Apr 24, 2024
10:45am - 11:15am
Room 346, Level 3, Summit
Nick Strandwitz1
Lehigh University1
Atomic and molecular layer deposition (ALD, MLD) techniques boast precise control of film thickness, conformal growth, and a wide range of material compositions. Generally, ALD and MLD thin films are non-porous, yet introduction of porosity would enable a wide range of uses ranging from catalysis to low-k dielectrics for electronics. Here, we have examined the purposeful inclusion of organic molecules including bifunctional and monofunctional alcohols during the MLD/ALD process and their subsequent removal using thermal and/or UV treatment to induce porosity. We examined the evolution of various physical and electrical properties with thermal treatment as well as the composition of these films. We found that the density and dielectric constant of these materials are smaller than the parent dense ALD oxides. This strategy is thus promising for tailor made dielectrics based on sequential self-limiting surface reactions characteristic of the ALD and MLD processes. This development parallels other methods for forming porous inorganic oxides such as terpinene inclusion in silicon-based dielectrics or block copolymer templating of inorganic solids.