Title: Basic Concepts
1Basic Concepts
- Antireflective coating is used to prevent
reflections from the chrome coming back into the
resist - Occasionally AR coatings are deposited on wafers
also - Develop the resist and etch to remove the metal
- We get good dimensional control because the Cr is
very thin (80nm) - It is critical that the areas beneath where the
Cr is removed be highly transparent at the
wavelength of the light used in the wafer
exposure system. - Masks (reticules) for steppers (step and repeat
systems) are 4x to 5x larger than what is printed - Relaxes minimal feature requirements on mask
- Masks for steppers print usually only one or two
die at a time any defect in the mask gets
reproduced for every die!
2Reflectivity
- At the interface of two bulk layers
http//www.mellesgriot.com/products/optics/images/
fig5_12.gif
3Antireflectivity Coatings
- For l/4 thick films
- Ideal index of refraction for antireflective
coating is v(nairnglass)
4Basic Concepts
- We generally separate lithography into three
parts - The light source
- The exposure system
- The resist
- The exposure tool creates the best image possible
on the resist (resolution, exposure field, depth
of focus, uniformity and lack of aberrations) - The photoresist transfers the aerial image from
the mask to the best thin film replica of the
aerial image (geometric accuracy, exposure speed,
resist resistance to subsequent processing)
5Light Source
- Historically, light sources have been arc lamps
containing Hg vapor
- A typical emission spectra from a Hg-Xe lamp
- Low in DUV (200-300nm) but strong in the UV
region (300-450nm)
6Light Source
- To minimize problems in the lens optics, the lamp
output must be filtered to select on of the
spectral components. - Two common monochromatic selections are the
g-line at 436 nm and the i-line at 365 nm. - The i-line stepper now dominates the 0.35 ?m
market
7Light Sources
- For 0.18 and 0.13, we use two excimer lasers (KrF
at 248 nm and ArF at 193 nm) - These lasers contain atoms that do not normally
bond, but if they are excited the compounds will
form when the excited molecule returns to the
ground state, it emits - These lasers must be continuously strobed
(several hundred Hz) or pulsed to pump the
excitation - Can get several mJ of energy out
- Technical problems have been resolved for KrF and
these are used for 0.25 and 0.18 ?m - ArF is likely for 0.18 and 0.10 ?m technical
problems remain
8Exposure System
- There are three classes of exposure systems
- Contact
- Proximity
- Projection
9Exposure System
- Contact printing is the oldest and simplest
- The mask is put down with the Cr in contact with
the wafer - This method
- Can give good resolution
- Machines are inexpensive
- Cannot be used for high-volume due to damage
caused by the contact - Still used in research and prototyping situations
10Wafer Exposure Systems
- Proximity printing solves the defect problem
associated with contact printing - The mask and the wafer are kept about5 25 ?m
apart - This separation degrades the resolution
- Cannot print with features below a few microns
- The resolution improves as wavelength decrease.
This is a good system for X-ray lithography
because of the very short exposure wavelength
(1-2 nm).
11Wafer Exposure Systems
- For large-diameter wafers, it is impossible to
achieve uniform exposure and to maintain
alignment between mask levels across the complete
wafer. - Projection printing is the dominant method today
- They provide high resolution without the defect
problem - The mask (reticule) is separated from the wafer
and an optical system is used to image the mask
on the wafer. - The resolution is limited by diffraction effects
- The optical system reduces the mask image by 4X
to 5X - Only a small portion of the wafer is printed
during each exposure - Steppers are capable of lt 0.25 ?m
- Their throughput is about 25 50 wafers/hour
12Optics Basics
- We need a very brief review of optics
- If the dimensions of objects are large compared
to the wavelength of light, we can treat light as
particles traveling in straight lines and we can
model by ray tracing - When light passes through the mask, the
dimensions of objects are of the order of the
dimensions of the mask - We must treat light as a wave
13Optics Basics
- Diffraction occurs because light does not travel
in straight lines - Pass a light through a pin-hole we see that the
image is larger than the hole - This cannot be explained by ray tracing
14Diffraction of Light
15Diffraction of Light
- The Huygens-Fresnel principle states that every
unobstructed point of a wavefront at a given time
acts as a point source of a secondary spherical
wavelet at the same frequency - The amplitude of the optical field is the sum of
the magnitudes and phases - For unobstructed waves, we propagate a plane wave
- For light in the pin-hole, the ends propagate a
spherical wave.
16Diffraction of Light
17Youngs Single Slit Experiment
sinq l/d
http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/optics/lightandcolor/d
iffraction.html
18Amplitude of largest secondary lobe at point Q,
eQ, is given by eQ a(A/r)f(c)d where A is
the amplitude of the incident wave, r is the
distance between d and Q, and f(c) is a function
of c, an inclination factor introduced by
Fresnel.
http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/optics/lightandcolor/d
iffraction.html
19Youngs Double Slit Experiment
http//micro.magnet.fsu.edu/optics/lightandcolor/i
nterference.html
20Basic Optics
- This diffraction bends the light
- Information about the shape of the pin hole is
contained in all of the light we must collect
all of the light to fully reconstruct the pattern - The following diagram shows how the system works
- Note that the focusing lens only collects part of
the diffraction pattern - The light diffracted at higher angles contains
information about the finer details of the
structure and are lost
21Basic Optics
22Basic Optics
- The image produced by this system is
23Basic Optics
- The diameter of the central maximum is given
by - Note that you get a point source only if d ? ?
24Basic Optics
- There are two types of diffraction
- Fresnel, or near field diffraction
- Fraunhofer, or far field diffraction
- In Fresnel diffraction, the image plane is near
the aperture and light travels directly from the
aperture to the image plane (see Figure 5-4) - In Fraunhofer diffraction, the image plane is far
from the aperture, and there is a lens between
the aperture and the image plane (see Figure 5-6) - Fresnel diffraction applies to contact and
proximity printing while Fraunhofer diffraction
applies to projections systems - There are powerful simulations systems for both
cases
25Fraunhofer Diffraction
- We define the performance of the system in terms
of - Resolution
- Depth of focus
- Field of view
- Modulation Transfer Function (MTF)
- Alignment accuracy
- throughput
26Fraunhofer Diffraction
- Imagine two sources close together that we are
trying to image (two features on a mask) - How close can these be together and we can still
resolve the two points? - The two points will each produce an Airy disk
(5-7) - Lord Rayleigh suggest that we define the
resolution by placing the maximum from the second
point source at the minimum of the first point
source
27Fraunhofer Diffraction
28Fraunhofer Diffraction
- With this definition, the resolution
becomes - For air, n1
- ? is defined by the size of the lens, or by an
aperture and is a measure of the ability of the
lens to gather light
29Fraunhofer Diffraction
- This is usually defined as the numerical
aperture, or NA - This really is defined only for point sources, as
we used the point source Airy function to develop
the equation - We can generalize by replacing the 0.61 by a
constant k1 which lies between 0.6 and 0.8 for
practical systems
30Fraunhofer Diffraction
- From this result, we see that we get better
resolution (smaller R) with shorter wavelengths
of light and lenses of higher numerical aperture - We now consider the depth of focus over which
focus is maintained. - We define ? as the on-axis path length difference
from that of a ray at the limit of the aperture.
These two lengths must not exceed ?/4 to meet the
Rayleigh criterion
31Depth of Focus
32Depth of Focus
- From this criterion, we have
- For small ?
33Fraunhofer Diffraction
- From this we note that the depth of focus
decreases sharply with both decreasing wavelength
and increasing NA. - The Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) is another
important concept - This applies only to strictly coherent light, and
is thus not really applicable to modern steppers,
but the idea is useful
34Fraunhofer Diffraction
- Because of the finite aperture, diffraction
effects and other non-idealities of the optical
system, the image at the image plane does not
have sharp boundaries, as desired - If the two features in the image are widely
separated, we can have sharp patterns as shown - If the features are close together, we will get
images that are smeared out.
35Modulation Transfer Function
36Fraunhofer Diffraction
- The measure of the quality of the aerial image is
given by - The MTF is really a measure of the contrast in
the aerial image - The optical system needs to produce MTFs of 0.5
or more for a resist to properly resolve the
features - The MTF depends on the feature size in the image
for large features MTF1 - As the feature size decreases, diffractions
effects casue MTF to degrade
37Change in MTF versus Wavelength
38Contrast and Proximity Systems
- These systems operate in the near field or
Fresnel regime - Assume the mask and the resist are separated by
some small distance g - Assume a plane wave is incident on the mask
- Because of diffraction, light is bent away for
the aperture edges - The effect is shown in the next slide
- Note the small maximum at the edge this results
from constructive interference - Also note the ringing
- As a result, we often use multiple wavelengths
39Fresnel Diffraction
40Fresnel Diffraction
- As g increases, the quality of the image
decreases because diffraction effects become more
important - The aerial image can generally be computed
accurately whenwhere W is the feature size - Within this regime, the minimum resolvable
feature size is
41Depth of Focus
http//www.research.ibm.com/journal/rd/411/holm1.g
if
42Summary of the Three Systems