Abstract

Understanding the origins and propagation of defects and hotspots in patterning processes used for semiconductor fabrication is of paramount importance in managing yield. In this paper, results from physics-based simulators to model lithography and dry etch processes are presented and compared to experimental results. These models are used to study different types of hotspots and defects observed in a litho-etch-litho-etch (LELE) multipatterning process. At each pass of the LELE flow, patterns are printed into a SiO2 collecting layer using a trilayer film stack comprised of a negative tone photoresist layer, a spin-on-glass layer (SOG), and a spin-on-carbon layer (SOC). After both passes of the LELE process, the patterns in the SiO2 collecting layer will be transferred to a TiN hardmask prior to final etch into an underlying dielectric. The SOG and SiO2 layers are etched using fluorocarbon plasma, while the SOC layer is etched with an H2/N2 plasma generated in a capacitively coupled plasma source. A pinching hotspot is observed during the single litho-etch pass in a region where two features are placed very close and the image contrast is low. However, for some lithography process conditions, this hotspot is rectified by subsequent etch steps and does not always transfer as a defect into the SiO2 layer. The quenching of the hotspot occurs primarily during the etching of the SOC layer due to the aspect ratio-dependent etching (ARDE) effect. A bridging hotspot is also observed at lithography during the single litho-etch pass at high exposure doses. This hotspot, on the other hand, is exacerbated by the etch steps because of the ARDE effect. Hotspots are also identified that originate from overlay errors between photomasks exposed during first and second passes of the LELE process. The etch bias generated during etching of the SOG layer is crucial to ensure that the overlay-related hotspot does not translate to the SiO2 layer. The extent of etch bias in the SOG etch step is critical and can be tuned by adjusting the neutral to ion flux ratio during that etch step. Increasing the flux ratio improves the process window for the overlay defect; however, when the ratio is higher than approximately 20% of the nominal value, a different defect type is formed in the SOG layer due to the inverse ARDE effect that propagates downstream to the SiO2 layer.

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