4.6 Article

Nanopatterning of carbonaceous structures by field-induced carbon dioxide splitting with a force microscope

Journal

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS
Volume 96, Issue 14, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.3374885

Keywords

atomic force microscopy; carbon; nanolithography; nanopatterning; photoelectron spectra

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Investigacion e Innovacion [MAT2009-08650, CTQ2007-31076-E, MAT2008-06765]

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We report a tip-based nanofabrication method to generate carbon nanopatterns. The process uses the field-induced transformation of carbon dioxide gas into a solid material. It requires the application of low-to-moderate voltages similar to 10-40 V. The method allow us to fabricated sub-25 nm dots and it can be up scaled to pattern square centimeter areas. Photoemission spectroscopy shows that the carbon is the dominating atomic species of the fabricated structures. The formation of carbon nanostructures and oxides by atomic force microscope nanolithography expands its potential by providing patterns on the same sample with different chemical composition.

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