DocumentCode :
1211762
Title :
Controlled Deposition of {\\rm SiO}_{2} Nanoparticles of NIST-Traceable Particle Sizes for Mask Surface Inspection System Characterization
Author :
Yook, Se-Jin ; Fissan, Heinz ; Engelke, Thomas ; Asbach, Christof ; Van der Zwaag, Till ; Kim, Jung Hyeun ; Eschbach, Florence ; Wang, Jing ; Pui, David Y.H.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Mech. Eng., Hanyang Univ., Seoul
Volume :
21
Issue :
2
fYear :
2008
fDate :
5/1/2008 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
238
Lastpage :
243
Abstract :
Particulate contamination of masks is a serious challenge in extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) technology due to the unavailability of conventional pellicles. EUVL mask surface inspection tools, operated at low pressure, are used not only for mask contamination control/monitoring but also for mask surface cleaning studies. In EUVL, contaminant particles can be generated during low-pressure stages of integrated circuit (IC) manufacturing and may contaminate the mask critical surface without protective pellicles. It is therefore needed to characterize the EUVL mask surface inspection tools with contaminants commonly seen in vacuum processes. We have developed a method to deposit particles of known material and NIST-traceable sizes on the mask surface for the purpose of calibrating the EUVL mask surface inspection tools. Our method can produce particles with 98% size-uniformity. SiO2 particles with NIST-traceable sizes of 50 nm, 60 nm, and 70 nm were separately deposited on quartz mask blanks with a controlled deposition spot size and number density, and detected by a Lasertec M1350 mask surface scanner. The results demonstrate high capture efficiencies for 60 and 70 nm SiO2 particles, and significantly lower capture efficiency for 50 nm SiO2 particles. The sizing accuracy of Lasertec M1350 deteriorates with decreasing particle size.
Keywords :
inspection; integrated circuit manufacture; masks; nanolithography; nanoparticles; particle size; semiconductor materials; silicon compounds; surface contamination; ultraviolet lithography; EUVL technology; Lasertec M1350 mask surface scanner; NIST-traceable particle sizes; SiO2; extreme ultraviolet lithography technology; integrated circuit manufacturing; mask; mask contamination; nanoparticles; particle size; quartz mask; surface cleaning; surface inspection tools; Inspection; Integrated circuit manufacture; Integrated circuit technology; Lithography; Monitoring; Pressure control; Protection; Surface cleaning; Surface contamination; Ultraviolet sources; ${rm SiO}_2$ particles; Monodisperse particle generation; NIST-traceable particle size; nanoparticles; particle deposition on masks;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Semiconductor Manufacturing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0894-6507
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TSM.2008.2000266
Filename :
4512067
Link To Document :
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