Paper
22 January 2001 Multibeam high-resolution UV wavelength reticle inspection
Chih-Chien Hung, Chue-San Yoo, Chia-Hui Lin, William Waters Volk, James N. Wiley, Steve Khanna, Steve Biellak, D. Wang
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A new reticle inspection system with three parallel scanning laser beams for UV imaging for both contamination and pattern inspection has been developed to detect defects on advanced reticles for DUV steppers and low k1 lithography for .13um and extensions to .10um design rules. The development of the new three beam architecture at UV wavelength has significantly increased system throughput while improving the resolution of the imaging optics for inspecting advanced reticles including Halftone, Tri-Tone, and Alternating PSM’s and reticles with aggressive OPC. The system is capable of running multiple inspection algorithms simultaneously in transmitted and reflected light to achieve concurrent pattern and STARlightTM inspection, thus improving both sensitivity and inspection thoroughness with a single inspection. These improvements enable fast inspections of reticles for 4X lithography design rules at 0.18um, 0.15um and 0.13um. Initial simulations were performed to optimize performance of optical components and a new defect detection algorithm. The simulations identified that with the optics changes to achieve three beam scans and with new algorithms, the inspection was more sensitive to all defect types including on edge contamination defects, which can be particularly difficult to detect. Using both PSL and programmed defect test masks and real production reticles, initial observations of the nature and the frequency of defects detected with this 100nm sensitivity instrument will be presented. With more defects to review, the system software provides concurrent or remote defect review so time to disposition defects does not effect system inspection capacity. With smaller defects to review the quality of defect review images has a direct impact on the effectiveness and ease-of-use of reticle inspections systems. The smaller review pixel with the system combined with a suite of review imaging tools, yields high quality images for defect dispositioning.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Chih-Chien Hung, Chue-San Yoo, Chia-Hui Lin, William Waters Volk, James N. Wiley, Steve Khanna, Steve Biellak, and D. Wang "Multibeam high-resolution UV wavelength reticle inspection", Proc. SPIE 4186, 20th Annual BACUS Symposium on Photomask Technology, (22 January 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.410690
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Inspection

Reticles

Optical proximity correction

Ultraviolet radiation

Algorithm development

Detection and tracking algorithms

Contamination

Back to Top