Back to Search Start Over

28nm pitch single exposure patterning readiness by metal oxide resist on 0.33NA EUV lithography

Authors :
Nancy Heylen
Koung-min Ryu
Christophe Beral
Werner Gillijns
Zsolt Tokei
Insung Kim
Nadia Vandenbroeck
Ilhwan Kim
Dongbo Xu
Lieve Teugels
Luka Kljucar
Chang-min Park
Philippe Foubert
A. Oak
M. H. Van der Veen
Jisun Lee
D. De Simone
Romuald Blanc
P. De Schepper
Michael Kocsis
Joren Severi
Kurt G. Ronse
Philippe Leray
Poulomi Das
Jan Doise
F. Schleicher
Anne-Laure Charley
Quoc Toan Le
Jerome Mitard
Source :
Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) Lithography XII.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
SPIE, 2021.

Abstract

For many years traditional 193i lithography has been extended to the next technology node by means of multi-patterning techniques. However recently such a 193i technology became challenging and expensive to push beyond the technology node for complex features that can be tackled in a simpler manner by the Extreme UltraViolet Lithography (EUVL) technology. Nowadays, EUVL is part of the high-volume manufacturing device landscape and it has reached a critical decision point where one can push further the single print on 0.33NA full field scanner or move to a EUV double patterning technology with more relaxed pitches to overcome current 0.33NA stochastic limits. In this work we have selected the 28nm pitch dense line-space (P28) as critical decision check point. We have looked at the 0.33NA EUV single print because it is more cost effective than 0.33NA EUV double patterning. In addition, we have conducted a process feasibility study as P28 in single print is close to the resolution limit of the 0.33NA EUV full field scanner. We present the process results on 28nm dense line-space patterning by using Inpria’s metal-oxide (MOx) EUV resist. We discuss the lithographic and etching process challenges by looking at resist sensitivity, unbiased line edge roughness (LER) and nano patterning failures after etching (AE), using broad band plasma (BBP) and e-beam (EB) defectivity inspection tools. To get further understanding on the P28 single patterning capability we have integrated the developed EUV MOx process in a relevant iN7 technology test vehicle by developing a full P28 metallization module with ruthenium. In such a way we were able to carry on electrical tests on metallized serpentine, fork-fork and tip-to-tip structures designed with a purpose of enabling further learning on pattern failures through electrical measurements. Finally, we conclude by showing the readiness of P28 single exposure using Inpria’s MOx process on a 0.33NA EUV full field scanner.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) Lithography XII
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........248259104475938c717bc9d068b1336c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2584713