Presentation + Paper
19 March 2018 Unraveling the role of photons and electrons upon their chemical interaction with photoresist during EUV exposure
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The interaction of 91.6 eV EUV photons with photoresist – in particular chemically amplified resist (CAR) – is different than exposure at 193 nm and 248 nm wavelengths. The latter is understood well and it is known that photons interact with electrons in the resist’s molecular valence orbitals (for chemically amplified resist (CAR) the photon interacts with the photo acid generator (PAG), which leads to a deprotection reaction on a polymer after a thermal catalytic reaction during a post-exposure-bake.). At EUV however, more steps are involved in the radiolysis process between the absorption of the photon and the final chemical modification. These are related to the generation of primary electrons and their decay to lower energy secondary electrons, and most of this steps are not well understood. In this paper, the reaction products from EUV and low energy electron exposure are examined using Residual Gas Analysis (RGA), which measures and analyzes the outgassing products related to the ongoing reactions. This investigation is applied firstly on a model CAR where details of the resist chemical constituents were known prior to testing. The measurement not only resolved information on the expected acid related reactions from the PAG and protection groups, but also exhibited direct scission reactions of the polymer, where some of them lead to polymerization reactions. Moreover, the measurement quantifies the balance between the different ongoing reactions, which were confirmed by contrast curve measurements. Based on learnings on the model resist, applied the measurement technique to commercial resists, where actual resist chemistry composition is not known. Despite that, it was found that information could be deduced to distinguish between acid related ongoing reactions and direct scission of reaction on the base polymer and quantify their relation. Moreover, different generations of commercial resists based on similar chemistry platform were investigated, which revealed that improvements in printing performance could be explained by PAG reaction yield increase.
Conference Presentation
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ivan Pollentier, Yannick Vesters, John S. Petersen, Pieter Vanelderen, Ashish Rathore, Danilo de Simone, and Geert Vandenberghe "Unraveling the role of photons and electrons upon their chemical interaction with photoresist during EUV exposure", Proc. SPIE 10586, Advances in Patterning Materials and Processes XXXV, 105860C (19 March 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2299593
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Polymers

Electrons

Extreme ultraviolet lithography

Photons

Extreme ultraviolet

Chemistry

Polymerization

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