Inhibiting
Metal Oxide Atomic Layer Deposition: Beyond Zinc Oxide
Posted on 2017-04-05 - 11:19
Atomic
layer deposition (ALD) of several metal oxides is selectivity inhibited
on alkanethiol self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on Au, and the eventual
nucleation mechanism is investigated. The inhibition ability of the
SAM is significantly improved by the in situ H2-plasma
pretreatment of the Au substrate prior to the gas-phase deposition
of a long-chain alkanethiol, 1-dodecanethiol (DDT). This more rigorous
surface preparation inhibits even aggressive oxide ALD precursors,
including trimethylaluminum and water, for at least 20 cycles. We
study the effect that the ALD precursor purge times, growth temperature,
alkanethiol chain length, alkanethiol deposition time, and plasma
treatment time have on Al2O3 ALD inhibition.
This is the first example of Al2O3 ALD inhibition
from a vapor-deposited SAM. The inhibitions of Al2O3, ZnO, and MnO ALD processes are compared, revealing the versatility
of this selective surface treatment. Atomic force microscopy and grazing-incidence
X-ray fluorescence further reveal insight into the mechanism by which
the well-defined surface chemistry of ALD may eventually be circumvented
to allow metal oxide nucleation and growth on SAM-modified surfaces.
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Sampson, Matthew D.; Emery, Jonathan D.; Pellin, Michael J.; B. F. Martinson, Alex (2017). Inhibiting
Metal Oxide Atomic Layer Deposition: Beyond Zinc Oxide. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b01410