利用单分子荧光技术测量纳米级聚合物性能(会议报告)

J. Liddle, Muzhou Wang, S. Stranick, Abhishek Kumar, J. Gilman
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引用次数: 0

摘要

聚合物抗蚀剂材料是光刻工艺的关键部分。理解它们的行为,特别是在极端维度上的行为变得具有挑战性:刚性衬底或自由表面的存在、化学相互作用和随机波动都可能发挥作用。聚合物材料在小长度尺度上的行为连续体模型不仅变得不准确,而且无法捕捉到必须理解的统计变化,以便确定生产无缺陷结构的最终限制是什么。纳米尺度聚合物性质的非均质性的实验测量是困难的。许多具有所需空间分辨率的技术使用高能电子束来快速破坏软材料,而x射线或中子散射方法只能提供集合平均测量。然而,单个荧光分子可以产生有关其所在环境的大量信息。测量适当工程荧光团的荧光寿命长期以来一直用于生命科学中探测局部pH值,氧或Ca2+浓度。寿命也可能对粘度敏感,在纳秒时间尺度上给出局部分子结构的信息。荧光团的取向和旋转迁移率的测量可以分别表明局部分子的有序性和迁移率。虽然单分子荧光成像方法在生命科学中的应用进展迅速,但其在材料科学中的应用发展较慢,只有少数与光刻材料相关的研究。一个主要原因是,在材料中,荧光团的取向往往是固定的。因此,单分子图像具有复杂的、依赖于方向的结构,如果不能正确地解释,就会导致在确定它们的位置和方向时出现很大的误差。将位置不准确性降低到几纳米或更好的水平,需要更复杂的方法来拟合单分子图像和新的成像硬件。通过这些方法,可以准确地确定单个荧光团的位置和方向。这些信息,当与单分子寿命测量相结合时,原则上可以提供纳米尺度的聚合物材料的结构和动力学。我将讨论我们在精确测量材料中的荧光团位置和方向以实现高分辨率成像方面的进展,我们开发的一种直接方法来确定定位不确定性和荧光团标记密度如何共同限制了我们解决纳米级结构的能力,光刻图版如何使我们能够部分克服这一限制,以及单分子取向测量如何在10nm长度尺度上提供聚合物变形的信息。最后,我将推测单分子荧光寿命的测量如何在光刻材料系统中图像形成过程的各个阶段提供局部聚合物非均质性的信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nanoscale polymer property measurement using single-molecule fluorescence (Conference Presentation)
Polymeric resist materials are a critical part of the lithographic patterning process. Understanding their behavior, particularly at extreme dimensions becomes challenging: the presence of a rigid substrate or free surface, chemical interactions, and stochastic fluctuations can all play a role. Continuum models for polymer material behavior at small length scales not only become inaccurate, but also fail to capture the statistical variations that must be understood in order to determine what are the ultimate limits to producing defect-free structures. Experimental measurement of nanoscale heterogeneities in polymer properties is difficult. Many of the techniques that possess the required spatial resolution use energetic beams of electrons that rapidly damage soft materials, while x-ray or neutron scattering methods provide only ensemble average measurements. Individual fluorescent molecules, however, can yield a significant amount of information about their local environment. Measurements of the fluorescence lifetimes of suitably engineered fluorophores have long been used in the life sciences to probe local pH, and oxygen, or Ca2+ concentration. Lifetimes may also be sensitive to viscosity, giving information about local molecular configurations at nanosecond timescales. Measurements of fluorophore orientation, and rotational mobility, can indicate local molecular ordering and mobility, respectively. While the use of single-molecule fluorescence imaging methods in the life sciences has progressed rapidly, its use in materials science has been slower to develop, with only a handful of studies related to lithographic materials. One principal reason for this is that, in materials, fluorophore orientation is often fixed. Single-molecule images therefore have a complex, orientation-dependent structure, that, if not correctly accounted for, can lead to large errors in determining their position and orientation. Reducing the positional inaccuracies to the few-nanometer or better level, requires more sophisticated approaches to fitting single-molecule images and novel imaging hardware. With these approaches, both the location and orientation of individual fluorophores can be determined accurately. This information, when combined with single molecule lifetime measurements can, in principle, provide nanometer scale on the structure and dynamics of polymeric materials. I will discuss our progress in making accurate and precise measurements of fluorophore position and orientation in materials to enable high-resolution imaging, our development of a straightforward approach to determine how localization uncertainty and fluorophore labeling density together limit our ability to resolve nanoscale structures, how lithographic patterning enables us to partially overcome that limit, and how single-molecule orientation measurements can provide information on deformation in polymers at the 10 nm length scale. Finally, I will speculate on how measurement of single-molecule fluorescence lifetimes might provide information on local polymer heterogeneity at various stages of the image formation process in lithographic material systems.
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