Abstract

Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography is being industrialized as the next candidate printing technique for high-volume manufacturing of scaled down integrated circuits. At mask level, the combination of EUV light at oblique incidence, absorber thickness, and non-uniform mirror reflectance through incidence angle, creates photomask-induced imaging aberrations, known as mask 3D (M3D) effects. A possible mitigation for the M3D effects in the EUV binary intensity mask (BIM), is to use mask absorber materials with high extinction coefficient κ and refractive coefficient n close to unity. We propose nickel aluminide alloys as a candidate BIM absorber material, and characterize them versus a set of specifications that a novel EUV mask absorber must meet. The nickel aluminide samples have reduced crystallinity as compared to metallic nickel, and form a passivating surface oxide layer in neutral solutions. Composition and density profile are investigated to estimate the optical constants, which are then validated with EUV reflectometry. An oxidation-induced Al L2 absorption edge shift is observed, which significantly impacts the value of n at 13.5 nm wavelength and moves it closer to unity. The measured optical constants are incorporated in an accurate mask model for rigorous simulations. The M3D imaging impact of the nickel aluminide alloy mask absorbers, which predict significant M3D reduction in comparison to reference absorber materials. In this paper, we present an extensive experimental methodology flow to evaluate candidate mask absorber materials.

Highlights

  • Extreme ultraviolet lithography is being industrialized as the candidate printing technique for high-volume manufacturing of scaled down microcircuit devices for logic and memory applications

  • This paper will focus on absorber material as a mitigation strategy for mask 3D (M3D) effects, and we verify whether mask absorber materials with high extinction coefficient κ and refractive coefficient n close to unity can be generated by combining Al and Ni in an alloy

  • We present an extensive experimental methodology flow to evaluate candidate absorber materials capable of reducing M3D effects

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Summary

Introduction

Extreme ultraviolet lithography is being industrialized as the candidate printing technique for high-volume manufacturing of scaled down microcircuit devices for logic and memory applications. The combination of EUV light at oblique incidence, absorber thickness, and non-uniform mirror reflectance through incidence angle, creates photomask-induced imaging aberrations, known as mask. This paper will focus on absorber material as a mitigation strategy for M3D effects, and we verify whether mask absorber materials with high extinction coefficient κ and refractive coefficient n close to unity can be generated by combining Al and Ni in an alloy. The motivation for this particular material selection is explained .

Materials and Methods
Film Characterization
Film Morphology
Durability
Composition and Density Profile
Verification of Optical Constants
EUV Imaging Simulations
Findings
Discussion and Outlook
Full Text
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