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The Role of Liquid Ink Transport in the Direct Placement of Quantum Dot Emitters onto Sub‐Micrometer Antennas by Dip‐Pen Nanolithography
Authors:Farah Dawood  Jun Wang  Peter A Schulze  Chris J Sheehan  Matthew R Buck  Allison M Dennis  Somak Majumder  Sachi Krishnamurthy  Matthew Ticknor  Isabelle Staude  Igal Brener  Peter M Goodwin  Nabil A Amro  Jennifer A Hollingsworth
Affiliation:1. Materials Physics and Applications Division, Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA;2. Nonlinear Physics Centre, Research School of Physics and Engineering, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia;3. Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, NM, USA;4. Advanced Creative Solutions Technology, Carlsbad, CA, USA
Abstract:Dip‐pen nanolithography (DPN) is used to precisely position core/thick‐shell (“giant”) quantum dots (gQDs; ≥10 nm in diameter) exclusively on top of silicon nanodisk antennas (≈500 nm diameter pillars with a height of ≈200 nm), resulting in periodic arrays of hybrid nanostructures and demonstrating a facile integration strategy toward next‐generation quantum light sources. A three‐step reading‐inking‐writing approach is employed, where atomic force microscopy (AFM) images of the pre‐patterned substrate topography are used as maps to direct accurate placement of nanocrystals. The DPN “ink” comprises gQDs suspended in a non‐aqueous carrier solvent, o‐dichlorobenzene. Systematic analyses of factors influencing deposition rate for this non‐conventional DPN ink are described for flat substrates and used to establish the conditions required to achieve small (sub‐500 nm) feature sizes, namely: dwell time, ink‐substrate contact angle and ink volume. Finally, it is shown that the rate of solvent transport controls the feature size in which gQDs are found on the substrate, but also that the number and consistency of nanocrystals deposited depends on the stability of the gQD suspension. Overall, the results lay the groundwork for expanded use of nanocrystal liquid inks and DPN for fabrication of multi‐component nanostructures that are challenging to create using traditional lithographic techniques.
Keywords:dip‐pen nanolithography  nanofabrication  optical nanoantenna  quantum dots
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