EXCIMER LASER WITH UNIFORM BEAM
20200303889 · 2020-09-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01S3/034
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/082
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H01S3/034
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/08
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Fine-structure in the transverse mode of an excimer laser beam is minimized by having a plurality of resonator mirrors located at each end of a linear excimer laser. At one end, a highly-reflective end mirror and a partially-reflective end mirror are inclined at small angle with respect to each other. At the other end, two output-coupling mirrors are inclined at a small angle with respect to each other. This arrangement of resonator mirrors generates a composite laser beam that blurs any fine structure.
Claims
1. An excimer laser generating a laser beam, comprising: a laser chamber containing an energized gas mixture; a first rear mirror having a high reflectivity at a wavelength of the laser beam; a second rear mirror that is partially reflective at the wavelength of the laser beam, the first and second rear mirrors located at one end of the laser chamber, the second rear mirror located between the first rear mirror and the laser chamber, the first and second rear mirrors tilted with respect to each other at a first angle; a first output-coupling mirror; and a second output-coupling mirror, the first and second output-coupling mirrors partially reflective at the wavelength of the laser beam, the first and second output-coupling mirrors located at an opposite end of the laser chamber, the first and second output-coupling mirrors tilted with respect to each other at a second angle.
2. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein both the first and second rear mirrors are tilted with respect to an optical axis of the laser beam.
3. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein both the first and second output-coupling mirrors are tilted with respect to an optical axis of the laser beam.
4. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first angle is equal to the second angle.
5. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first and second rear mirrors are on opposite surfaces of a transparent wedged-shaped substrate.
6. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first and second output-coupling mirrors are on opposite surfaces of a transparent wedged-shaped substrate.
7. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first angle and the second angle are both greater than 0.05 milliradians.
8. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the second rear mirror has a reflectivity in a range between 20% and 80% at the wavelength of the laser beam.
9. An excimer laser as recited in claim 8, wherein the second rear mirror has a reflectivity in a range between 35% and 65% at the wavelength of the laser beam.
10. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein each of the first and second output-coupling mirrors has a reflectivity less than 5% at the wavelength of the laser beam.
11. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first and second output-coupling mirrors have the same reflectivity at the wavelength of the laser beam.
12. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the first angle is in a range between 5% and 20% of the full-angle divergence of a laser beam from an equivalent excimer laser having all resonator mirrors at normal incidence to the laser beam.
13. An excimer laser as recited in claim 1, wherein the second angle is in a range between 5% and 20% of the full-angle divergence of a laser beam from an equivalent excimer laser having all resonator mirrors at normal incidence to the laser beam.
14. An excimer laser generating a laser beam, comprising: a laser chamber containing an energized gas mixture; a rear mirror located at one end of the laser chamber having a high reflectivity at a wavelength of the laser beam; a first output-coupling mirror; and a second output-coupling mirror, the first and second output-coupling mirrors partially reflective at the wavelength of the laser beam, the first and second output-coupling mirrors located at an opposite end of the laser chamber, the first and second output-coupling mirrors tilted with respect to each other at a relative tilt angle, both the first and second output-coupling mirrors tilted with respect to the rear mirror.
15. An excimer laser as recited in claim 14, wherein both the first and second output-coupling mirrors are tilted with respect to an optical axis of the laser beam.
16. An excimer laser as recited in claim 14, wherein the first and second output-coupling mirrors are on opposite surfaces of a transparent wedged-shaped substrate.
17. An excimer laser as recited in claim 14, wherein the relative tilt angle is greater than 0.05 milliradians.
18. An excimer laser generating a laser beam, comprising: a laser chamber containing an energized gas mixture; a first rear mirror having a high reflectivity at a wavelength of the laser beam; a second rear mirror that is partially reflective at the wavelength of the laser beam, the first and second rear mirrors located at one end of the laser chamber, the second rear mirror located between the first rear mirror and the laser chamber, the first and second rear mirrors tilted with respect to each other at a relative tilt angle; and an output-coupling mirror that is partially reflective at the wavelength of the laser beam, the output-coupling mirror located at an opposite end of the laser chamber, the output-coupling mirror tilted with respect to both the first and second rear mirrors.
19. An excimer laser as recited in claim 18, wherein the first and second rear mirrors are on opposite surfaces of a transparent wedged-shaped substrate.
20. An excimer laser as recited in claim 18, wherein the relative tilt angle is greater than 0.05 milliradians.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, schematically illustrate a preferred embodiment of the present invention, and together with the general description given above and the detailed description of the preferred embodiment given below, serve to explain principles of the present invention.
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] Referring now to the drawings, wherein like components are designated by like numerals,
[0020] Windows 14 have high transmission at the wavelength of laser beam 20. In the drawing, the windows are depicted with laser beam 20 at a normal angle-of-incidence. In this arrangement, the windows would be antireflection coated at the wavelength of the laser beam. In an alternative arrangement, uncoated windows would be oriented at Brewster's angle. High-reflecting mirror 16 has a reflectivity of about 100%. Output-coupling mirror 18 typically has a reflectivity of between 4% and 10%, most typically between 5% and 8%. Both mirrors usually have planar surfaces. Laser beam 20 is depicted by boundary rays, with solid lines indicating an intra-cavity laser beam and dashed lines indicating an output laser beam.
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] The fine structure is dominated by vertical streamers, some extending the full height of the beam, which are imprinted on the spatial mode as the beam is amplified in the gas discharge. Spatial modulations in the gain, which change from pulse-to-pulse, are due to instabilities in the gas discharge and turbulence in the gas flow, discussed above. Static components of the fine structure, invariant from pulse-to-pulse, are due to spatial modulations in losses caused by contamination of the windows and by damage to the windows induced by the intense ultraviolet laser radiation. Contamination and damage accumulates during operation of the laser, degrading performance, until the windows are replaced. Window replacement is a long-interval maintenance procedure.
[0024]
[0025]
[0026] As drawn, first rear mirror 32 is about parallel to first output-coupling mirror 36 (.sub.1.sub.3) and second rear mirror 34 is about parallel with second output-coupling mirror 38 (.sub.2.sub.4), although this is not a required condition for the inventive excimer laser to function. The first and second rear mirrors are depicted as discrete optical components, each optical component having parallel planar surfaces, with one of the surfaces being the mirror. An alternative and convenient arrangement is for these rear mirrors to be opposite surfaces of one wedge-shaped optical component. Similarly, the first and second output-coupling mirrors could be opposite surfaces of another wedged-shaped optical component.
[0027] An effect of the mirror tilting is depicted in
[0028] Returning to
[0029] In selecting the tilt angles, there is a compromise between enhancing mixing of the component beams to blur the fine structure and increasing the full-angle divergence of the composite output beam, which may be undesirable. Selecting small tilt angles relative to the full-angle divergence , means the orientation of each tilt about optical axis 22 is not too critical. Some orientations were found to be better for blurring fine structure; most likely because the fine structure is otherwise dominated by the vertical streamers apparent in
[0030]
[0031] The composite output beam of
[0032]
[0033] An advantage of the inventive excimer laser is that a weaker and therefore less-costly beam homogenizer can be used to achieve the same processing quality as a prior-art excimer laser. Another advantage is that time intervals between gas changes and window replacements can be extended, because instabilities and non-uniformities in the output beam take longer to reach maximum tolerance limits for a process. Extending average or scheduled time intervals between these maintenance procedures reduces laser down-time and cost of ownership.
[0034] Although one embodiment of the present invention is described above having two rear mirrors and two output-coupling mirrors, additional partially-reflective rear mirrors and/or additional output-coupling mirrors may be included to further mitigate fine structure, without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. In another embodiment of the present invention, an excimer laser has one rear mirror that is high-reflecting and a plurality of output-coupling mirrors. In yet another embodiment of the present invention, an excimer laser has a high-reflecting rear mirror, a plurality of partially-reflective rear mirrors, and one output-coupling mirror.
[0035] Although the resonator mirrors described above had planar surfaces, excimer laser mirror surfaces sometimes have slight curvature. As one of skill in the art would recognize, the principals of the present invention can be applied to resonator mirrors having slight curvature.
[0036] The present invention is described above in terms of a preferred embodiment and other embodiments. The invention is not limited, however, to the embodiments described and depicted herein. Rather, the invention is limited only by the claims appended hereto.