Journal of Vacuum Science and Technology B, volume 42, issue 3

Ordered silicon nanocone fabrication by using pseudo-Bosch process and maskless etching

Zheng Yan 1
Huseyin Ekinci 2
Aixi Pan 1
Bo Cui 1
1
 
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering and Waterloo Institute for Nanotechnology (WIN) 1 , P.O. Box N2L 3G1, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada
2
 
Department of Physics and Astronomy, and Institute for Quantum Computing (IQC) 2 , P.O. Box N2L 3G1, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G1, Canada
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-05-01
scimago Q3
SJR0.328
CiteScore2.7
Impact factor1.5
ISSN21662746, 21662754
Abstract

Nanocone arrays are widely employed for applications such as antireflection structures and field emission devices. Silicon nanocones are typically obtained by an etching process, but the profile is hard to attain because anisotropic dry etching generally gives vertical or only slightly tapered sidewall profiles, and isotropic dry plasma etching gives curved sidewalls. In this work, we report the fabrication of cone structures by using masked etching followed by maskless etching techniques. The silicon structure is first etched using fluorine-based plasma under the protection of a hard metal mask, with a tapered or vertical sidewall profile. The mask is then removed, and maskless etching with an optimized nonswitching pseudo-Bosch recipe is applied to achieve the cone structure with a sharp apex. The gas flow ratio of C4F8 and SF6 is significantly increased from 38:22 (which creates a vertical profile) to 56:4, creating a taper angle of approximately 80°. After subsequent maskless etching, the sidewall taper angle is decreased to 74°, and the structure is sharpened to give a pointed apex. The effect of an oxygen cleaning step is also studied. With the introduction of periodic oxygen plasma cleaning steps, both the etch rate and surface smoothness are greatly improved. Lastly, it was found that the aspect ratio-dependent etching effect becomes prominent for dense patterns of cone arrays, with a greatly reduced etch depth at a 600 nm pitch array compared to a 1200 nm pitch array.

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