Title :
High-average power EUV light source for the next-generation lithography by laser-produced plasma
Author_Institution :
Hiratsuka R&D Center, Kanagawa, Japan
Abstract :
Laser-produced plasma is expected to fulfill the strict requirement as an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) light source for the next-generation lithography with 115-W average power at the intermediate focus, in terms of stability, minimum contamination, and cost of ownership. A liquid xenon micro jet is employed in our experimental facility to confirm the scalability up to the 115-W clean output power. The present experimental device is composed of a 1-kW 10-kHz 6-ns Nd:YAG laser with a xenon jet of up to 50-μm diameter of 35 m/s speed inside a vacuum chamber, combined with a xenon recirculation system. The observed EUV power is 4 W at 13.5 nm (2% bandwidth, 2πsr) from the plasma source with 0.5% stability (1 σ, 50-pulse moving average). Debris mitigation and contamination control is now studied for fast ions by time-of-flight measurements, and confinement and exhaust by a magnetic field is shown to be effective. Xe+ to Xe13+ ions were observed with Xe2+ being the main charged state. Experimental study is presented on these subjects and further parametric study on the laser wavelength and pulsewidth is reported, discussing the scalability toward the realization of a 115-W system.
Keywords :
plasma jets; plasma production by laser; plasma sources; time of flight spectra; ultraviolet lithography; ultraviolet sources; xenon; 1 kW; 10 kHz; 115 W; 13.5 nm; 35 m/s; 4 W; 50 mum; 6 ns; Nd:YAG laser; Xe; Xe+ ions; Xe13+ ions; Xe2+ charged state; YAG:Nd; YAl5O12:Nd; contamination control; debris mitigation; extreme ultraviolet light source; fast ions; high-average power light source; laser-produced plasma; liquid xenon microjet; magnetic field confinement; magnetic field exhaust; next-generation lithography; plasma source; time-of-flight measurements; vacuum chamber; xenon recirculation system; Contamination; Laser stability; Light sources; Lithography; Plasma sources; Plasma stability; Power lasers; Scalability; Ultraviolet sources; Xenon;
Journal_Title :
Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JSTQE.2004.837715