Title :
Shrinking of silicon nanopore arrays by direct dry-oxygen oxidation
Author :
Tao Deng ; Jian Chen ; Mengwei Li ; Zewen Liu
Author_Institution :
Inst. of Microelectron., Tsinghua Univ., Beijing, China
Abstract :
Solid-state nanopores have emerged as useful single-molecule sensors for DNA and proteins. Dry-oxygen oxidation was proposed to directly shrink pyramidal silicon (Si) pore arrays. With this method, inverted-pyramid Si nanopore arrays with feature sizes of over 60 nm, prepared using a combination of dry and wet etching, were shrunk to be less than 20 nm with nanometer precision. The shrinkage was found to be dominated by the deposition of the SiO2 layer on the nanopore surface and its surface-tension-driven mass flow. The inner structure of the nanopore after the shrinkage kept its typical inverted-pyramid shape, which theoretically permits high-resolution DNA sequencing. Furthermore, this method can process many nanopore samples at one time and reduce the inbuilt stress in the Si nanopores during the annealing.
Keywords :
DNA; annealing; biosensors; etching; nanoporous materials; oxidation; proteins; silicon; surface tension; Si; SiO2 layer deposition; annealing; direct dry-oxygen oxidation; dry etching; high-resolution DNA sequencing; inbuilt stress reduction; inverted-pyramid Si nanopore arrays; nanometer precision; nanopore inner structure; nanopore surface; proteins; pyramidal silicon pore arrays; silicon nanopore array shrinking; single-molecule sensors; solid-state nanopores; surface tension-driven mass flow; wet etching; DNA; Nanostructures; Oxidation; Shape; Silicon; Surface treatment;
Conference_Titel :
Nanotechnology (IEEE-NANO), 2013 13th IEEE Conference on
Conference_Location :
Beijing
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-0675-8
DOI :
10.1109/NANO.2013.6721044