Abstract

The proximity effect in electron-beam lithography, which is due to electron scattering in the resist and wafer, results in nonuniform exposure and development for patterns in which the incident doses of all the shapes are the same. Correction for this effect has been accomplished in the past primarily by varying the incident doses of all the shapes in order to achieve an equal average resultant dose per unit area for all shapes. We show that in the case of dense circuits with linewidths of about 1 µm or smaller, two enhancements to the proximity correction technique can be easily implemented. One of these is a simple approach to shape breakup (partitioning) to enable dose correction to be applied nonuniformly within the original design shapes. The other technique is a new type of algorithm for forming subsets of the design to perform self-consistent dose correction. These two enhancements are applied to LSI chip data for dense circuits and are shown to permit fabrication of circuits which would be more difficult to process using the proximity correction techniques described previously, due to the particular geometries present in these circuit designs. We also show the application of step and repeat pattern recognition algorithms to compact the resulting data, and consequently to reduce the amount of data by an amount which is greater than the increase in the number of shapes caused by partitioning.

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