METHOD FOR ELECTRONIC LITHOGRAPHY WITH ELECTROSTATIC SCREENING
20190057838 ยท 2019-02-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01J37/3174
ELECTRICITY
G03F7/2061
PHYSICS
B82Y40/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
G03F7/2059
PHYSICS
G03F7/093
PHYSICS
G03F7/70433
PHYSICS
International classification
H01J37/317
ELECTRICITY
H01L21/027
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An e-beam lithography process includes the following steps: implanting into a substrate, or into a dielectric layer deposited on the surface of the substrate, electrons in a first pattern; depositing an e-beam resist on the surface of the substrate or of the sacrificial dielectric layer; and exposing the resist by means of an electron beam in a second pattern, then developing the resist; the first and second patterns being made up of elementary patterns, the elementary patterns of the first pattern at least partially surrounding the elementary patterns of the second pattern.
Claims
1. An e-beam lithography process comprising the following steps: implanting into a substrate, or into a dielectric layer deposited on the surface of said substrate, electrons in a first pattern; depositing an e-beam resist on the surface of said substrate or of said sacrificial dielectric layer; and exposing said resist by means of an electron beam in a second pattern, then developing said resist; said first and second patterns being made up of elementary patterns, the elementary patterns of said first pattern at least partially surrounding the elementary patterns of said second pattern.
2. The process as claimed in claim 1, also comprising a prior step of depositing said dielectric layer on the surface of said substrate, and a step of etching the regions of said dielectric layer that are exposed following the development of the resist.
3. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein said dielectric layer has a thickness comprised between 10 and 100 nm and preferably between 20 and 50 nm.
4. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein said dielectric layer has a resistivity higher than or equal to 10.sup.6 /.
5. The process as claimed in claim 2, wherein said substrate is a semiconductor substrate.
6. The process as claimed in claim 1, wherein said resist is exposed by means of an electron beam of energy lower than or equal to 10 keV and preferably 5 keV.
7. The process as claimed in claim 1, including implanting a charge density comprised between 1 and 100 C/cm.sup.2 into said substrate or said dielectric layer.
8. The process as claimed in claim 1, including a prior step of optimizing said first pattern so that the electric field generated by the implanted electrons concentrates the electron beam used to expose the resist in the interior of the elementary patterns of said second pattern
Description
[0019] Other features, details and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the description given with reference to the appended drawings, which are given by way of example and show, respectively:
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
[0023] The figures are not to scale.
[0024]
[0025] Electrons are implanted in the layer CD by means of an electron beam FEI, in an elementary geometric pattern MPI the characteristics of which will be discussed below. This step is illustrated in
[0026] Next, as illustrated in
[0027] It may be seen in
[0028] After they have passed through the layer, the electrons EFL reach the substrate, where they rapidly recombine with the holes T accumulated at the substrate-dielectric layer interface. This rapid recombination decreases the fraction of backscattered electrons and therefore contributes to limiting the spread of the PSF. This effect does not occur if the substrate is insulating.
[0029] The implanted charge dose and the geometry of the implantation pattern MPI may be optimized by means of numerical simulations taking into account the scattering of the electrons EFL in the resist and in the substrate, and the influence of the electric field generated by the trapped electrons EP and the holes T. In the case of a disk-shaped elementary lithography pattern ML and of an implantation pattern MPI of circular annulus shape, there are only three parameters to be optimized: the implanted dose, the spacing between the pattern ML and the pattern MPI (shown by d1 in
[0030] The subsequent steps of the process are conventional: the exposed resist is developed, so as to obtain an aperture in correspondence with the lithography pattern MLif the resist is positiveor its complementif the resist is negative (
[0031] Of course, in actual applications the implantation pattern and the lithography pattern will be made up of a large number of elementary patterns such as those shown in the figures.