Abstract
The semiconductor industry's transition to three-dimensional (3D) logic and memory devices has revealed the limitations of plasma etching in reliable creation of vertical high aspect ratio (HAR) nanostructures. Metal-assisted chemical etch (MacEtch) can create ultra-HAR, taper-free nanostructures in silicon, but the catalyst used for reliable MacEtch-gold-is not CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor)-compatible and therefore cannot be used in the semiconductor industry. Here, for the first time, we report a ruthenium MacEtch process that is comparable in quality to gold MacEtch. We introduce new process variables-catalyst plasma pretreatment and surface area-to achieve this result. Ruthenium is particularly desirable as it is not only CMOS-compatible but has also been introduced in semiconductor fabrication as an interconnect material. The results presented here remove a significant barrier to adoption of MacEtch for scalable fabrication of 3D semiconductor devices, sensors, and biodevices that can benefit from production in CMOS foundries.
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