A route for the top-down fabrication of ordered ultrathin GaN nanowires
Abstract
Ultrathin GaN nanowires (NWs) are attractive to maximize surface effects and as building block in high-frequency transistors. Here, we introduce a facile route for the top-down fabrication of ordered arrays of GaN NWs with aspect ratios exceeding 10 and diameters below 20\,nm. Highly uniform thin GaN NWs are first obtained by using electron beam lithography to pattern a Ni/SiNx hard mask, followed by dry etching and wet etching in hot KOH. The SiNx is found to work as an etch stop during wet etching in hot KOH. Arrays with NW diameters down to (33 5)\,nm can be achieved with a yield exceeding 99.9\,\%. Further reduction of the NW diameter down to 5\,nm is obtained by applying digital etching which consists in plasma oxidation followed by wet etching in hot KOH. The NW radial etching depth is tuned by varying the RF power during plasma oxidation. NW breaking or bundling is observed for diameters below ≈ 20\,nm, an effect that is associated to capillary forces acting on the NWs during sample drying in air. This effect can be principally mitigated using critical point dryers. Interestingly, this mechanical instability of the NWs is found to occur at much smaller aspect ratios than what is predicted for models dealing with macroscopic elastic rods. Explicit calculations of buckling states show an improved agreement when considering an inclined water surface, as can be expected if water assembles into droplets. The proposed fabrication route can be principally applied to any GaN/SiNx nanostructures and allows regrowth after removal of the SiNx mask.
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