Publication | Closed Access
Patterning of Complex, Nanometer-Scale Features in Wide-Area Gold Nanoplasmonic Structures Using Helium Focused Ion Beam Milling
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Citations
34
References
2021
Year
EngineeringNano-opticsNanoclusterMetasurfacesMetamaterialsElectromagnetic MetamaterialsGold FilmIon Beam MillingNanometrologyNanophotonicsPlasmonic MaterialMaterials SciencePhysicsNanotechnologyNanostructuringMetaopticsNanoplasmonic MetasurfacePlasmonicsNanomaterialsSurface ScienceApplied PhysicsNanometer-scale FeaturesNanofabricationDynamic MetamaterialsNanoplasmonic Metasurface Applications
Meeting the evolving demands of plasmonics research requires increasingly precise control over surface plasmon properties, which necessitates extremely fine nanopatterning, complex geometries, and/or long-range order. Nanoplasmonic metasurfaces are representative of a modern research area requiring intricate, high-fidelity features reproduced over areas of several free-space wavelengths, making them one of the most challenging fabrication problems in the field today. This work presents a systematic study of the helium focused ion beam milling of gold for nanoplasmonic metasurface applications, using as its example a nanoplasmonic metasurface based on an array of nanometer-scale plasmonic-wire-loaded subwavelength apertures in a gold film. At each step, the pattern variations are compared to simulation to predict the experimental outcome. Our results show that even in a practical fabrication environment, helium ion beam milling can be used to reliably pattern 10 nm features into gold with 1:5 aspect ratio in complex geometries over a wide area.
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