A method of depositing various materials onto heat-sensitive targets.
Heat-sensitive targets are generally defined as targets that have thermal
damage thresholds that are lower than the temperature required to process
a deposited material. The invention uses precursor solutions and/or
particle or colloidal suspensions, along with optional pre-deposition
treatment and/or post-deposition treatment to lower the laser power
required to drive the deposit to its final state. The present invention
uses Maskless Mesoscale Material Deposition (M.sup.3D.TM.) to perform
direct deposition of material onto the target in a precise, highly
localized fashion. Features with linewidths as small as 4 microns may be
deposited, with little or no material waste. A laser is preferably used
to heat the material to process it to obtain the desired state, for
example by chemical decomposition, sintering, polymerization, and the
like. This laser processing may be performed in an ambient environment
with laser powers of less than 100 milliwatts.