Claims
- 1. An excimer laser system comprising:
- A) a laser chamber containing:
- 1) two spaced apart elongated electrodes;
- 2) a laser gas comprising:
- a noble gas,
- fluorine,
- a buffer gas;
- B) a blower for flowing the laser gas between the two spaced apart electrodes;
- C) a fluorine source;
- D) a means for determining .DELTA.E/.DELTA.V; and
- E) a fluorine control system arranged to automatically control fluorine injection flow based on determined values of .DELTA.E/.DELTA.V in order to permit said laser to operate within a desired sweet spot determined by fluorine concentration in the laser chamber.
- 2. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein the noble gas is krypton.
- 3. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein the noble gas is argon.
- 4. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein krypton comprises about 1 percent of the laser gas fluorine comprises about 0.1 percent of the laser gas and the buffer gas is neon which comprises about 98.9 percent of the laser gas.
- 5. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein said feedback control system comprises temperature and pressure sensors and a processor programmed to adjust fluorine injection based on temperature deviations from a reference temperature.
- 6. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein said laser feedback control system is programmed to control fluorine flow to keep said laser operating within a predetermined sweet spot.
- 7. An excimer laser as in claim 6 wherein sweet spot is defined as a range of fluorine concentration.
- 8. An excimer laser as in claim 6 wherein said sweet spot is defined by a slope of a voltage vs. F.sub.2 concentration curve.
- 9. An excimer laser as in claim 8 wherein said feedback control system is programmed to inject fluorine at intervals close enough together to simulate continuous injection in order to permit a voltage defined sweet spot no larger than about 2 percent of the nominal sweet spot voltage.
- 10. An excimer laser as in claim 8 and further comprising an exhaust line separate from said inject manifold.
- 11. An excimer laser as in claim 1 wherein said inject bottle has a gas volume of more than 0.5 liters.
- 12. An excimer laser as in claim 1 and further comprising a bleed bottle having a volume of more than 0.3 liters.
- 13. An excimer laser as in claim 1 and further comprising gas piping permitting gas flow from a relatively high pressure location of said chamber to said inject bottle and from said inject bottle to a relatively low pressure location of said chamber.
- 14. A process for controlling the fluorine concentration in a gas discharge laser comprising the steps of:
- A) operating the laser at various F.sub.2 concentration levels and determining laser parameters to determine a preferred operating range;
- B) determine .DELTA.E/.DELTA.V within said preferred operating range;
- C) determine a .DELTA.E/.DELTA.V injection value, (.DELTA.E/.DELTA.V).sub.i ; and
- D) during laser operation inject a quantity of F.sub.2 when .DELTA.E/.DELTA.V decreases to or below (.DELTA.E/.DELTA.V).sub.i.
- 15. A process as in claim 14 wherein the quantity of F.sub.2 injected is less than 5 milligrams.
- 16. A process as in claim 14 wherein said process is automatic and controlled by a computer processor programmed with a F.sub.2 control algorithm.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part of Ser. No. 09/034,870 filed Mar. 4, 1998 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,005,879 entitled "Pulse Energy Control for Excimer Lasers". This invention relates to excimer lasers and in particular for equipment and methods for controlling laser gas in excimer lasers.
US Referenced Citations (1)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
6018537 |
Hofmann et al. |
Jan 2000 |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
034870 |
Mar 1998 |
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