Mitsuru Ueda, Hideharu Mori, et al.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry
A novel method is introduced for oxidizing thin metal films with nanometer-scale resolution. Simply by subjecting Ti and Nb films to local current densities of 107 A/cm2, metal-oxide tunneling barriers of 10-50 nm width can be fabricated in a self-limiting fashion. The high spatial resolution of the process results from its strongly nonlinear dependence on the current density. Our experiments suggest that the oxidation involves current-induced atomic rearrangements and local heating. At the final stages of the barrier formation, when only atomic-scale channels remain unoxidized, the oxidation rate decreases drastically while the conductance drops in steps of about 2 e2/h. This behavior gives evidence of ballistic transport and of the superior stability of such metallic nanowires against current-induced forces compared with that of the bulk metal. Finally, we show that current-induced local oxidation is a valuable process for the fabrication of novel nanoelectronic devices. As an example, we prepared a single electron transistor that exhibits a Coulomb staircase at room temperature. © 1999 American Vacuum Society.
Mitsuru Ueda, Hideharu Mori, et al.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry
A.B. McLean, R.H. Williams
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics
J. Paraszczak, J.M. Shaw, et al.
Micro and Nano Engineering
G. Will, N. Masciocchi, et al.
Zeitschrift fur Kristallographie - New Crystal Structures