Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography

Thermoplastic polymer micro- and nanostructures suffer pattern decay when heated to a temperature close to or above the polymer’s glass transition temperature. In this work, we report enhanced thermal stability of polycarbonate nanostructures at temperatures well above their glass transiti...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Youwei Jiang, Bingqing Luo, Xing Cheng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-02-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/12/3/545
id doaj-a364bc151a7a4d3eac0457e48dbc60a6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a364bc151a7a4d3eac0457e48dbc60a62020-11-24T20:51:28ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442019-02-0112354510.3390/ma12030545ma12030545Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint LithographyYouwei Jiang0Bingqing Luo1Xing Cheng2SUSTech Academy for Advanced Interdisciplinary Studies, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, ChinaShenzhen Key Laboratory for Nanoimprint Technology, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, ChinaShenzhen Key Laboratory for Nanoimprint Technology, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen 518055, ChinaThermoplastic polymer micro- and nanostructures suffer pattern decay when heated to a temperature close to or above the polymer’s glass transition temperature. In this work, we report enhanced thermal stability of polycarbonate nanostructures at temperatures well above their glass transition temperatures. Based on this observation, we develop a unique technique for high-resolution polymer patterning by polymer reflows. This technique is characterized as the precise control of polymer reflows regardless of the annealing time, which avoids the time-domain nonlinear reflow of the polymer melt. We also implement thermal nanoimprinting in a step-and-repeat fashion, which dramatically increases the throughput of the thermal nanoimprint. The enhanced pattern stability against thermal reflow also allows for multiple imprinting at the same location to generate complex resist patterns from a simple mold structure. Since modern lithography often uses thin resist films (sub-100 nm) due to the restraint from the pattern aspect ratio, the unusual annealing behavior of thin polymer films is highly relevant in sub-100 nm lithographic processing.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/12/3/545thermal nanoimprintpolymer patterningpolymer reflowstep-and-repeat nanoimprint
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Youwei Jiang
Bingqing Luo
Xing Cheng
spellingShingle Youwei Jiang
Bingqing Luo
Xing Cheng
Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
Materials
thermal nanoimprint
polymer patterning
polymer reflow
step-and-repeat nanoimprint
author_facet Youwei Jiang
Bingqing Luo
Xing Cheng
author_sort Youwei Jiang
title Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
title_short Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
title_full Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
title_fullStr Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
title_full_unstemmed Enhanced Thermal Stability of Thermoplastic Polymer Nanostructures for Nanoimprint Lithography
title_sort enhanced thermal stability of thermoplastic polymer nanostructures for nanoimprint lithography
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2019-02-01
description Thermoplastic polymer micro- and nanostructures suffer pattern decay when heated to a temperature close to or above the polymer’s glass transition temperature. In this work, we report enhanced thermal stability of polycarbonate nanostructures at temperatures well above their glass transition temperatures. Based on this observation, we develop a unique technique for high-resolution polymer patterning by polymer reflows. This technique is characterized as the precise control of polymer reflows regardless of the annealing time, which avoids the time-domain nonlinear reflow of the polymer melt. We also implement thermal nanoimprinting in a step-and-repeat fashion, which dramatically increases the throughput of the thermal nanoimprint. The enhanced pattern stability against thermal reflow also allows for multiple imprinting at the same location to generate complex resist patterns from a simple mold structure. Since modern lithography often uses thin resist films (sub-100 nm) due to the restraint from the pattern aspect ratio, the unusual annealing behavior of thin polymer films is highly relevant in sub-100 nm lithographic processing.
topic thermal nanoimprint
polymer patterning
polymer reflow
step-and-repeat nanoimprint
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/12/3/545
work_keys_str_mv AT youweijiang enhancedthermalstabilityofthermoplasticpolymernanostructuresfornanoimprintlithography
AT bingqingluo enhancedthermalstabilityofthermoplasticpolymernanostructuresfornanoimprintlithography
AT xingcheng enhancedthermalstabilityofthermoplasticpolymernanostructuresfornanoimprintlithography
_version_ 1716802275490398208