The stochastic effect in contact single patterning is one of the primary challenges in extending into sub-40nm pitch with 0.33NA EUV. EUV stochastic defects induced by EUV photon shot noise are known to strongly correlate to image contrast. Mitigation of Mask3D induced contrast fading is one of the key solutions to enable further shrink, while maintaining sufficient defect-free process latitude. Wavefront and pupil co-optimization is designed to compensate the Mask 3D phase error that leads to contrast fading. For application in HVM, the newly developed Pupil/Mask/Wavefront co-optimization gives the best imaging performance while maintaining the illumination efficiency and decreasing the rms wavefront for the final optimal wavefront to ensure there is no negative impact on the rest of the patterns that are not included in the optimization. In this paper, we investigate how to apply Pupil/Mask/Wavefront co-optimization to improve the image contrast of a sub-40nm pitch contact hole array, including in-resist verification. We will first explain the fundamentals of Mask 3D fading mitigation via phase injection for a 1D feature and how to extend this concept to 2D features. We will compare the effectiveness of new Pupil/Mask/Wavefront co-optimization versus Zernike Z5 or Z6 only phase injection method. Finally, we will show the potential benefit in combination with using a low-n phase shifting mask for which the optimum image contrast is achieved with the co-optimized wavefront, pupil and mask.
Dose and focus are both primary contributors to a change in feature size (critical dimension – CD). Within the context of this abstract, dose refers to all ‘apparent dose’ effects within the scanner and track combination. These dose-like effects can be an actual dose from the scanner and/or an apparent dose coming from process effects (i.e. resist/develop nonuniformity) that impact CD’s in a manner similar to scanner dose. Semiconductor manufacturers monitor CD over time for process control and can institute dose and/or focus changes in order to maintain CD performance and to optimize CD uniformity. This CD monitoring and control can be time consuming and a shift in CD does not directly indicate which has changed, dose or focus. Until now there is not a good alternate way to detect and monitor dose-related changes on product wafers. This paper will introduce a dual tone target concept for dose metrology to distinguish CD changes from dose and focus and demonstrate how the dual tone target concept is used to infer the apparent dose on a diffraction-based optical metrology system, like YieldStar. The concept is verified via experimental results showing accurate dose measurements with low focus cross talk. Additionally, correlation with CD-SEM measurements will be demonstrated which shows that apparent dose derived from this diffraction-based methodology matches well to the CD-SEM.
Utilizing a unique high NA optical system, a new methodology to measure device overlay accurately has been developed with a key differentiation. Historically, optical techniques to measure features below the image resolution require supporting measurement techniques to be used as a reference to anchor the optical measurement. This novel selfreference methodology enables accurate and robust optical metrology for device features after etch eliminating the need for external reference measurements such as Decap, x-sections or high landing energy SEMs. In this paper, we discuss how a high NA Optical Metrology system enables measurements on small area device replica targets, which enables the ability to create a reference target for device measurements. The methodology utilizes this reference target to enable accurate direct on device overlay measurements without the need for an external reference. Furthermore, the technique is expanded to improve the robustness of the measurement and monitor live in production the health of the recipe, ensuring accuracy overtime. This ultimately leads to a method to extend the recipes in real-time based on the health KPIs. The improved accurate and robust device overlay measurements have proven to improve the overlay performance compared to other techniques. This, combined with the speed of optical systems, enables unconstrained dense measurements directly on device structures after etch, allowing for improved overlay control.
In leading edge patterning processes, overlay is now entangled with CD including OPC residuals and stochastics. This combined effect is a serious challenge for continued shrink and can be characterized with an Edge Placement Error (EPE) budget containing multi-domain components: global and local CD, local placement errors, overlay errors, etch biases and OPC. EPE defines process capability and ultimately relates to device yield. Understanding the EPE budget leads to efficient ways to monitor process capability and optimize it using EPE based process control applications. We examine a critical EPE use case on a leading edge DRAM node. We start by constructing and verifying the EPE Budget via densely sampled on-product in-device local, global CD and Overlay metrology after the etch process step. EPE budget contributors are ranked according to their impact to overall EPE performance and later with simulated EPE performance improvements per component. A cost/benefit analysis is shown to help choose the most HVM-friendly solutions.
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