SEMATECH announced today that researchers have reached a significant
milestone in reducing tool-generated defects from multi-layer deposition
of mask blanks used for extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL), bringing
that technology a step closer to high-volume manufacturing.
Following a two-year effort to improve deposition tool hardware, process
parameters and substrate cleaning techniques, technologists deposited
EUV multilayers with as few as eight defects per mask at 50 nm
sensitivity (SiO2 equivalent), which includes 6 substrate
defects, one handling defect and one defect from the multi-layer
deposition process. This result was achieved on a 40 bi-layer film stack
with an Ru cap and measured over the mask blank quality area of 132 x
132 mm2.
Furthermore, SEMATECH has developed novel cleaning processes which have
significantly improved substrate cleaning yield on quality substrates,
yielding an integrated process capable of manufacturing EUV mask blanks
with less than 20 total defects at 45 nm sensitivity. The achievements
in mask defect reduction and increase in yield for high quality blanks
are attributed to a significant improvement in substrate cleaning,
handling, and deposition.
Defects are generally formed by decoration of substrate defects by the
multilayer deposition process and, to a lesser extent, by the deposition
process itself and have prevented the quality of mask blanks from
keeping pace with roadmap requirements for the production of pilot line
and high-volume manufacturing EUV reticles. Reducing the defects in the
extreme ultraviolet (EUV) mask blank multilayer deposition system is one
of the most critical technology gaps the industry needs to address to
enable cost effective insertion of this technology at the 22 nm
half-pitch. For successful introduction, integrated EUV blanks must meet
a defectivity level of less than 0.003 defects/cm2 at 25 nm
sensitivity.
“SEMATECH continues to produce results that the industry needs to show
that EUVL is manufacturable,” said Stefan Wurm, SEMATECH’s Lithography
director. “SEMATECH’s Mask Blank Defect Reduction program continues to
demonstrate practical results for mask blank defect reduction, more
efficient deposition and cleaning processes, effective reticle handling,
and other areas that can support high-volume EUVL manufacturing at the
22 nm half-pitch node.”
“EUVL requires a low defect density reflective mask blank, which is
considered to be one of the top two critical technology gaps for
commercialization of the technology,” said Frank Goodwin, manager of
SEMATECH’s Mask Blank Defect Reduction program. “The goal of our work is
to enable model-based prediction and data driven analysis of defect
performance for targeted process improvement and component learning to
feed into the new deposition tool design.”
Substrate and mask blank defect levels have steadily improved across the
industry, but more slowly than expected. To accelerate progress,
SEMATECH’s Mask Blank Defect Reduction program has developed world-class
knowledge on the composition of very small defects, through
sophisticated defect analysis capabilities and processes that include
the use of leading-edge analytical tools such as the Titan TEM and an
Auger tool for mask surface analysis. SEMATECH's Mask Blank Defect
Reduction program is supported by the Mask Blank Development Center,
located at the College of Nanoscale Science and Engineering (CNSE),
State University of New York, Albany, to develop defect-free EUV blanks.
About SEMATECH
SEMATECH®, the international consortium of leading semiconductor device,
equipment, and materials manufacturers, this year celebrates 25 years of
excellence in accelerating the commercialization of technology
innovations into manufacturing solutions. Through our unwavering
commitment to foster collaboration across the nanoelectronics industry,
we help our members and partners address critical industry transitions,
drive technical consensus, pull research into the industry mainstream,
improve manufacturing productivity, and reduce risk and time to market.
Information about SEMATECH can be found at www.sematech.org
or follow us on Twitter @sematechnews.
