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Engineeringtalk
- April 2007
Edited by the Engineeringtalk editorial team
Vibration isolators aid nano-research
Nanoelectronics pioneer uses negative-stiffness vibration
isolation technology to eliminate ultralow environmental frequencies
and improve dataset integrity in nanoelectronics AFM research.
David K Ferry heads up the Nanostructures Research Group
at Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe, a collection of
faculty, staff and students working on research in the regimes
of nanolithography, and the physics of nanostructures and
ultrasmall semiconductor devices.
The group is a part of the University's College of Engineering,
centre for Solid State Electronics Research, whose alumni
makes up a serious constituency throughout the nanoelectronics
universe, in both industry and academia.
Their current interests lie in the area of quantum dots,
quantum wires, and ultra-small semiconductor devices in a
variety of materials. The group conducts a wide spectrum of
theoretical studies of quantum transport in these very small
devices. For example, they are doing a process called scanning
gate microscopy at low temperatures. This involves taking
the equivalent of an atomic force microscope and putting bias
on it, and studying the change in conductance of small semiconductor
structures as they move this bias tip around on a surface.
Their system is mounted in a large cryogenic cooler, an enclosed
container with a helium-3 cooling system, an isotope of a
helium molecule - which is brought down to 300mK, or 1000x
below room temperature, about one-half a degree above absolute
zero. The cooler has a vacuum jacket around it so the heat
cannot be transmitted, and it protects the cold from being
mitigated by the ambient room temperature.
The AFM tip is on a cantilever. Normally, with the AFM, you
just move this cantilever along the surface then note the
change in position as it goes over topography on the surface.
Dr Ferry's group is using a process called a piezoelectric
sensor. They metalicise the AFM cantilevered tip with a very
thin layer of metal so they can apply a voltage to it. Then
use that voltage to perturb the structure they are looking
at. As the tip moves it creates a voltage across the plane,
which is measured to determine certain mechanical property
values. This is a technique that was developed at Harvard
four to five years ago. This type of experimentation is not
uncommon, similar experiments are being done by a large number
of universities.
But what is not common is the system that the Nanostructures
Research Group is using for vibration isolation: negative-stiffness
vibration isolation, developed by Minus K Technology - which
provides a significantly greater and more stable attenuation
of the critical lower vibration frequencies, and therefore
more reliable accrued datasets. When measuring a very few
angstroms or nanometres of displacement, you have got to have
an absolutely stable surface on which to rest your instrument.
If you do not, any of that vibration coupled into the mechanical
structure of your instrument will cause vertical noise, and
fundamentally an inability to measure these kinds of high
resolution features. "Any kind of vibration noise in
the system makes that AFM cantilever tip move, and that gives
you bad signals and incorrect data", says Dr Ferry.
"We actually went further than most university applications
because we integrated a rather large magnet into our system,
something that Harvard, for example, is just now putting into
their operation". "The magnet allows us to look
at different types of transport". "We can turn the
magnet on and look at the magneto-transport of the semiconductors".
"It is a quite a different mode of transport altogether".
"The entire system had to be isolated, not just the cantilever",
continues Dr Ferry.
"We required an extremely high level of vibration isolation
given our research parameters".
"We are deriving modern electronic devices from our experiments".
"Future electronic devices are our interest".
"What we are doing is looking at the conductivity of
materials and then seeing how quantum mechanics fits into
this". "We study basic physics which has a real
application - engineering - and particularly in the semiconductor
industry". "Our research covers:
(first) electron beam lithography of quantum dots and quantum
devices, with applications such as quantum ballistic transport
at very low temperatures and high magnetic fields, as well
as the quantum-classical transition, and the role of quantum
effects in real devices at room temperature".
"(Secondly) magneto-transport studies used to probe
the nature of electron dynamics in semiconductor quantum dots,
which are quasi-zero-dimensional structures whose sise is
comparable to the Fermi wavelength of the electrons themselves".
"Magneto-transport studies may be used to probe these
phenomena and to determine the factors which limit electron
phase coherence within the structures". "Current
interest in these devices is motivated by their potential
application in new areas of technology, such as quantum computing
and ultra high frequency signal processing".
"(Thirdly) surface chemical analysis performed with
a scanning Auger microprobe".
"Under good conditions, a lateral resolution of about
2 nm is achievable".
"And, (fourthly) Professor Michael Kozicki, in the group,
has examined chemically enhanced vapour etching (CEVE) patterning
technique". "He has used hydrocarbon contamination
layers from laboratory air or vacuum chamber ambients and
successfully demonstrated nanoscale pattern formation in silicon
dioxide". "He has also developed a nitrogen chamber
coupled directly to a UHV STM/AFM facility for CEVE processing
of silicon dioxide resists, and their use in semiconductor
device fabrication". "Within the nitrogen chamber
there is a processing system for the actual CEVE development".
"But, the current work with the scanning probe system
is really interesting, and made possible by the negative-stiffness
isolators", says Dr Ferry.
The negative-stiffness isolator is a passive isolation approach,
and has a key advantage in that it is not powered. It has
no electricity going to it. So, in a site where heat buildup
could be an issue, such as with enclosed cryogenic chambers,
negative-stiffness becomes a highly efficient option. Negative-stiffness
isolators employ a unique - and completely mechanical - concept
in low-frequency vibration isolation.
Vertical-motion isolation is provided by a stiff spring that
supports a weight load, combined with a negative-stiffness
mechanism (NSM). The net vertical stiffness is made very low
without affecting the static load-supporting capability of
the spring. Beam-columns connected in series with the vertical-motion
isolator provide horizontal-motion isolation. The horizontal
stiffness of the beam-columns is reduced by the "beam-column"
effect. (A beam-column behaves as a spring combined with an
NSM.) The result is a compact passive isolator capable of
very low vertical and horizontal natural frequencies and very
high internal structural frequencies. The isolators (adjusted
to 0.5Hz) achieve 93% isolation efficiency at 2Hz, 99% at
5Hz, and 99.7% at 10Hz.
Negative-stiffness isolators provide a capability quite unique
to the field of nanotechnology - specifically, the transmissibility
of the negative-stiffness isolator. That is, the vibration
that transmits through the isolator as measured as a function
of floor vibrations - which is substantially improved over
active isolation systems. Although active isolation systems
have fundamentally no resonance, their transmissibility does
not roll off as fast as negative-stiffness isolators. So,
at building and seismic frequencies the transmissibility of
active isolators can be 10x greater than negative-stiffness
isolators. This causes substantial adverse measurement and
imaging artifacts in the data. compared with other laboratory
research instrumentation, the growth of AFM usage has been
quite extensive over the past 10 years. AFM equipment placement
has gone through a doubling phase pretty much every year during
the last decade.
Since its inception in 1988, it has continuously proven to
be a key tool in moving nanotechnology research forward. "More
than half of the universities in the United States, and worldwide,
are engaging in nanotechnology research", says Dr Ferry.
"In the electronic area, the nanoelectronic side of it
has been going since the late 1960s". "This is driven
by the fact that in the semiconductor industry all things
are getting smaller and smaller". "Today, the transistors
have critical dimensions down around 25nm". "And
the most critical dimension is the oxide thickness which is
1nm". "When you consider that you have to control
1nm vertical thickness over 300mm of lateral dimension, that
is a difference of 10 to the 8th power".
"That defines what modern manufacturing technology produces".
"The need for effective vibration isolation has never
been greater, and will continue to become more demanding as
the nano-industry progresses".
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