Software for semiconductor manufacturing. Design-Aware Manufacturing. Manufacturing-Aware Design. Curvilinear mask data processing. Currently working on realizing synergies from curvilinear (mask and design), GPU-acceleration, Pixel-based computing, and deep learning.
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Simultaneously, the same need for linearity correction, printability enhancement, and resilience to manufacturing variation has caused much innovation in offline mask data preparation and mask process correction. Typically, the writer performs inline correction for backscatter, fogging, loading, charging and thermal effects, but leaves <10μm effects to offline correction.
With multi-beam writers, the write time is independent of shape count. Any set of input shapes is rasterized to a set of arrays of equal sized pixels that are each independently dosed to write the desired shapes. Multi-beam writers also have a certain minimum write time that is required for writing even a very small number of simple shapes. This gives rise to the possibility of providing linearity correction features, even for the short-range effects as inline correction in the writer. Such inline correction has zero impact on throughput and turnaround time of mask making.
This paper introduces the GPU-accelerated inline linearity correction capability of the NuFlare MBM-1000 for the first time.
Last year, thermal effect correction (TEC) was introduced by NuFlare in the EBM-95001. It is a GPU-accelerated inline correction for the effect that the temperature of the resist has on CD. For example, a 100nm CD may print at 102nm where that area was at a comparably high temperature at the time of the shot. Since thermal effect is a temporal effect, the simulated temperature of the surface of the mask is dynamically updated for the effect of each shot in order to accurately predict the cumulative effect that is the temperature at the location of the shot at the time of the shot and therefore its impact on CD. The shot dose is changed to reverse the effects of the temperature change.
This paper for the first time reveals an enhancement to this thermal model and a simulator for it. It turns out that the temperature at the time each location receives backscatter from other shots also make a difference to the CD. The effect is secondary, but still measurable for some resists and substrates. Results of a test-chip study will be presented.
The computation required for the backscatter effect is substantial. It has been demonstrated that this calculation can be performed fast enough to be inline with the EBM-9500 with a reasonable-sized computing platform. Run-time results and the computing architecture will be presented.
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