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New microscopy technique good for nanoscale dimensioning

October 30, 2008--A new type of microscope--a through-focus scanning optical microscope (TSOM)--enables fast and cheap nanoscale imaging.1 The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST; Boulder, CO) used the relatively inexpensive optical microscope to quickly and cheaply analyze nanoscale dimensions with nanoscale measurement sensitivity. The TSOM imaging technique has potential applications in nanomanufacturing, semiconductor process control, and biotechnology.

Optical microscopes are not widely considered for checking nanoscale (less than 100 nm) dimensions because of the limitation imposed by the wavelength of light--you can't get a precise image with a probe three times the object's size. NIST researcher Ravikiran Attota gets around this, paradoxically, by considering lots of "bad" images. "This imaging uses a set of blurry, out-of-focus optical images for nanometer dimensional measurement sensitivity," he says. Instead of repeatedly focusing on a sample to acquire one best image, the new technique captures a series of images with an optical microscope at different focal positions and stacks them one on top of the other to create the TSOM image. A computer program Attota developed analyzes the image.

While Attota believes this simple technique can be used in a variety of applications, he has worked with two. The TSOM image can compare two nanoscale objects such as silicon lines on an integrated circuit. The software "subtracts" one image from the other. This enables sensitivity to dimensional differences at the nanoscale--line height, width, or side-wall angle. Each type of difference generates a distinct signal.

The TSOM technique has also been theoretically evaluated in another quality-control application. Medical researchers are studying the use of gold nanoparticles to deliver advanced pharmaceuticals to specific locations within the human body. Perfect size will be critical. To address this application, a TSOM image of a gold nanoparticle can be taken and compared to a library of simulated images to obtain "best-match" images with the intent of determining if each nanoparticle passes or fails.

This new imaging technology requires a research-quality optical microscope, a camera and a microscope stage that can move at preset distances. "The setup is easily under $50,000, which is much less expensive than electron or probe microscopes currently used for measuring materials at the nanoscale," Attota explains. "This method is another approach to extend the range of optical microscopy from microscale to nanoscale dimensional analysis." So far, sensitivity to a 3 nm difference in line widths has been demonstrated in the laboratory.


REFERENCES:
1. R. Attota et al., Opt. Letters 33, 1990 (2008).


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