
At Paderborn, the team led by physicist Prof. Jörg Lindner works with nanostructured block copolymers, interlinked polymer chains that "self-organize" into regular patterns, allowing for a wide range of applications. "Our ability to control the self-organization of block copolymers has made rapid progress in recent years," says Lindner. In order to continue this development, though, nondestructive methods for characterizing material properties must be expanded, as the goal of a larger endeavour involving the co-authors of partner institutions, INRiM, Politecnico di Torino and PTB.
Block copolymers allow extremely small structures to be created on semiconductor surfaces, which facilitates future-oriented processes for further miniaturizing next-generation microelectronic components. "The structure sizes that can be achieved here are limited only by the length of the polymer chains, so they can be even smaller than the structures that are laboriously produced through conventional techniques. The advances in miniaturization also create a need for new measurement methods and size standards so that smaller structures can be analyzed. Block copolymers can help here, too - but only after the chemical differences between the involved polymer types are increased by selectively modifying one of the polymers. Selectively integrating aluminum oxide using sequential infiltration synthesis makes it possible to create nanostructures that can be used to test these new measurement processes," explains Lindner.
Link to the study: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsapm.2c02094 .
Part of These projects have received funding from the EMPIR program co-financed by the Participating States and from the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation program.