substrates.
Lorenzo RamòMaria Caterina GiordanoGiulio FerrandoPaolo CanepaFrancesca TelesioLuca RepettoFrancesco Buatier de MongeotMaurizio CanepaFrancesco BisioPublished in: ACS applied nano materials (2023)
Thermal scanning-probe lithography (t-SPL) is a high-resolution nanolithography technique that enables the nanopatterning of thermosensitive materials by means of a heated silicon tip. It does not require alignment markers and gives the possibility to assess the morphology of the sample in a noninvasive way before, during, and after the patterning. In order to exploit t-SPL at its peak performances, the writing process requires applying an electric bias between the scanning hot tip and the sample, thereby restricting its application to conductive, optically opaque, substrates. In this work, we show a t-SPL-based method, enabling the noninvasive high-resolution nanolithography of photonic nanostructures onto optically transparent substrates across a broad-band visible and near-infrared spectral range. This was possible by intercalating an ultrathin transparent conductive oxide film between the dielectric substrate and the sacrificial patterning layer. This way, nanolithography performances comparable with those typically observed on conventional semiconductor substrates are achieved without significant changes of the optical response of the final sample. We validated this innovative nanolithography approach by engineering periodic arrays of plasmonic nanoantennas and showing the capability to tune their plasmonic response over a broad-band visible and near-infrared spectral range. The optical properties of the obtained systems make them promising candidates for the fabrication of hybrid plasmonic metasurfaces supported onto fragile low-dimensional materials, thus enabling a variety of applications in nanophotonics, sensing, and thermoplasmonics.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- single molecule
- high speed
- energy transfer
- mass spectrometry
- optical coherence tomography
- reduced graphene oxide
- living cells
- electron microscopy
- quantum dots
- label free
- room temperature
- tandem mass spectrometry
- tissue engineering
- cell fate
- light emitting
- visible light
- high density
- dual energy
- ionic liquid
- liquid chromatography
- structural basis