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Principles of Optical Lithography

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1 Principles of Optical Lithography
Layout: Motivation IC manufacturing Traditional method and trends Resolution enhancement techniques University of Szeged Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

2 „From Lithography to Optical Lithography”
lithography: Graphic Arts. any of several printing processes, such as offset lithography, in which the image areas of a plate are treated (photographically or directly by hand, as with a lithographic crayon) to accept greasy inks and repel water, while the nonimage area accept water and repel ink. /Dictionary of Science and Technology/ A litográfia szó eredeti jelentése “Object” “Image” printing process Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

3 Optical lithography is the process used to transfer a
„From Lithography to Optical Lithography” “Object” “Image” optical imaging process Az optikai litográfia az IC gyártás egyik lépése amely során a maszkon lévő mintázatot egy lencserendszer segítségével egy fényérzékeny vékony rétegbe (resist) exponálják. application: cameras, microscopes, manufacturing of integrated circuits (IC) Optical lithography is the process used to transfer a pattern to a layer of an integrated circuit. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

4 Manufacturing of Integrated Circuits
Az IC gyartasanak lépései. Korkoros, azaz a képen látható gyártási folyamat tobbszor megismetlodik. Chip fabrication occurs as a cycle of steps carried out as many as 20 times! Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

5 Silicon crystal (ingot)
Manufacturing of Integrated Circuits 4 Si substrate Light Photoresist SiO2 SiO2 Thermal oxidation 3 Si - substrate Silicon crystal (ingot) 1 polished wafer 2 Silicon is the most abundant element on the Earth except for oxygen. Silicon is a natural semiconductor, which means that it can be altered to be either an isolator or conductor. Purified silicon is melted and then formed into cylindrical single crystals called ingots. The ingots are sliced into wafers about mm (0.03 inch) thick. In the step called polarization the wafers polished untill they have a mirror-smooth surface. The diameter of the wafer is 8 inches (200 mm) and 12 inches (300 mm). Bigger wafers mean that more chips can be made at one time, holding down the cost per chip. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. 5 6 7 8 9

6 Photolithography - Equipment
Resist Dispenser Spin Coater: Used for the application of photoresist, primer, and developer. Photoresist Thickness Control: Photoresist Viscosity Spin Speed Temperature Humidity A subsztratra a resistet spin-coating eljarassal szokas felvinni. Vacuum Chuck Hollow Shaft To House Vacuum Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

7 Photolithography - Equipment
Spin Speed vs. Thickness: A resist vastagsaga a fordulatszammal allithato be. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

8 Positive vs. Negative Resist
Positive Resist: Photo Mask Resist Silicon Substrate Oxide Pozitiv resist eseten a fennyel kolcsonhatasba lepo reszt tudjuk eltavolitani. Light areas on the mask => photoresist is removed during development. Long-chained molecules in resist are broken down to smaller chains by the UV light, which are easily dissolved by the developer solution. Capable of smaller features, better resolution, but has poor adhesion and costs much more. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

9 Positive vs. Negative Resist
Photo Mask Resist Resist Oxide Oxide Silicon Substrate Dark areas on the mask => photoresist is removed during development. Short-chain molecules in the resist are “cross-linked” by the UV light. Resultant longer chains are resistant to developer solution. Better adhesion, but incapable of producing submicron features. Only used (anymore) for certain specialty applications. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

10 Threshold of Photoresists
A photoresist kuszobszeruen viselkedik, azaz kell egy min. energia, hogy „valami törtenjen” Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

11 Manufacturing of Integrated Circuits
4 Si substrate Light Photoresist SiO2 Silicon is the most abundant element on the Earth except for oxygen. Silicon is a natural semiconductor, which means that it can be altered to be either an isolator or conductor. Purified silicon is melted and then formed into cylindrical single crystals called ingots. The ingots are sliced into wafers about mm (0.03 inch) thick. In the step called polarization the wafers polished untill they have a mirror-smooth surface. The diameter of the wafer is 8 inches (200 mm) and 12 inches (300 mm). Bigger wafers mean that more chips can be made at one time, holding down the cost per chip. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. 5 6 7 8 9

12 „From Optical Lithography to Projection Optical Lithography”
Contact Printing Projection Printing simplest design (M=1x, no optics) easy to operate but requires mask cleaning limited to ~1m features contact printing: there is a physical contact between the mask and the resist, requires mask cleaning procedure and homogeneous illumination as large beam as the mask pattern proximity printing: There is gap between the mask and the resist, therefore there is a resolution loss introduced by diffraction. projection printing: It has 4 subcategories, the critical point is the field size, the bigger the field size the bigger the area we can image instead mechanical movement step and scan: the whole reticle is devided into smaller part and these parts scanned sequantually. Proximity Printing simple design (M=1x, no optics) easy to operate limited to ~1  m features (diffraction) some resolution loss due to gap complex design (M=1x, no optics) limited by field size, optical aberrations etc. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

13 Clean Room Environment
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Clean Room Environment “2. line of defence” “first line of defence” Since we are in the sub micron range even very small dusts could cause series problems. Therefore the whole process is made in a clean environment called clean room. However, there is a second line of defence.

14 Early integrated circuit Salt-size transistors
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Transistor miniaturization The first transistor 1948 Early integrated circuit 1973 Technological jump in 1958 when Kilby invented the integrated circuits. The tendency is clear, to reduce the size of the electronic components Salt-size transistors 1964 DRAM chip 1997

15 Transistor miniaturization
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Transistor miniaturization Moore’s Law: the number of transistors quadruples every four years Rock’s Law: the cost of a fab doubles every four years Result 1: fewer advanced fabs and fewer fab operators, fabless/foundry partnerships Result 2: Extend the lifetime of every generation, by means of super resolution techniques. Moore law is empirical law. New generation means for example when a new wavelength is introduced. New wavelength means new stepper, new materials, such as new resist. The introduction of a new generation is extremly expensive. Therefore, researches try to extend the lifetime of the “old” steppers by means of alternatives techniques, which are not require stepper modification. PST is a typical example.

16 Rayleigh resolution limit
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Rayleigh resolution limit Egy homogen modon kivilagitott diffrakciolimitalt lencse fokuszaban az intenzitasprofil.

17 Rayleigh resolution limit
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Rayleigh resolution limit Lateral Resolution Critical Feature Size Critical Dimension Axial Resolution Depth of Field Depth of Focus A feloldas az NA novelesevel, vagy a hullamhossz csokkentesevel erheto el. Ezek a hagyomanyos modszerek. De a k, rendszerre jellemzo parametert is lehet modositani. How can we enhance the resolution? Reducing the wavelength () Increasing the numerical aperture (NA) Manipulating the k1 factor

18 Lithography Roadmap (reduction of )
Why excimer is the winner? Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

19 Lithography Roadmap - Why Excimers
It is difficult to design and manufacture an achromatic projection lens for excimer lasers in deep UV due to the small difference in chromatic dispersion between fused quartz and fluorite, in addition to other material related problems, such as UV-induced defect formation. A kromatikus hiba nagy hatrany az UV tartomanyban, mert akromatot nem lehet kesziteni.  < 0.6 pm Beam shaping Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

20 Development of Projection Optics (increasing of NA)
Lithography represents the greatest capital expense in an advanced fab Strategies to stretch machine capabilities and extend the lifetime of every generation Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

21 Development of Projection Optics (evolution of the stepper)
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

22 Stepper Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

23 Importance of DOF DOF is limited by thickness of the resist
surface smoothness (although the wafer is polished, aftert several fabrication cycles the surface has a complex topology) A DOF a struktúra miatt is nagy kell hogy legyen, a resist vastagsaga mellett ez egy eros limit. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

24 Chemical-Mechanical Polishing (CMP)
Minden egyes lepes utan polirozzuk le. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

25 Chemical-Mechanical Polishing (CMP)
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

26 Importance of DOF The required minimum feature size reduces
from 0.24 micron to 0.04 micron The required DOF is 0.5 micron in 2010, /limited by the thickness of the resist/ Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

27 Images in lithography Designed Pattern Mask Aerial Image Real Image
Mask writing process (e-beam or laser) Mask Stepper (NA, M, , , etc.) Aerial Image Wafer reflection Thin film effects Real Image Photochemistry Diffusion Latent Image Development Resist Image Pattern transfer Device Layer Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

28 Aerial versus Resist image simulated by Solid-C
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

29 Image formation based on Fourier Optics
m(x,y): electric field transmittance of the mask P(fx,fy): transfer function of the optical system (different interpretations are possible) Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

30 Image formation Manhattan Geometry
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Image formation Manhattan Geometry Szigoru eloirasok a lehetseges, alkalmazhato alakzatokrol.

31 Image formation Number of diffracted orders
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Image formation Number of diffracted orders (Spatial Fourier components) Image quality Harom diffrakcios rendnek benne kell lennie az aperturaban. Kulonben nem oldhato fel a racs. Conventional imaging requires minimum 3 diffraction orders

32 Fourier series of a grating
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. Fourier series of a grating mask 1/2 k=0 k=1 k=2 k=40 f(x)=1/2 threshold of the photoresist De a resist kuszobszeruen viselkedik, igy az elohivott kép lehet kontrasztos. 1 1 1 -3 -2 - 2 3

33 Resolution Enhancement Techniques
Input Parameters Mirror * Wavelength () Light Source * Bandwidth * Exposure Filter * Filter (annular, quadrupole, etc.) * Spatial coherence () Condenser Lens Mask * Binary or PS mask (Manhattan geometry) * Magnification (M) * Numerical Aperture (NA) * Resist system * Thickness * Absorp. Param. A, B * Rate Constant C * Refractive Index * Development Model * etc. * Defocus Pupil-Plane Filter * Pupil-plane filter/Aberrations * Image model Projection Lens System * Image flare Wafer with Photoresist Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

34 Resolution Enhancement Techniques - OPC
Linewidth variation The light intensity profile is not significantly different for the isolated 1.0 micron line as for the 1.0 micron line/1 micron spacing grating. Isolated and grouped lines are expected to print approximately the same with. A feloldas erosen fugg a mintatol. Significantly different light intensity profiles depending upon whether the lines are isolated or part of a grating structure The size of a line is dependent upon its proximity to other geometries Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

35 Resolution Enhancement Techniques - OPC
Silicon Image w/o OPC Conventional (no OPC) Valtoztassuk meg a maszkon a mintat ugy, hogy a vegso kep lehyen jo. Original Layout 0.18 mm OPC Layout Silicon Image with OPC Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

36 Resolution Enhancement Techniques - OPC
Problems: Proximity effects Nonlinearity Line shortening Corner rounding Solution: OPC (Optical proximity correction): is the technique of predistorting mask patterns such that the printed patterns are as close to the desired shape as possible. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

37 Resolution Enhancement Techniques - OPC
OPC processes 1. Catastrophic OPC: The goal is to guarantee presence of a pattern without feature-size control worries. Precise dimension control is not critical. An example is to ensure a wire is continuous and that no open circuit will result. 2. One dimensional OPC (Linewidth variation minimization): Vary the size of each feature on the photomask depending on its nominal dimension and environment /For example, dense and sparse lines are made smaller on the mask whereas lines of intermediate periodicities are made larger/ 3. Line shortening method: 4. Corner rounding: biasing if there is room Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

38 Resolution Enhancement Techniques - OPC
Uncorrected Test Pattern Vertex Count=94 Super Aggressive Correction Vertex Count=1106 Limited by the pixel size of the mask writing process!!! Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

39 Resolution Enhancement Techniques /Off-Axis Illumination/
0. +1. +2. -1. -2. Photo-Mask Projection Lens Photo-Resist Intensity in the Pupil-plane Conventional Illumination Off-Axis TWO BEAM IMAGING! Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

40 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

41 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

42 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

43 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

44 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
A maszkon a fazistolo hiba nagyobb gondot okoz mint a krom hiba. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

45 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Phase-shifting masks are classified as “strong” and “weak”, according to their ability to suppress the zero order diffraction component. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

46 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Phase Shifting Layer Chrome Alternating/Levenson PSM Attenuated PSM Phase Shifting Layer (T ) Dark Field Grating (PS Layer) Chromeless PSM Outrigger PSM Rim PSM Interferometric PSM ? Phase Shifting Method without Phase Shifting Layer. a. b. c. d. e. f. Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

47 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Four-beam imaging z Front Illumination Reflective Chrome Layer 2· x Fused Silica Substrate Back Illumination Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

48 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
Image Plane Mask L3 L2 L1 Optical Axis CCD 0.7° Piezo Translator M1 M2 Attenuator Ar+-ion laser (=457.9) nm Beam Splitter Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

49 Resolution Enhancement Techniques Phase Shifting Techniques
1 3.5 Intensity X(m) Calculated Measured CCD Image a b c d e f g h R image T image Correct Phase Wrong Phase Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

50 What’s next for Optical Lithography
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. What’s next for Optical Lithography

51 What’s next for Optical Lithography
Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20. What’s next for Optical Lithography

52 Lithography Roadmap Principles of Optical Lithography, 2002 November 20.

53 Development of Projection Optics (increasing of NA)
Catadioptric and immersion objectives NANO Fórum 2006 December 13.


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