Morning all. I'm trying to etch a thin (15nm) epilayer of MnAs to stop in a thicker (300nm) layer of GaAs. The problem is that while MnAs wet-etches rapidly with almost anything (and the etch spreads laterally in an uncontrollable way), it is amazingly resistant to dry etching (not just my observations, from the literature too). I've tried 'RIE' using just argon (should I call it 'IE', since I don't want 'reactive'?), to create a physical etch and (hopefully) end up with something that might be slow, but will at least be not particularly selective between MnAs and GaAs. It isn't. I'm still getting maybe 20x selectivity between the two (thanks to a very slow MnAs etch rate), despite the manganese atom being slightly lighter than gallium (resist goes another order of magnitude quicker, but I'd thought since resist has all those nice organic light atoms, this isn't surprising). Etch rates in all substrates are super-linear with power, which I interpret naively as being more like a linear relation with accelerating voltage. Which (at last!) brings me to my questions. What should I expect in very general terms from a purely physical plasma etch? Is it dominated by chemical bonds in the substrate rather than atomic mass? Might there be a reactive contaminant in my system (I believe not)? Is it even plausible that my highly magnetic manganese interferes locally with the plasma? Better still, has anyone discovered the holy grail of MnAs dry etching (reactive or otherwise)? ;-) Comments and corrections would be much appreciated. Thank you! Andy