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. 2019 Apr 20;19(8):1886. doi: 10.3390/s19081886

Table 1.

Summary of the fabrication methods for solid-state nanopores.

Method Material Minimum Diameter Inner Morphology Fabrication Scale Controllability/Reproducibility Manufacturing Cost Manufacturing Time/Rate
Focused ion/electron beam (FIB/FEB) drilling SiN [16,42,43,44,45,54], SiO2 [46], Metallic and metal oxide [24,47,110,111], 2D materials [56,112,113,114] 1.3 nm [54] Cylindrical/Hourglass One at a time Good controllability (nanometer precision) High (requires FIB or TEM) 0.2 s for one pore [45]; hours for a high-density array
Dielectric breakdown SiN [59,60], SiO2 [63], HfO2 [64] <1 nm [60] Cylindrical One/multiple at a time Poor controllability over the amount of nanopores Low (requires a voltage source and electrolyte solutions) ~ 1 h for one or multiple pores [60]
Metal-assisted chemical etching (MaCE) Si [74,76,77,84] 50 nm [84] Conical Array (pore density of 109 cm−2) [84] Poor distribution in the pore size and location Middle (requires heavy metal particles, HF/H2O2 solutions) 30 min to etch 30 µm-thick Si, and 24 h to etch 500 µm-thick Si [84]
Electrochemical anodization Metal oxide [70,71,72,73] 23 nm [73] Cylindrical/hexagonal prism Array (pore density of 5 × 1010 cm−2) [73] Good controllability when fabricating >20 nanopores Low (requires a voltage source and etchant solutions) Etching rate of 40 μm/h at 30 °C under bias voltage of 70 V [73]
Ion-track etching Polymers [67,68,69,82,83,115] 51 nm (in an array) [82], 2 nm (individual pores) [83] Cylindrical Array (pore density of 107 to 109 cm−2) [82] Poor distribution in the pore size (standard deviation of the pore size was 22% and 25% [82]) Middle (requires heavy ion accelerometers) UV radiation for 10 to 24 h, and NaOH etching for 5 min on the 23 µm-thick PET [82]
Feedbackcontrolled wet etching Si [65,66] 30 nm [66] Truncated-pyramidal Array (pore density of 1.96 × 106 cm−2) [66,78] Poor size uniformity for ~30 nm nanopores [66]. Good size uniformity (± 5%) for >500 nm nanopores [78]. Low (requires heated KOH etchant) 84 µm/h in 33 wt % KOH at 80 °C
EBL-assisted RIE SiN [85], SiO2 [86,116] 18 nm [86] Cylindrical Array (pore density of 5 × 1010 cm−2) [86] Good size uniformity of 18 ± 2 nm. High (requires EBL technique) Hours to form patterns at the wafer-scale via EBL
EBL-assisted nanoimprint Polymer [88], Al2O3 [89] 10 nm [88] Cylindrical/hexagonal prism Array (pore density of 2.6 × 1011 cm−2) [88] Good controllability thanks to the high-precision EBL High (EBL is more expensive than the photolithography technique) Hours to form high-precision masks at the wafer-scale via EBL
Metal deposition and heating SiN [91,92], SiO2 [91] 8 nm [90] Conical Array (4 × 106 cm−2) [90] Poor distribution in the pore size and location Middle (requires metal nanoparticles and a furnace) Several  hours for heating Au at 1067  ±  5 °C [90]
Shrinking by FIB/FEB SiN [52,96], Metal oxide [97], Si [98,99], SiO2 [100] <1 nm Cylindrical/conical One or several pores at a time Sub-nanometer precision High (requires FIB, SEM or TEM) Shrinking rate of 0.67 nm/s [98]
Shrinking by material deposition Al2O3 [103], SiN [106] <1 nm Cylindrical/conical Wafer scale Good (ALD has sub-nanometer precision [103]) Middle (depends on the deposition technology) Shrinking rate of 0.1 nm/cycle by ALD (1 cycle takes several seconds)
Shrinking by thermal oxidation Si [107,108] <1 nm Cylindrical/conical Wafer scale Good Middle (requires an oxidation furnace) Shrinking rate of 4.6 nm/h [108]