posted on 2023-03-17, 14:39authored byShankar Dutt, Buddini I. Karawdeniya, Y. M. Nuwan D.
Y. Bandara, Nahid Afrin, Patrick Kluth
Thin membranes are highly sought-after for nanopore-based
single-molecule
sensing, and fabrication of such membranes becomes challenging in
the ≲10 nm thickness regime where a plethora of useful molecule
information can be acquired by nanopore sensing. In this work, we
present a scalable and controllable method to fabricate silicon nitride
(SixNy) membranes
with effective thickness down to ∼1.5 nm using standard silicon
processing and chemical etching using hydrofluoric acid (HF). Nanopores
were fabricated using the controlled breakdown method with estimated
pore diameters down to ∼1.8 nm yielding events >500,000
and
>1,800,000 from dsDNA and bovine serum albumin (BSA) protein, respectively,
demonstrating the high-performance and extended lifetime of the pores
fabricated through our membranes. We used two different compositions
of SixNy for
membrane fabrication (near-stoichiometric and silicon-rich SixNy) and compared
them against commercial membranes. The final thicknesses of the membranes
were measured using ellipsometry and were in good agreement with the
values calculated from the bulk etch rates and DNA translocation characteristics.
The stoichiometry and the density of the membrane layers were characterized
with Rutherford backscattering spectrometry while the nanopores were
characterized using pH-conductance, conductivity-conductance, and
power spectral density (PSD) graphs.