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Section 2: Lithography Jaeger Chapter 2 EE143 – Ali Javey.

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Presentation on theme: "Section 2: Lithography Jaeger Chapter 2 EE143 – Ali Javey."— Presentation transcript:

1 Section 2: Lithography Jaeger Chapter 2 EE143 – Ali Javey

2 The lithographic process
EE143 – Ali Javey

3 Photolithographic Process
Substrate covered with silicon dioxide barrier layer Positive photoresist applied to wafer surface Mask in close proximity to surface Substrate following resist exposure and development Substrate after etching of oxide layer Oxide barrier on surface after resist removal View of substrate with silicon dioxide pattern on the surface EE143 – Ali Javey

4 Photomasks - CAD Layout
Composite drawing of the masks for a simple integrated circuit using a four-mask process Drawn with computer layout system Complex state-of-the-art CMOS processes may use 25 masks or more EE143 – Ali Javey

5 Photo Masks Example of 10X reticle for the metal mask - this particular mask is ten times final size (10 mm minimum feature size - huge!) Used in step-and-repeat operation One mask for each lithography level in process EE143 – Ali Javey

6 Lithographic Process EE143 – Ali Javey

7 Printing Techniques Contact printing Proximity printing
Projection printing Contact printing damages the mask and the wafer and limits the number of times the mask can be used Proximity printing eliminates damage Projection printing can operate in reduction mode with direct step-on-wafer, eliminating the need for the reduction step presented earlier EE143 – Ali Javey

8 Contact Printing hv photoresist wafer Resolution R < 0.5m
Mask Plate photoresist wafer Resolution R < 0.5m mask plate is easily damaged or accumulates defects EE143 – Ali Javey

9 R is proportional to (  g ) 1/2
Proximity Printing hv g~20m Photoresist exposed wafer R is proportional to (  g ) 1/2 ~ 1mm for visible photons, much smaller for X-ray lithography EE143 – Ali Javey

10 Projection Printing hv De-Magnification: nX 10X stepper 4X stepper
lens focal plane P.R. wafer ~0.2 mm resolution (deep UV photons) tradeoff: optics complicated and expensive EE143 – Ali Javey

11 Aerial Images formed by Contact Printing, Proximity Printing and Projection Printing
EE143 – Ali Javey

12 Optical Stepper EE143 – Ali Javey

13 Excimer Laser Stepper Light is in pulses of 20 ns duration at a repetition rate of a few kHz. About 50 pulses are used. EE143 – Ali Javey

14 Photon Sources EE143 – Ali Javey

15 Resolution limits in projection printing
EE143 – Ali Javey

16 Resolution limits: Bragg condition
EE143 – Ali Javey

17 Image Degradation by lens
EE143 – Ali Javey

18 The /NA limit EE143 – Ali Javey

19 Resolution and the need for higher order terms
EE143 – Ali Javey

20 Depth of Focus (DOF) off point best EE143 – Ali Javey

21 Example of DOF problem Photo mask Field Oxide Different photo images
EE143 – Ali Javey

22 Tradeoffs in projection lithography
lm (1) and (2) require a compromise between  and NA ! EE143 – Ali Javey

23 Sub-resolution exposure: Phase Shifting Masks
Pattern transfer of two closely spaced lines Conventional mask technology - lines not resolved Lines can be resolved with phase-shift technology EE143 – Ali Javey

24 Immersion Lithography
A liquid with index of refraction n>1 is introduced between the imaging optics and the wafer. Advantages Resolution is improved proportionately to n. For water, the index of refraction at l = 193 nm is 1.44, improving the resolution significantly, from 90 to 64 nm. 2) Increased depth of focus at larger features, even those that are printable with dry lithography. EE143 – Ali Javey

25 Image Quality Metric: Contrast
EE143 – Ali Javey

26 Image Quality metric: Slope of image
* simulated aerial image of an isolated line EE143 – Ali Javey

27 The need for high contrast
EE143 – Ali Javey

28 Resists for Lithography
Positive Negative Exposure Sources Light Electron beams Xray sensitive EE143 – Ali Javey

29 Two Resist Types Negative Resist Positive Resist
Polymer (Molecular Weight (MW) ~65000) Light Sensitive Additive Promotes Crosslinking Volatile Solvents Light breaks N-N => Crosslink Chains Sensitive, hard, Swelling during Develop Positive Resist Polymer (MW~5000) Photoactive Inhibitor (20%) Inhibitor Looses N2 => Alkali Soluble Acid Develops by “etching” - No Swelling. EE143 – Ali Javey

30 Positive P.R. Mechanism Photons deactivate sensitizer less
cross-linking dissolve in developer solution polymer + photosensitizer EE143 – Ali Javey

31 Positive Resist E = resist sensitivity 1 Resist contrast º æ E ö log ç
÷ 10 è E ø 1 EE143 – Ali Javey

32 Negative P.R. Mechanism hv => cross-linking => insoluble in developer solution. EE143 – Ali Javey

33 Positive vs. Negative Photoresists
Positive P.R.: higher resolution aqueous-based solvents less sensitive Negative P.R.: more sensitive => higher exposure throughput relatively tolerant of developing conditions better chemical resistance => better mask material less expensive lower resolution organic-based solvents EE143 – Ali Javey

34 Overlay Errors alignment mask + wafer photomask plate Alignment marks
from previous masking level EE143 – Ali Javey

35 Thermal Run-in/Run-out errors
wafer radius EE143 – Ali Javey

36 Rotational / Translational Errors
image Al n+ referrer p (3) Rotational Error EE143 – Ali Javey

37 Overlay implications: Contacts
EE143 – Ali Javey

38 Overlay implications: Gate edge
EE143 – Ali Javey

39 Total Overlay Tolerance
si = std. deviation of overlay error for ith masking step stotal = std. deviation for total overlay error Layout design-rule specification should be > stotal EE143 – Ali Javey

40 Standing Waves EE143 – Ali Javey

41 Standing waves in photoresists
x P.R. d SiO2/Si substrate Intensity = minimum when m = 0, 1, 2,... Intensity = maximum when m = 1, 3, 5,... n = refractive index of resist EE143 – Ali Javey

42 Proximity Scattering EE143 – Ali Javey

43 Approaches for Reducing Substrate Effects
Use absorption dyes in photoresist Use anti-reflection coating (ARC) Use multi-layer resist process 1: thin planar layer for high-resolution imaging 2: thin develop-stop layer, used for pattern transfer to 3 3: thick layer of hardened resist (imaging layer) (etch stop) (planarization layer) EE143 – Ali Javey

44 Electron-Beam Lithography
Angstroms for V in Volts Example: 30 kV e-beam => l = 0.07 Angstroms NA = – 0.005 Resolution < 1 nm But beam current needs to be 10’s of mA for a throughput of more than 10 wafers an hour. EE143 – Ali Javey

45 Types of Ebeam Systems EE143 – Ali Javey

46 Resolution limits in e-beam lithography
EE143 – Ali Javey

47 The Proximity Effect EE143 – Ali Javey


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