Focused ion beam technology: a single tool for a wide range of applications

Focused ion beams can be used to analyse, structure or optimise materials - enabling a wide range of possible applications. The publication from the Fit4Nano project provides an overview and a roadmap for future developments.

Focused ion beams can be used to analyse, structure or optimise materials - enabling a wide range of possible applications. The publication from the Fit4Nano project provides an overview and a roadmap for future developments. © N. Klingner/HZDR, Katja Höflich/HZB

Processing materials on the nanoscale, producing prototypes for microelectronics or analysing biological samples: The range of applications for finely focused ion beams is huge. Experts from the EU collaboration FIT4NANO have now reviewed the many options and developed a roadmap for the future. The article, published in “Applied Physics Review”, is aimed at students, users from industry and science as well as research policy makers.

“We realized that focused ion beams can be used in many different ways, and we thought we had a good overview at the start of the project. But then we discovered that there are many more applications than we thought. In many publications, the use of focused ion beams is not even explicitly mentioned, but is hidden in the methods section. It was detective work,” says Dr Katja Höflich, physicist at the Ferdinand-Braun-Institut and the Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin (HZB), who coordinated the comprehensive report. “In particular, we found work from the 1960s and 1970s that was ahead of its time and unjustly forgotten. They still provide important insights today”.

The report provides an overview of the current state of focused ion beam (FIB) technology, its applications with many examples, the most important equipment developments and future prospects. “We wanted to provide a reference work that is useful for academic research and industrial R&D departments, but also helps research management to find their way in this field,” says Dr Gregor Hlawacek, group leader at the Institute of Ion Beam Physics and Materials Research at Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR). Hlawacek leads the FIT4NANO project, an EU project on FIB technologies, in which the authors of the report are involved.

From basic research to the finished component

FIB instruments use a focused ion beam of typically two to 30 keV. With its small diameter in the nanometre and sub-nanometre range, such an ion beam scans the sample and can change its surface with nanometre precision. FIB instruments are a universal tool for analysis, maskless local material modification and rapid prototyping of microelectronic components. The first FIB instruments were used in the semiconductor industry to correct photomasks with focused gallium ions. Today, FIB instruments are available with many different types of ions. An important application is the preparation of samples for high-resolution, nanometre-precision imaging in the electron microscope. FIB methods have also been used in the life sciences, for example to analyse and image micro-organisms and viruses with FIB-based tomography, providing deep insights into microscopic structures and their function.

FIB instruments are constantly evolving towards other energies, heavier ions and new capabilities, such as the spatially resolved generation of single atomic defects in otherwise perfect crystals. Such FIB processing of materials and components has enormous potential in quantum and information technology. The range of applications, from fundamental research to the finished device, from physics, materials science and chemistry to life sciences and even archaeology, is absolutely unique. “We hope that this roadmap will inspire scientific and technological breakthroughs and act as an incubator for future developments,” says Gregor Hlawacek.

arö

  • Copy link

You might also be interested in

  • Optical innovations for solar modules - which are the most promising?
    Science Highlight
    28.03.2025
    Optical innovations for solar modules - which are the most promising?
    In 2023, photovoltaic systems generated more than 5% of the world’s electrical energy and the installed capacity doubles every two to three years. Optical technologies can further increase the efficiency of solar modules and open up new applications, such as coloured solar modules for facades. Now, 27 experts provide a comprehensive overview of the state of research and assess the most promising innovations. The report, which is also of interest to stakeholders in funding and science management, was coordinated by HZB scientists Prof. Christiane Becker and Dr. Klaus Jäger.
  • Catalysis research with the X-ray microscope at BESSY II
    Science Highlight
    27.03.2025
    Catalysis research with the X-ray microscope at BESSY II
    Contrary to what we learned at school, some catalysts do change during the reaction: for example, certain electrocatalysts can change their structure and composition during the reaction when an electric field is applied. The X-ray microscope TXM at BESSY II in Berlin is a unique tool for studying such changes in detail. The results help to develop innovative catalysts for a wide range of applications. One example was recently published in Nature Materials. It involved the synthesis of ammonia from waste nitrates.
  • BESSY II: Magnetic ‘microflowers’ enhance magnetic fields locally
    Science Highlight
    25.03.2025
    BESSY II: Magnetic ‘microflowers’ enhance magnetic fields locally
    A flower-shaped structure only a few micrometres in size made of a nickel-iron alloy can concentrate and locally enhance magnetic fields. The size of the effect can be controlled by varying the geometry and number of 'petals'. This magnetic metamaterial developed by Dr Anna Palau's group at the Institut de Ciencia de Materials de Barcelona (ICMAB) in collaboration with her partners of the CHIST-ERA MetaMagIC project, has now been studied at BESSY II in collaboration with Dr Sergio Valencia. Such a device can be used to increase the sensitivity of magnetic sensors, to reduce the energy required for creating local magnetic fields, but also, at the PEEM experimental station, to study samples under much higher magnetic fields than currently possible.