Abstract

The decreasing size of semiconductor features and the increasing structural complexity of advanced devices have placed continuously greater demands on manufacturing metrology, arising both from the measurement challenges of smaller feature sizes and the growing requirement to characterize structures in more than just a single critical dimension. For scanning electron microscopy, this has resulted in increasing sophistication of imaging models. For critical dimension atomic force microscopes (CD-AFMs), this has resulted in the need for smaller and more complex tips. Carbon nanotube (CNT) tips have thus been the focus of much interest and effort by a number of researchers. However, there have been significant issues surrounding both the manufacture and use of CNT tips. Specifically, the growth or attachment of CNTs to AFM cantilevers has been a challenge to the fabrication of CNT tips, and the flexibility and resultant bending artifacts have presented challenges to using CNT tips. The Korea Research Institute for Standards and Science (KRISS) has invested considerable effort in the controlled fabrication of CNT tips and is collaborating with the National Institute of Standards and Technology on the application of CNT tips for CD-AFM. Progress by KRISS on the precise control of CNT orientation, length, and end modification, using manipulation and focused ion beam processes, has allowed us to implement ball-capped CNT tips and bent CNT tips for CD-AFM. Using two different generations of CD-AFM instruments, we have evaluated these tip types by imaging a line/space grating and a programmed line edge roughness specimen. We concluded that these CNTs are capable of scanning the profiles of these structures, including re-entrant sidewalls, but there remain important challenges to address. These challenges include tighter control of tip geometry and careful optimization of scan parameters and algorithms for using CNT tips.

Highlights

  • The measurements described in this paper were primarily obtained on two critical dimension atomic force microscopes (CD-AFMs): (1) CDAFM135 operates using a displacement measuring interferometer to detect the z-axis motion of the cantilever and (2) CD-AFM236 operates using a variation on the optical lever method to sense the cantilever motion

  • Using focused ion beam (FIB) processes that enable the geometrical modification of straight and aligned Carbon nanotube (CNT) tips, it is possible to fabricate CNT tips that are tailored for CD-AFM applications

  • Some examples developed by Korea Research Institute for Standards and Science (KRISS) are the platinum ballcapped (B-tip) and the bent CNT tip (J-tip), which can reach re-entrant sidewalls and enter very narrow trenches or holes

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Summary

Introduction

The decreasing size of semiconductor features and the increasing structural complexity of advanced devices have placed continuously greater demands on manufacturing metrology, arising both from the measurement challenges of smaller feature sizes and the growing requirement to characterize structures in more than just a single critical dimension.[1,2] These changing requirements have dramatically altered manufacturing metrology, both in terms of the available technology and its method of application. An elegant example of using CNT tips to optimal advantage was demonstrated by Watanabe et al.[25] These researchers leveraged the high lateral compliance of CNT tips by incorporating the bending behavior into a unique imaging mode that could measure vertical sidewalls with a straight and vertically mounted CNT tip This innovative work helped set the stage for a more recent investigation of CNT snap-in behavior on vertical sidewalls using a second-generation CD-AFM.[26] In the future, creative ways of using the behavior of very small tips to advantage will likely become increasingly important at the frontier of CD-AFM metrology. We used two different generations of CD-AFM instruments to evaluate ball-capped and bent-type CNT tips by imaging line/space gratings and a programmed line edge roughness specimen We concluded that these CNT tips are capable of scanning the profiles of these features including re-entrant sidewalls, but there remain important challenges to address, including tighter control of tip geometry and careful optimization of scan parameters and algorithms for using CNT tips.

Types of Tips Developed by KRISS
Fabrication of Carbon Nanotube Tips at KRISS
Measurements and Results
Summary and Conclusions
Full Text
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