DOC PREVIEW
Berkeley ELENG C235 - Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical Lithography

This preview shows page 1-2 out of 7 pages.

Save
View full document
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 7 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 7 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 7 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience

Unformatted text preview:

Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical LithographyMotivation for Immersion LithographyLimitations of Immersion LithographyFrustrated Total Internal ReflectionEvanescent Wave Assist Features (EWAF)ConclusionsReferences© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyEvanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical LithographyReinaldo VegaEE2352/13/08© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyMotivation for Immersion LithographyConventional lithography:Minimum half-pitch = k*/NAk = “process factor.” Empirically determined, but typically ~ 0.3.NA = numerical aperture.NA = n*sinn = lowest refractive index in the system = lens system half-anglePhysical NA limit = 1 in conventional systems with air (n=1) bet. lens and wafer.Min-half pitch = 57.9nm at 193nm litho, k=0.3, for “perfect” lens (NA = 1).Realistically NA ~ 0.9 => half pitch = 64.33 nmImmersion LithographyPutting fluid between lens and wafer. Fluid acts as a “final lens.”Can achieve NA > 1 (hyper-NA)Increases minimum refractive index => half-pitch drops.Consider water (n = 1.44). For classical NA = 0.9, immersion NA = 1.296.Half-pitch = 44.67 nm.Other fluids:Aluminum chloride (n = 1.6)Hydrogen phosphate (n = 1.54)Sodium sulfate (n = 1.49)© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyLimitations of Immersion LithographyHigh absorption in fluids other than water (~10-100x).Higher dose-to-clear.Lower wafer throughput.Resist swelling/contamination for thin films.n>1.6 difficult to achieve with fluids.Resolution limitation, half-pitch ~ 40 nm.Potential solution: Solid Immersion Lithography (SIL)Use solid final “lens” between lens system and wafer.Sapphire (Al2O3) is common (n = 1.92 @ 193nm).Half-pitch drops to 33.5 nm (for k = 0.3).Hyper-NA systems face problem of Total Internal Reflection (TIR).nsapphire > nphotoresistCritical angle related to interface between high (nH) and low (nL) index media.c=sin-1(nL/nH)Example: NAclassical-lens = 0.9, resist index = 1.7, sapphire SIL with normal light incidence from lens.c = sin-1(1.7/1.92) = 62.3 degrees.lens = sin-1(0.9) = 64.2 degrees!! TIR!!But photoresist still exposed! Why???© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyFrustrated Total Internal ReflectionSimilar to “tunneling,” but for photons.Some transmission still occurs in low index medium under TIR.“evanescent wave” with exponentially decaying amplitude.Turns back into homogeneous wave upon confronting a higher index medium (e.g., photoresist).Circumvents limitations of incidence angle on TIR.Highly sensitive to gap spacing between SIL layer and photoresist.Requires strong process control of resist, BARC, and TARC thicknesses.Significant gap spacing implications for wafer throughput.© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyEvanescent Wave Assist Features (EWAF)TIR not needed to form evanescent waves.Surface bound evanescent waves useful for enhancing image quality.Example: contact holes.Surface bound evanescent waves, constructive interference.Exposing radiation62nm wide© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyConclusionsEvanescent wave lithography (EWL) has wafer- and mask-level applications.Wafer-level:Solid immersion lithography (SIL) with high index media.Total internal reflection (TIR) not a concern if small SIL-to-wafer gap spacing can be achieved.Mask-level:Surface bound evanescent waves can be harnessed to improve image contrast/sidewall angle.World-record imaging with EWL.Smallest half-pitch to-date (26 nm).Good for 32nm, 22nm nodes.Optical lithography isn’t dead yet!!!© 2008, Reinaldo Vega UC BerkeleyReferencesBruce W. Smith et al., “Evanescent wave imaging in optical lithography,” Proc. SPIE, 6154 (2006)Bruce W. Smith et al., “25nm Immersion Lithography at a 193nm Wavelength,” Proc. SPIE, 5754


View Full Document

Berkeley ELENG C235 - Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical Lithography

Documents in this Course
Nanowires

Nanowires

24 pages

Nanowires

Nanowires

21 pages

Load more
Download Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical Lithography
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical Lithography and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view Evanescent Wave Imaging Using Optical Lithography 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?