Paper
11 April 2006 Analysis of 193nm immersion specific defects
Akihiko Otoguro, Jeung-Woo Lee, Toshiro Itani, Kiyoshi Fujii, Tomohiro Funakoshi, Tsunehiro Sakai, Kenji Watanabe, Mikio Arakawa, Hitoshi Nakano, Masamichi Kobayashi
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A great deal of research effort is focused on accelerating the development of 193-nm immersion lithography because it appears to be the most suitable lithographic solution available for 65-nm-and-below semiconductor devices. To realize a 193-nm immersion process, we must find ways to detect and analyze immersion specific defects, and then establish processes that let us avoid such defects. In this paper, we examine immersion specific defects and ways to detect and eliminate them in production processes. Through comparison of dry exposure and immersion exposure processes, we have found that "bridges" and "water-marks" are the most significant immersion specific defects using current developable top-coats. Although we confirmed that the current solvent-removable top-coat process is better for avoiding immersion specific defects, we also found that the defect density with a developable top-coat was still low enough for volume production. We also investigated the causes of immersion specific defects and hypothesized that DI water permeation and the local topology of the top-coat play an important role in the generation of immersion specific defects. To test whether this was so, we evaluated the change in the top-coat film thickness by the quartz crystal microbalance technique. We confirmed that top-coat swelling caused by water permeation into the top-coat film is a major cause of immersion
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Akihiko Otoguro, Jeung-Woo Lee, Toshiro Itani, Kiyoshi Fujii, Tomohiro Funakoshi, Tsunehiro Sakai, Kenji Watanabe, Mikio Arakawa, Hitoshi Nakano, and Masamichi Kobayashi "Analysis of 193nm immersion specific defects", Proc. SPIE 6153, Advances in Resist Technology and Processing XXIII, 61531P (11 April 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.656086
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Photoresist processing

Bridges

Semiconducting wafers

Photography

Scanning electron microscopy

Immersion lithography

Thin film coatings

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