Wet
chemical etching is essential not only for processing silicon
(Si) wafers but also for forming diverse structures, significantly
promoting the development of the semiconductor industry. However,
tight control of etched topography at the nanoscale and even atom-scale
in a controllable and reproducible fashion can be hardly achieved
in either laboratory research or industrial production, seriously
hindering further enhancement of high-performance Si-based electronic
devices. Herein, the roles of mechanically driven defects in wet etching
were systematically investigated toward promoting controllable wet
etching of monocrystalline Si. The role of antietching of mechanically
driven amorphous Si (a-Si) and the role of promoting etching of distorted
Si (including dislocations and stacking faults) were revealed in anisotropic
or isotropic etchants. It was also found that the nucleation of nanocrystals
in the a-Si area with increasing contact pressure can lead to deactivation
of the antietching mask, and the required contact pressure for deactivation
in KOH and tetramethyl ammonium hydroxide solutions was much higher
than that in HF/HNO3 mixtures. The selective etching mechanisms
for every defect including a-Si, distorted Si, and nanocrystals were
further addressed down to the atom-scale based on the proposed dissolution
model. This study provides insights into deeply understanding the
role of defects in wet etching and pushes forward the idea of controllable
wet chemical etching in the Si-based semiconductor industry.
Nanoparticle-based therapeutic and detectable modalities can augment anticancer efficiency holding potential in capable target and suppressive metastases post administration. However, individual discrepancies of current “one-size-fits-all” strategies for anticancer nanotherapeutics have...
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