Abstract

AbstractThis article considers the fundamentals of what happens in a solid when it is impacted by a medium-energy gallium ion. The study of the ion/sample interaction at the nanometer scale is applicable to most focused ion beam (FIB)–based work even if the FIB/sample interaction is only a step in the process, for example, micromachining or microelectronics device processing. Whereas the objective in other articles in this issue is to use the FIB tool to characterize a material or to machine a device or transmission electron microscopy sample, the goal of the FIB in this article is to have the FIB/sample interaction itself become the product. To that end, the FIB/sample interaction is considered in three categories according to geometry: below, at, and above the surface. First, the FIB ions can penetrate the top atom layer(s) and interact below the surface. Ion implantation and ion damage on flat surfaces have been comprehensively examined; however, FIB applications require the further investigation of high doses in three-dimensional profiles. Second, the ions can interact at the surface, where a morphological instability can lead to ripples and surface self-organization, which can depend on boundary conditions for site-specific and compound FIB processing. Third, the FIB may interact above the surface (and/or produce secondary particles that interact above the surface). Such ion beam–assisted deposition, FIB–CVD (chemical vapor deposition), offers an elaborate complexity in three dimensions with an FIB using a gas injection system. At the nanometer scale, these three regimes—below, at, and above the surface—can require an interdependent understanding to be judiciously controlled by the FIB.

Highlights

  • The focused ion beam (FIB) is becoming an ideal tool for growing, sculpting, infusing, and observing small shapes in an ever-widening range of applications

  • The FIB has extended the applications to a regime in which localized, three-dimensional (3D) ion/surface interactions are important, with doses of ~1018/cm[2] and unprecedented current densities

  • New FIB tool capabilities are being developed to meet more stringent requirements, such as transmission electron microscopy (TEM) sample preparation with reduced surface damage and shallower implants driven by further miniaturizations of microelectronic devices

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Summary

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Fundamentals of focused ion beam nanostructural processing: Below, at, and above the Surface.

Introduction
Fundamentals of Focused Ion Beam Nanostructural Processing
Findings
Future FIBs
Full Text
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