1 / 13

Effect of Resist Thickness

Effect of Resist Thickness. Resists usually do not have uniform thickness on the wafer Edge bead: The build-up of resist along the circumference of the wafer - There are edge bead removal systems Step coverage. Centrifugal Force. Effect of Resist Thickness.

tirza
Download Presentation

Effect of Resist Thickness

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Effect of Resist Thickness • Resists usually do not have uniform thickness on the wafer • Edge bead: The build-up of resist along the circumference of the wafer • - There are edge bead removal systems • Step coverage Centrifugal Force

  2. Effect of Resist Thickness • The resist can be underexposed where it is thicker and overexposed where it is thinner • This can lead to linewidth variations • Light intensity varies with depth below the surface due to absorptionwhere  is the optical absorption coefficient • Thus, the resist near the surface is exposed first • We have good fortune. There is a process called bleaching in which the exposed material becomes almost transparent • i.e.,  decreases after exposure to light • - Therefore, more light goes to deeper layers

  3. aexposed = B and aunexposed = A+B C. A. Mack, “Absorption and exposure in positive photoresist”, Appl. Opt. 27(23), Dec. 1, 1988, pp. 4913-4919.

  4. Photoresist Absorption • If the photoresist becomes transparent, and if the underlying surface is reflective, reflected light from the wafer will expose the photoresist in areas we do not want it to. • However, this leads to the possibility of standing waves (due to interference), with resultant waviness of the developed resist • We can solve this by putting an antireflective coating on the surface before spinning the photoresist  increases process complexity

  5. Standing Waves due to Reflections

  6. Standing Waves Due to Reflections http://www.lithoguru.com/scientist/lithobasics.html

  7. Removal of Standing Wave Pattern (a)                                     (b)                                (c) Diffusion during a post-exposure bake (PEB) is often used to reduce standing waves. Photoresist profile simulations as a function of the PEB diffusion length: (a) 20nm, (b) 40nm, and (c) 60nm. http://www.lithoguru.com/scientist/lithobasics.html

  8. Mask Engineering • There are two ways to improve the quality of the image transferred to the photoresist • Optical Proximity Correction (OPC) • Phase Shift Masks (PSM) • We note that the lenses in projections systems are both finite and circular • Most features on the mask are square • We lose the high frequency components of the pattern • We thus lose information about the “squareness” of the corners

  9. Mask Engineering • The effects are quite predictable • We can correct them by adjusting feature dimensions and shapes in the masks

  10. Mask Engineering

  11. Phase Shift Masks • In a projection system, the amplitudes of the diffracted light at the wafer add • Closely spaced lines interact; the intensity at the wafer is smeared • If we put a material of proper index of refraction on part of the mask, we can retard some of the light and change its phase by 180 degrees • Properly done, the amplitudes interfere • The thickness of the PS layer is n is the index of refraction of the phase shift material

  12. Phase Shift Masks (PSM) Intensity pattern is barely sufficient to resolve the two patterns.

More Related