Paper
17 October 2008 New electron optics for mask writer EBM-7000 to challenge hp 32nm generation
Takashi Kamikubo, Steven Golladay, Rodney Kendall, Victor Katsap, Kenji Ohtoshi, Munehiro Ogasawara, Shinsuke Nishimura, Rieko Nishimura, Osamu Iizuka, Takahito Nakayama, Shunji Shinkawa, Tetsurou Nishiyama, Shuichi Tamamushi
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Abstract
Semiconductor scaling is expected to continue to hp32nm and beyond, accompanied by explosive data volume expansion. Required minimum feature size at hp 32nm will be less than 50nm on the mask, according to ITRS2007(1). EBM 7000 is a newly designed mask writer for the hp32 nm node with an improved electron optical column providing the beam resolution (10 nm measured in situ) and beam current density (200 A/cm2) necessary for cost effective mask production at hp32nm node. In this paper we report on column improvements, the in situ beam blur measurement method and writing results from EBM 7000. Written patterns show dose margin (CD change [nm] / 1 % dose change) of .94 nm /1 % dose for line/space arrays using chemically amplified resist PRL009 and our standard processing. Using a simple model to relate the measured beam intensity distribution to the measured dose margin, we infer an effective total blur of 30 nm, dominated by a contribution of 28 nm from the resist exposure and development process. Further evidence of the dominance of the process contribution is the measured improvement in dose margin to .64 nm/% dose obtained by modifying our standard process. Even larger process improvements will be needed for successful fabrication of hp22nm masks.
© (2008) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Takashi Kamikubo, Steven Golladay, Rodney Kendall, Victor Katsap, Kenji Ohtoshi, Munehiro Ogasawara, Shinsuke Nishimura, Rieko Nishimura, Osamu Iizuka, Takahito Nakayama, Shunji Shinkawa, Tetsurou Nishiyama, and Shuichi Tamamushi "New electron optics for mask writer EBM-7000 to challenge hp 32nm generation", Proc. SPIE 7122, Photomask Technology 2008, 71220J (17 October 2008); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.801725
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Photomasks

Photoresist processing

Objectives

Beam shaping

Chemically amplified resists

Optical testing

Signal detection

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