Proceedings Article | 7 March 2008
KEYWORDS: Model-based design, Optical proximity correction, Algorithm development, Design for manufacturing, Photomasks, Double patterning technology, Electronic design automation, Scanners, Printing, Optical lithography
When using the most advanced water-based immersion scanner at the 32nm node half-pitch, the image resolution will
be below the k1 limit of 0.25. If EUV technology is not ready for mass production, double patterning technology
(DPT) is one of the solutions to bridge the gap between wet ArF and EUV platforms. DPT technology implies a
patterning process with two photolithography/etching steps. As a result, the critical pitch is reduced by a factor of 2,
which means the k1 value could increase by a factor of 2. Due to the superimposition of patterns printed by two
separate patterning steps, the overlay capability, in addition to image capability, contributes to critical dimension
uniformity (CDU). The wafer throughput as well as cost is a concern because of the increased number of process
steps. Therefore, the performance of imaging, overlay, and throughput of a scanner must be improved in order to
implement DPT cost effectively. In addition, DPT requires an innovative software to evenly split the patterns into two
layers for the full chip. Although current electronic design automation (EDA) tools can split the pattern through
abundant geometry-manipulation functions, these functions, however, are insufficient. A rigorous pattern split requires
more DPT-specific functions such as tagging/grouping critical features with two colors (and hence two layers),
controlling the coloring sequence, correcting the printing error on stitching boundaries, dealing with color conflicts,
increasing the coloring accuracy, considering full-chip possibility, etc. Therefore, in this paper we cover these issues
by demonstrating a newly developed DPT pattern-split algorithm using a rule-based method. This method has one
strong advantage of achieving very fast processing speed, so a full-chip DPT pattern split is practical. After the pattern
split, all of the color conflicts are highlighted. Some of the color conflicts can be resolved by aggressive model-based
methods, while the un-resolvable conflicts, known as native conflicts, require a change in the design to achieve a DPTfriendly
design. A model-based stitching boundary correction is then used after the color conflicts are corrected.
Finally the OPC treatment is implemented on both split layouts. The OPC challenges are highlighted by examining the
printed image from both exposures. The key concepts described above with additional full chip requirements have
been successfully implemented onto Brion's TachyoTM system. The efficiency and accuracy of the DPT pattern split
method were evaluated on a full-chip layout. The results show that the algorithm proposed in this paper is a viable
solution for the DPT pattern split.