ArXiv TLDR

A scalable platform for nanometer-scale quantum confinement

🐦 Tweet
2604.08957

Christina M. Spaegele, Mehdi Rezaee, Thomas Werkmeister, Soon Wei Daniel Lim, Kailyn Vaillancourt + 6 more

physics.opticscond-mat.mes-hallquant-ph

TLDR

A new scalable nanofabrication platform achieves 1.75 nm features via modified ALD, demonstrating quantum confinement in graphene.

Key contributions

  • Developed a scalable nanofabrication platform capable of producing in-plane features down to 1.75 nm.
  • Transforms conventional ALD into a surface structuring method using precise thickness control and oxide nanofins.
  • Produces nanolaminates with sub-10 nm periodicities over large areas for 1D gate arrays.
  • Demonstrated quantum confinement effects in graphene, observing satellite Dirac peaks.

Why it matters

This platform overcomes current nanofabrication limits, enabling exploration of new light-matter interaction regimes. It holds significant promise for advanced applications in short wavelength optics, electronics, and polaritonics.

Original Abstract

Overcoming the limitations of current nanofabrication techniques to achieve nanoscale feature sizes is essential for achieving new regimes of light-matter interactions at extreme frequencies and length scales. Here, we demonstrate a scalable nanofabrication platform capable of producing in-plane feature sizes down to 1.75 nm, pushing the boundaries of current top-down nanofabrication techniques. Using precise thickness control of atomic layer deposition (ALD) and employing widely spaced oxide nanofins, we transform conventional ALD into a surface structuring method that produces nanolaminates with sub-10 nm periodicities over large areas. The resulting nanostructures can be used as a one-dimensional gate array to control charge carriers in two-dimensional materials. As an initial demonstration, we integrate the platform with graphene and perform electron transport measurements. In the presence of the gate array enabled by the nanolaminate, we observe satellite Dirac peaks consistent with band-structure modulation, suggestive of quantum-confinement effects. Our platform paves the way for exploring previously inaccessible regimes of nanoscale light-matter interactions, holding significant promise for applications in short wavelength optics, electronics, and polaritonics.

📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest

Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.