Two essential process steps of the template fabrication chain are inspection and repair. The widely introduced gas
assisted e-beam etching and deposition technique for mask repair offers crucial advantages, especially regarding the
resolution capability. We started the evaluation of a new e-beam repair test stand based on the Zeiss MeRiT technology
for UV-NIL template repair. For this purpose, templates with programmed defects of different shapes and sizes have
been designed and fabricated. The repair experiments were focused on the development of recipes for quartz etching and
deposition specifically tailored for NIL repair requirements Both, clear and opaque programmed defects have been
repaired and the results have been analyzed. After recipe optimization, templates with repaired programmed defects have
been imprinted on a Molecular Imprints Imprio 250 tool. By comparing template and imprint results we investigated the
repair capability.
To overcome several drawbacks of the standard pattern copy procedure used to create the repair shape(s) for a particular defect site, we have developed and implemented a layout based pattern copy method (a.k.a. "database pattern copy"). In general, pattern copy derives the repair structure by comparing a high resolution image of the defective area with the same image of a non-defective area. The repair shape is generated as the difference of these two images, and adjusted for processing purposes. As opposed to the conventional pattern copy method, which derives the reference using information taken from the mask under repair, the new method uses reference information from the original mask design file. As a result, it reduces the CD error of the repair, simplifies the repair process work flow, and greatly reduces the potential of operator error. We present the new method along with experimental results taken from programmed defect repair on our MeRiT MGTM production tool.
With the ever decreasing feature sizes and increasing cost of current and future photolithographic masks the repair of these masks becomes a substantial factor of the total mask production cost. In a collaborative effort NaWoTec, Carl Zeiss Nano Technology Systems Division (NTS) and Carl Zeiss Semiconductor Metrology Systems Division (SMS) have built an electron beam based mask repair tool capable of processing a wide variety of mask types, such as quartz binary masks, phase shift masks, EUV masks, and e-beam projection stencil masks. In this paper, besides a brief overview of the tool platform, we will present the automated repair of clear and opaque defects on Cr and MoSi quartz masks. Emphasis will be put onto the resolution and the speed of the repair procedure and the high grade of automation and integration achievable in the repair of high-end photomasks. An outlook against the ITRS requirements and the extendibility of the presented solution to further technology nodes will be given in the summary.
With the ever decreasing feature sizes and increasing cost of current and future photolithographic masks the repair of these masks becomes a substantial factor of the total mask production cost. In collaboration NaWoTec GmbH, Carl Zeiss Nano Technology Systems Division and Carl Zeiss Semiconductor Metrology Systems Division have launched a mask repair tool capable of processing a wide variety of mask types, such as quartz binary masks, phase shift masks, EUV masks, and e-beam projection stencil masks. In this paper, besides a brief overview of the tool platform, we will present the automated repair of clear and opaque defects on Cr and MoSi quartz masks. Emphasis will be put onto the resolution and the speed of the repair procedure and the high grade of automation and integration achievable in the repair of highend photomasks. An outlook against the ITRS requirements and the extendibility of the presented solution to further technology nodes will be given in the summary.
In this paper, we present the test results obtained from the first commercial electron beam mask repair tool. Repaired defect sites on chrome-on-glass masks are characterized with 193nm AIMS to quantify the edge placement precision as well as optical transmission loss. The electron beam mask repair tool is essentially based on a scanning electron microscope (SEM), therefore, it can be used for in-situ CD and defect metrology. E-beam for EUV mask defect repair is also discussed. These early results are very encouraging and demonstrate the basic advantages of electron beam mask repair as well as highlight the key challenge of charge control.
Klaus Edinger, Hans Becht, Rainer Becker, Volker Bert, Volker Boegli, Michael Budach, Susanne Göhde, Jochen Guyot, Thorsten Hofmann, Ottmar Hoinkis, Alexander Kaya, Hans Koops, Petra Spies, Bernd Weyrauch, Johannes Bihr
High-resolution electron-beam assisted deposition and etching is an enabling technology for current and future generation photo mask repair. NaWoTec in collaboration with LEO Electron Microscopy has developed a mask repair beta tool capable of processing a wide variety of mask types, such as quartz binary masks, phase shift masks, EUV masks, and e-beam projection stencil masks. Specifications currently meet the 65 nm device node requirements, and tool performance is extendible to 45 nm and below. The tool combines LEO's ultra-high resolution Supra SEM platform with NaWoTec's e-beam deposition and etching technology, gas supply and pattern generation hardware, and repair software. It is expected to ship to the first customer in October this year. In this paper, we present the tool platform, its work flow oriented repair software, and associated deposition and etch processes. Unique features are automatic drift compensation, critical edge detection, and arbitrary pattern copy with automatic placement. Repair of clear and opaque programmed defects on Cr, TaN, and MoSi quartz masks, as well as on SiC and Si stencil masks is demonstrated. We show our development roadmap towards a production tool, which will be available by the end of this year.
KEYWORDS: Photomasks, Etching, Electron beams, Ion beams, Lithography, Silicon carbide, Gemini Observatory, Magnetism, Signal attenuation, Electron beam lithography
An electron beam technology for repair of Next Generation Lithography masks is described. Deposition of missing material in clear defects is shown with different material characteristics. Etching of opaque defects is demonstrated. The superiority of the electron beam technology to the well established and widely used focused ion beam techniques is discussed. Electron beam repair avoids the unacceptable transmission loss which is generated by focus ion beam techniques especially for 193 nm and 157 nm lithography by Ga-ion implantation. Shrinking dimensions of printable
defects require higher resolution than ion beams allow, which is, however, obtained routinely with electron beam systems. Specially designed lenses having low aberrations provide outstanding better signal to noise ratio than ion beam systems. Results on deposition and etching of NGL mask relevant materials like TaN, SiC, Mo/Si, and
silicon dioxide is demonstrated. In general 1 keV electrons and a low electron current were used for the etching processes.
KEYWORDS: Photomasks, Electron beams, Etching, Platinum, Interferometers, Charged-particle lithography, Quartz, Silicon carbide, Scanning electron microscopy, Control systems
Electron-beam induced chemical reactions and their applicability to mask repair are investigated. For deposition and chemical etching with a focused electron-beam system, it is required to disperse chemicals in a molecular beam to the area of interest with a well-defined amount of molecules and monolayers per second. For repair of opaque defects the precursor gas reacts with the absorber material of the mask and forms a volatile reaction product, which leaves the surface. In this way the surface atoms are removed layer by layer. For clear defect repair, additional material, which is light absorbing in the UV, is deposited onto the defect area. This material is rendered as a nanocrystalline deposit from metal containing precursors. An experimental electron-beam mask repair system is developed and used to perform exploratory work applicable to photo mask, EUV mask, EPL and LEEPL stencil mask repair. The tool is described and specific repair actions are demonstrated. Platinum deposited features with lateral dimensions down to 20 nm demonstrate the high resolution obtainable with electron beam induced processes, while AFM and AIMS measurements indicate, that specifications for mask repair at the 70 nm device node can be met. In addition, examples of etching quartz, TaN, and silicon carbide stencil masks are given.
Volker Boegli, Hans Koops, Michael Budach, Klaus Edinger, Ottmar Hoinkis, Bernd Weyrauch, Rainer Becker, Rudolf Schmidt, Alexander Kaya, Andreas Reinhardt, Stephan Braeuer, Heinz Honold, Johannes Bihr, Jens Greiser, Michael Eisenmann
The applicability of electron-beam induced chemical reactions to mask repair is investigated. To achieve deposition and chemical etching with a focused electron-beam system, it is required to disperse chemicals in a molecular beam to the area of interest with a well-defined amount of molecules and monolayers per second. For repair of opaque defects the precursor gas reacts with the absorber material of the mask and forms a volatile reaction product, which leaves the surface. In this way the surface atoms are removed layer by layer. For clear defect repair, additional material, which is light absorbing in the UV, is deposited onto the defect area. This material is rendered as a nanocrystalline deposit from metal containing precursors. An experimental electron-beam mask repair system is developed and used to perform exploratory work applicable to photo mask, EUV mask, EPL and LEEPL stencil mask repair. The tool is described and specific repair actions are demonstrated. Platinum deposited features with lateral dimensions down to 20 nm demonstrate the high resolution obtainable with electron beam induced processes, while AFM and AIMS measurements indicate, that specifications for mask repair at the 70 nm device node can be met. In addition, examples of etching quartz and TaN are given.
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