Fabrication of electrodes with a controlled nanometric separation is strategic for many application fields as molecular electronics and biosensors. A technological process at room temperature with an high yield can be defined starting from electromigration induced break junction technique (EIBJ). A self assembly adhesion molecule (MPTMS (3-mercaptopropyl)trimethoxysilane) for gold, efficiently used in previous works, solves the problems of metallic residuals, typical of titanium and chromium. As a consequence a simple and lowcost technological process to realise gold nanogaps at roomtemperature becomes feasible. The analysis of internal mechanisms that act on metal wire, when the density produces electromigration, together with a thermal model of the wire itself, can be used to control nanogap dimension. The design of a large set of wires, where different geometries are used to modify their thermal behaviour during electromigration, is used to verify feedback algorithms to control applied bias voltage. Some interesting experimental results seem to confirm the model proposed by the authors, opening newopportunities for future high yield nanogap fabrication.

Electrothermal modelling for EIBJ nanogap fabrication

2009

Abstract

Fabrication of electrodes with a controlled nanometric separation is strategic for many application fields as molecular electronics and biosensors. A technological process at room temperature with an high yield can be defined starting from electromigration induced break junction technique (EIBJ). A self assembly adhesion molecule (MPTMS (3-mercaptopropyl)trimethoxysilane) for gold, efficiently used in previous works, solves the problems of metallic residuals, typical of titanium and chromium. As a consequence a simple and lowcost technological process to realise gold nanogaps at roomtemperature becomes feasible. The analysis of internal mechanisms that act on metal wire, when the density produces electromigration, together with a thermal model of the wire itself, can be used to control nanogap dimension. The design of a large set of wires, where different geometries are used to modify their thermal behaviour during electromigration, is used to verify feedback algorithms to control applied bias voltage. Some interesting experimental results seem to confirm the model proposed by the authors, opening newopportunities for future high yield nanogap fabrication.
2009
Istituto dei Materiali per l'Elettronica ed il Magnetismo - IMEM
Biosensor
Electromigration
MPTMS
Nanoelectronics
Nanogap
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/163025
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