ZnO is a promising II-VI semiconductor for UV applications although p-type ZnO is not yet available. Nevertheless it remains an alternative material for GaN and its alloy InGaN. For example, the exciton binding energy of ZnO (60 meV) is higher than that of GaN (21 meV). This allows ZnO to emit light at ambient temperature and interestingly, it increases the device brightness. Besides promising intrinsic properties, light-matter control and especially in the UV relies on the ability of material nanostructuring. We present here two different kinds of top-down process in order to nanostructure ZnO. The first one relies on Electron Beam Lithography (EBL) combined with a lift-off process and inductively coupled plasma (ICP) reactive ion etching (RIE). Nickel (Ni) has been used as a mask in order to have a high selectivity in the presence of C2F6 and O2 ionized gases. The etching rate used was 26nm/s in order to avoid roughness. The second process is called Direct Holographic Patterning (DHP). ZnO thin films have been holographicaly patterned for the first time by direct photodissolution in NaCl solution using laser interference lithography. Application of an electrical potential strongly increases the dissolution rate and decreases the pattern formation time. Both processes will be discussed in terms of their respective potential for light confinement in the UV.
We present a method for mapping the electromagnetic field distribution in the vicinity of noble metal nanoparticles able to sustain localised surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). The field distribution is coded by topographic change in a self-developing photosensitive polymer (PMMA-DR1). Metallic nanostructures are fabricated by e-beam lithography and optically characterised by extinction spectroscopy. Photoinduced topographic changes are checked by means of atomic force microscopy (AFM). The dipolar character of the surface modification around the particles agrees qualitatively with theoretical predictions and a strong correlation between LSPR position and the relief depth is found.
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