Title: Lateral Patterning: Electron Beam Lithography and Bonding
1Lateral PatterningElectron Beam Lithography
and Bonding
2Outline
- Lateral Patterning
- Patterning Schemes
- Direct Writing Methods
- Lithography Methods
- Electron Beam Lithography (EBL)
- Introduction
- Resists
- Electron Optics
- Electron-Solid Interactions
- Proximity Effects
- Bonding
- Ball Bonding
- Wedge Bonding
3Lateral Patterning Patterning Schemes
4Direct Writing Methods
- Focused Ion Beam Writing
- Ions are implanted in the substrate
- Can localize electrons and make resistive regions
- Used for local doping of the sample
- Scanning Probe Lithography
- Moving single atoms
- Material deposition from the tip on the substrate
- Scratching of the surface
- Local oxidation (depletion of 2DEG)
5Lateral Patterning Lithography methods
- Optical Lithography
- The illumination of the resist by UV-light
through a mask - The mask can be a quartz plate coated with a thin
chromium film - Contact illumination the mask in contact with
the resist - Projection illumination the mask pattern is
transferred via lenses - Large throughput
- One mask can be used to make many patterns
- Masks are expensive
- The resolution is limited by the wavelength
(smallest feature ?/2)
6Lateral Patterning Lithography methods
- X-Ray Lithography
- The wavelengths are so small that the diffraction
no longer limits the lithographic resolution - The problem with short wavelengths (high energy)
is the mask - Difficult to construct any type of optic systems
- Requires either a custom built x-ray source and
stepper or access to a syncrotron storage ring to
do the exposure.
7Electron Beam Lithography (EBL)
- The Technique
- A beam of electrons is scanned across a surface
covered with a resist film, thus depositing
energy in the desired pattern in the resist film - Attributes
- Capable of very high resolution, almost to the
atomic level - Flexible, works on a variety of materials and an
almost infinite number of patterns - Slow - one or more orders of magnitude slower
than optical lithography - Expensive and complicated the equipment can
cost many millions of dollars and requires
frequent service to stay properly maintained
8Electron Beam Lithography (EBL)
- Applications
- Support of the integrated circuit industry
- Mask making
- Direct write for advanced prototyping of
integrated circuits - Manufacture of small volume specialty products
(GaAs integrated circuits, optical waveguides) - Research into the scaling limits of integrated
circuits - Study of quantum effects and other novel
phenomena at very small dimensions - Aharanov Bohm effect
- Ballistic electron effects
- Quantization of electron energy levels
- Single electron transistors
9EBL Resists
- Usually polymers dissolved in a liquid solvent.
The resist is dropped onto the substrate, which
is then spun at 1000 to 6000 rpm to form a
coating - After baking out the casting solvent, electron
exposure modifies the resist, leaving it either
more soluble (positive) or less soluble
(negative) in the developer - The pattern in the resist is transferred to the
substrate either through an etching process
(plasma or wet chemical) or by liftoff of material
10EBL Resists
- The sensitivity of the resist
- Positive resist the point at which all of the
resist is removed - Negative resist the point at which some of the
resist remains - Negative resist is faster
- The contrast
- A measure of the ability of the resist to
distinguish between light and dark portions of
the mask. It is defined as - which is the slope of the line.
11EBL Resists
- Charge dissipation
- Substrate charging causes considerable distortion
when patterning insulators and may contribute
significantly to overlayer errors even on
semiconductors - Solved by evaporating a thin metal film on top of
the resist which is removed before resist
development. - PMMA (polymethyl methacrylate)
- The most used EBL positive resist
- One of the highest resist resolutions available
12EBL Electron Optics
- EBL column
- Electron source
- Two or more lenses
- Beam deflector
- Beam blanker for turning the beam on/off
- Stigmator for astigmatism correction
- Apertures for helping to define the beam
- Alignment systems for beam centering
- Detector system for assisting with focusing and
locating marks on the sample
13EBL Electron Optics
- Electron Sources
- Thermionic source
- A conducting material is heated to the point
where the electrons have sufficient energy to
overcome the work function barrier of the
conductor - Field emission source
- Applying an electric field sufficiently strong
that the electrons can tunnel through the barrier - Desired source qualities
- High intensity (brightness)
- High uniformity
- Small spot size
- Good stability
- Long life
14EBL Electron Optics
15EBL Electron Optics
- Electron Lenses
- Electrostatic
- Magnetic
- Not as good as optical lenses
- Spherical aberration
- The outer zone of the lens focuses more strongly
than the inner zone - Chromatic aberration
- Electrons at slightly different energies get
focused at different image planes - Electrostatic lenses have worse aberrations than
magnetic lenses
Magnetic lense
16- Other Electron Optical Elements
- Apertures
- Small holes through which the beam passes on its
way down the collumn in order to shape the beam. - Electron beam deflection
- Used to scan the beam across the surface of the
sample - Can be done both electrostatically and
magnetically - Magnetic deflection causes less distortion, but
electrostatic deflection is faster. - Beam blanking (turning the beam on/off)
- Usually accomplished with a pair of plates set up
as a simple electrostatic deflector - Stigmators
- Special type of lens used to correct astigmatism,
where the beam focuses in different directions at
different lens settings the shape of a nominally
round beam becomes oblong. Can be both magnetic
and electrostatic.
17- The resolution
- Virtual source size dV divided by the
demagnification M-1 of the column gives the
diameter - Spherical aberrations limit the beam diameter to
- where Cs is the spherical aberration
coefficient of the final lens and a is the
convergence half-angle at the target. - Chromatic aberrations limit the beam diameter to
-
- where Cc is the chromatic aberration
coefficient, DV is the energy spread of the
electrons and Vb is the beam voltage - The wavelength of the electrons gives a
diffraction limit of resolution - The theoretical beam size is given by
18EBL Electron Solid Interactions
- Forward scattering
- As the electrons penetrate the resist a fraction
of them of them undergoes small angle scattering
events. - This effect can be minimized by using the
thinnest resist possible - Can be used to tailor the resist sidewall profile
(liftoff) - Backscattering
- In the substrate the electrons experience large
angle scattering and some of them return back to
the resist at a significant distance from the
incident beam, causing additional resist exposure
(proximity effect)
- Secondary electrons
- As the electrons slow down much of their energy
is dissipated in the form of secondary electrons.
Their range in the resist is only a few
nanometers, so they contribute little to the
proximity effect. Instead the net result is an
effective widening of the beam by roughly 10 nm.
19EBL Electron Solid Interactions
- The forward scattering of electrons in the resist
leads to overcut resist profile after
illumination, which is useful in liftoff processes
20EBL Proximity Effects
- The scattering of the electron beam results in
pattern specific linewidth variations called the
proximity effect. - A narrow line between two large exposed areas may
receive so many scattered electrons that it can
develop away (in positive resists) - A small feature may lose so much of its dose due
to scattering that it develops incompletely
SEM micrograph of a positive resist pattern on
silicon exposed with a 20 kV electron beam
demonstrates the proximity effect, where small
isolated exposed areas receive less dose
relative to larger or more densely exposed areas.
21EBL Proximity Effect Avoidance
- Dose adjustment
- Works well if the pattern has uniform density and
linewidths - Multilevel resist
- A thin top level is sensitive to the electrons
and the pattern developed in it is transferred to
the underlying layer by dry etching - Additional process complexity
- Higher beam voltages
- Minimize forward scattering, but can increase
backscattering - Low beam energies (electron range smaller than
the minimum feature size) - Must have thin resist layer
- Electrons more difficult to focus and more
sensitive to stray electric and magnetic fields
22EBL Proximity Effect Correction
- Dose modulation
- The dose received by the individual shapes is
corrected so that the shape prints at its correct
size - Shape-to-shape interactions are computationally
very time-consuming - Pattern biasing
- The extra dose that the dense patterns receive is
compensated by slightly reducing their size - GHOST
- The inverse tone of the pattern is written
- with a defocused beam designed to mimic
- the shape of the backscatter distribution.
23Wirebonding
- The wire, usually made of gold or aluminum, is
used to establish electrical connection from the
semiconductor chip (in the microscopic world) to
the external device leads (the macroscopic world) - Two versions of bonding
- Ball bonding
- Wedge bonding
24Wirebonding Ball-bonding
- The thin gold wire is melted with a small
electrical spark forming a metal ball at the end
of the wire - The capillary from which the wire is fed presses
the wire into the bonding pad on the chip - The capillary lifts and moves to the connection
where it descends and attaches the wire to the
pad - The wire is pulled back so it breaks close to the
bonding area - Commonly referred to as Ball-Wedge-bonding
25Wirebonding Wedge-bonding
- The wire is pressed into the semiconductor pad
horizontally and attaches in that position - The wedge tool moves to the connection pad
position where, identically, the wire is attached
horizontally - The wire is pulled back in order to break after
the attachment bond area - Directional bonding
- Smaller wire loop
- Can provide closer bonding (relevant for smaller
devices)
26Wirebonding
- There are three major wirebonding processes
- Thermocompression
- Applying a relatively high force with the formed
wire ball into the pre-heated chip or substrate - Ball-bonding
- Ultrasonic
- Applying a relatively smaller force pressing the
wire to the chip at room temperature and applying
vibrational energy in form of ultrasounds - Reliability and bond strength not as good as
thermosonic bonding - Wedge-bonding
- Thermosonic
- Most common method
- Temperature around 100-150 oC, combines pressure
and ultrasonic energy to form the bond - Suitable for both ball-bonding and wedge-bonding
27Wirebonding