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20-09-2007

100K Dpi Printing Unveiled

Printing Particles of 60 Nanometers 
 

A new technique allows the printing of particles as small as 60 nanometers - roughly 100 times smaller than a human red blood cell - in complex patterns at a resolution of 100,000 dots per inch. The level of control offered by the nanoprinting technique could lead to breakthroughs in nanoscale biosensors, ultratiny lenses inside future optical chips, and the fabrication of nanowires for next-generation computer chips.


This image created by IBM scientists demonstrates
a new nanoprinting technique they believe will lead
to breakthroughs in ultratiny chips, optics, and
biosensors. The recreation of Robert Fludd's 17th
century drawing of the sun was made by precisely
placing 20,000 gold particles, each about 60
nanometers in diameter, or 100 times smaller than a
human red blood cell. The technique translates to a
resolution of 100,000 dots per inch (dpi), compared
to offset printing's standard of 1500 dpi. 
(Images courtesy IBM)
Scientists in IBM's Zurich research lab, working in collaboration with those from ETH Zurich (the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology), demonstrated the new, efficient and precise technique to ‘print’ at the nanoscale by recreating Robert Fludd's 17th century drawing of the sun (the alchemists' symbol for gold) using 20,000 gold particles that were all 60 nanometers (nm) in diameter and printing them onto a silicon wafer. To compare; the width of a human hair is approximately 80,000 nm.
The technique translates to a resolution of 100,000 dots per inch (dpi), compared to the 1500 dpi common in offset printing today, IBM said, and represents the smallest piece of artwork ever printed from single-pigment particles.

Although still a few years from being used widely, the researchers said the new technique could lead to high-volume manufacturing techniques for nanostructures inside chips and other devices that are more efficient and cost less than today's methods because it allows scientists to place individual particles precisely where they want them.
The work, published in the September issue of the journal Nature Nanotechnology, offers a new tool for use in a wide range of fields and industries such as biomedicine, electronics and information technology that seek ways to exploit the often unique properties of nanoparticles, which are defined as particles smaller than 100 nm.

Adding instead of Carving


The traditional printing method known as "gravure printing," where an image is
etched on the surface of a metal plate, the etched area is filled with ink, then the
plate is rotated on a cylinder that transfers the image to paper or other material.
This method allows for features as small as 10,000 nm, far too big for use in
electronics. Bottom: IBM's new nanoprinting method, which uses a self-assembly
process to control the arrangement of tiny nanoparticles, in this case 20,000
gold particles, each about 60 nm in diameter. The gold nanoparticles are swept
across a surface and convective forces in the liquid push the particles into
grooves in the surface, forming nanostructures with a well-defined geometry. 
Until now, standard top-down microfabrication techniques produce such tiny particles by in effect carving them out of a bigger piece of material, IBM said. Printing, in contrast, adds ready-made nanoparticles onto a surface in a very efficient way and allows for different types of materials such as metals, polymers, semiconductors, and oxides to be combined in one process.
The printing process could be used in biomedicine to print large arrays of beads that can identify certain cells in the body from supertiny samples to rapidly screen for cancer cells or heart attack markers, IBM said.
Nanoparticles can also interact with light. With the new method, optical materials with new properties could be printed for use in optoelectronic devices. So-called ‘metamaterials’ could be created in which the printed structures are as small as the wavelength of the light and therefore act as if they were a single lens with unusual properties, according to IBM.

Semiconductors
The method also holds promise for semiconductors. In one experiment, the researchers achieved the controlled placement of catalytic seed particles for growing semiconducting nanowires, which are promising candidates for future transistors in microchips.
The printing template geometries explored include lines to produce closely-packed nanoparticle wires, which could be used in molecular electronics; regularly spaced arrays of gold particles as seeds for nanowire growth; and arbitrary arrangements, such as the printed replica of the sun. The long-range accuracy, which measures the deviation from the desired arrangement on a large area, is similar to that of microcontact printing methods, IBM said.

The next steps will be to refine the method to achieve even higher accuracies, as would be required for large-scale integration in microelectronics, as well as to extend the method to print even smaller particles.

www.ibm.com