Global Frontier Center for Multiscale Energy Systems, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea.
Nature. 2021 Apr;592(7852):54-59. doi: 10.1038/s41586-021-03353-1. Epub 2021 Mar 31.
Three-dimensional (3D) printing has revolutionized manufacturing processes for electronics, optics, energy, robotics, bioengineering and sensing. Downscaling 3D printing will enable applications that take advantage of the properties of micro- and nanostructures. However, existing techniques for 3D nanoprinting of metals require a polymer-metal mixture, metallic salts or rheological inks, limiting the choice of material and the purity of the resulting structures. Aerosol lithography has previously been used to assemble arrays of high-purity 3D metal nanostructures on a prepatterned substrate, but in limited geometries. Here we introduce a technique for direct 3D printing of arrays of metal nanostructures with flexible geometry and feature sizes down to hundreds of nanometres, using various materials. The printing process occurs in a dry atmosphere, without the need for polymers or inks. Instead, ions and charged aerosol particles are directed onto a dielectric mask containing an array of holes that floats over a biased silicon substrate. The ions accumulate around each hole, generating electrostatic lenses that focus the charged aerosol particles into nanoscale jets. These jets are guided by converged electric-field lines that form under the hole-containing mask, which acts similarly to the nozzle of a conventional 3D printer, enabling 3D printing of aerosol particles onto the silicon substrate. By moving the substrate during printing, we successfully print various 3D structures, including helices, overhanging nanopillars, rings and letters. In addition, to demonstrate the potential applications of our technique, we printed an array of vertical split-ring resonator structures. In combination with other 3D-printing methods, we expect our 3D-nanoprinting technique to enable substantial advances in nanofabrication.
三维(3D)打印技术已经彻底改变了电子、光学、能源、机器人、生物工程和传感等领域的制造工艺。缩小 3D 打印的规模将使利用微纳结构特性的应用成为可能。然而,现有的金属 3D 纳米打印技术需要聚合物-金属混合物、金属盐或流变油墨,这限制了材料的选择和所得结构的纯度。气溶胶光刻技术以前曾被用于在预图案化的衬底上组装高纯 3D 金属纳米结构阵列,但仅限于有限的几何形状。在这里,我们介绍了一种使用各种材料直接打印具有灵活几何形状和特征尺寸低至数百纳米的金属纳米结构阵列的技术。打印过程在干燥的气氛中进行,无需聚合物或油墨。相反,离子和带电气溶胶颗粒被引导到包含阵列孔的介电掩模上,该掩模漂浮在偏置硅衬底上。离子在每个孔周围积聚,产生静电透镜,将带电气溶胶颗粒聚焦成纳米级射流。这些射流由在包含孔的掩模下形成的收敛电场线引导,该掩模的作用类似于传统 3D 打印机的喷嘴,从而能够将气溶胶颗粒打印到硅衬底上。通过在打印过程中移动衬底,我们成功地打印了各种 3D 结构,包括螺旋、悬垂纳米柱、环和字母。此外,为了展示我们的技术的潜在应用,我们打印了一个垂直环形谐振器结构阵列。结合其他 3D 打印方法,我们预计我们的 3D 纳米打印技术将为纳米制造带来重大进展。