6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125d95b
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Patterning of supported gold monolayers via chemical lift-off lithography
Kevin M CheungSami MalolaQing YangJana OlsonStephan LinkSami KaappaHannu HäkkinenPaul S. WeissLiane Siu SlaughterThomas D. YoungHuan H. CaoAnne M. AndrewsAnne M. AndrewsAndrew C. Serinosubject
two-dimensional materialMaterials scienceta221General Physics and AstronomyNanoparticlesoft lithographyNanotechnology02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistrylcsh:Chemical technology01 natural scienceslcsh:TechnologySoft lithographyFull Research PaperAnalytical ChemistrynanorakenteetmonolayerMonolayernanostructuresNanotechnologyGeneral Materials Sciencelcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringThin filmlcsh:ScienceLithographyNanoscopic scaleta116chemical patterningta114lcsh:TPDMS stamphybrid material021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologylcsh:QC1-9990104 chemical sciencesNanosciencethin filmslcsh:Qohutkalvot0210 nano-technologyHybrid materialOther Chemical Scienceslcsh:Physicsdescription
The supported monolayer of Au that accompanies alkanethiolate molecules removed by polymer stamps during chemical lift-off lithography is a scarcely studied hybrid material. We show that these Au–alkanethiolate layers on poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) are transparent, functional, hybrid interfaces that can be patterned over nanometer, micrometer, and millimeter length scales. Unlike other ultrathin Au films and nanoparticles, lifted-off Au–alkanethiolate thin films lack a measurable optical signature. We therefore devised fabrication, characterization, and simulation strategies by which to interrogate the nanoscale structure, chemical functionality, stoichiometry, and spectral signature of the supported Au–thiolate layers. The patterning of these layers laterally encodes their functionality, as demonstrated by a fluorescence-based approach that relies on dye-labeled complementary DNA hybridization. Supported thin Au films can be patterned via features on PDMS stamps (controlled contact), using patterned Au substrates prior to lift-off (e.g., selective wet etching), or by patterning alkanethiols on Au substrates to be reactive in selected regions but not others (controlled reactivity). In all cases, the regions containing Au–alkanethiolate layers have a sub-nanometer apparent height, which was found to be consistent with molecular dynamics simulations that predicted the removal of no more than 1.5 Au atoms per thiol, thus presenting a monolayer-like structure.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-12-01 | Beilstein Journal of Nanotechnology |