This invention generally relates to calibration and more specifically to calibration of sample measurements made using systems having both a micromachining tool and an analytical tool.
In the integrated circuit industry, electron microscopes are central to microstructural analysis of integrated circuit components. The quality of a finished integrated circuit is highly dependent on the measurement and control of the circuit's critical dimensions. Thus, it is very important to ensure that critical dimension measurements received from metrology tools, such as electron microscopes, are precise and accurate. Typically, in critical dimension analysis of an integrated circuit component an electron microscope measures the apparent width of a structure when determining its dimensions. The apparent width of the structure is compared to critical dimension specifications in order to determine the compliance of the integrated circuit component.
Unfortunately, there are disadvantages to using the typical apparatus and method, as the apparent width of a structure as reported by the measurement tool is often different from the actual width of the structure. In addition, the discrepancy between the actual width and the apparent width of the structure could fluctuate from day to day, as well as from tool to tool. Thus, the integrity of the data derived from such measurements is often called into question, and is difficult to rely on.
In an effort to overcome this problem, it is possible to use a calibration piece having a structure with a known size. The calibration piece is loaded into the measurement tool and measured at regular intervals, such as once each day. The difference between the apparent width and the actual width of the structure on the calibration piece is used as a correction factor for other measurements. Unfortunately, even this procedure tends to not have the desired accuracy in all situations.
For example, most scanning electron microscopes can provide very good information about the dimensions of integrated circuit features within the plane of a wafer but very little information about the three-dimensional structure of these features. To over come this, dual beam tools having both a focused ion beam (FIB) and a scanning electron microscope (SEM) can be used. Such a tool uses the FIB to mill away a trench in the wafer proximate a feature of interest. The trench exposes a cross-section of the feature. Such a cross-section can be used to measure the physical dimensions of features in the direction perpendicular to the plane of the wafer. The SEM can be used to observe the cross-section and measure the size of the features in the horizontal and vertical directions. The electron beam from the SEM forms an angle that is approximately 45 degrees with respect to the plane of the wafer. Therefore, the image obtained from the SEM must be scaled by the cosine of the angle of incidence to obtain the actual size of the features. If the angle of incidence is not accurately known, the size of the features is in turn not known with accuracy.
d=d′/cos θ
Note also the slant in the
Thus, there is a need in the art, for a method for calibrating vertical dimensions in dual beam FIB/SEM systems against a standard and a corresponding standard.
Objects and advantages of the invention will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description and upon reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Although the following detailed description contains many specific details for the purposes of illustration, anyone of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that many variations and alterations to the following details are within the scope of the invention. Accordingly, the exemplary embodiments of the invention described below are set forth without any loss of generality to, and without imposing limitations upon, the claimed invention.
Embodiments of the present invention include methods for in-situ calibration of measurements made with a dual beam system having a micromachining tool capable of exposing a sample cross-section and a metrology or inspection tool for analyzing the exposed sample cross-section. An example of such a dual beam system is one having a focused ion beam (FIB) and scanning electron microscope (SEM). Alternatively, embodiments of the invention can be applied to systems using alternative techniques to produce and/or analyze the sample cross-sections. Such alternative system may include laser ablation or electron beam ablation. Examples of suitable dual beam systems that can be used with embodiments of the present invention include the CLM-3D, manufactured by FEI, Hillsboro, Oreg., USA.
Embodiments of the invention can be understood by reference to
In alternative embodiments, FIB source 208 may be replaced with another suitable micromachining tool, e.g., a laser ablation tool or electron beam ablation tool. Similarly, the SEM 206 may be replaced with any other suitable analytical tool. As used herein, analytical tools include both inspection tools and metrology tools. Inspection tools are those which can detect defects within the sample 203. Metrology tools are used to measure the size and/or other physical properties of features of the sample 203. Examples of tools that may be used for inspection and/or metrology include, but are not limited to, critical-dimension scanning electron microscopes, scatterometers, optical microscope, scanning probe microscopes such as atomic force microscopes, scanning tunneling microscopes, lateral force microscopes, scanning capacitance microscopes, and near field optical microscopes, patterned wafer inspection systems, unpatterned wafer inspection systems, reticle inspection systems, fly height testers, and disk substrate inspection systems.
The flow diagram of
According to alternative embodiments of the invention standards such as those described above may be checked in-situ for uniformity of the standard across a width of the standard. For example, a few trenches may be formed in the sample to reveal the calibrated feature at different locations across the width of the standard. The revealed calibrated feature may then be examined, e.g., with a SEM or CD-SEM. This allows a uniformity check of the standard across the width of the standard.
In certain embodiments of the invention the known dimensions of the standard feature may include one or more traceably measured dimensions. As used herein, a measurement is said to be “traceable” or “traceably measured” if the measurement has been made with a measurement system calibrated with a standard reference material traceable to a national testing authority. Such standard reference materials may provide the bases for the traceability to the International System of Units. Artifacts whose properties are traceable to fundamental quantities (e.g. speed of light, angle, wavelength of cesium etc.) are also regarded as “traceable”. Artifacts whose properties are traceable to a lattice spacing of a known crystalline material of known crystalline orientation (e.g. the lattice spacing of silicon <110> etc.) are also regarded as “traceable”. Examples of national testing authorities include, but are not limited to national laboratories such as the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST—Gaithersburg, Md., US), the Institute for National Measurement Standards (Montreal, Canada), the National Institute of Metrology (Beijing China, China), the Bureau National de Metrplogie (Paris, France), the Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing (BAM—Berlin, Germany), The National Physics Laboratory (New Delhi, India), the Istituto di Metrologia “G. Colonnetti” (IMGC—Torino, Italy), the National Metrology Institute of Japan (Ibaraki, Japan), the National Physical Laboratory Center for Basic Metrology (Teddington, UK), the Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM—Sevres Cedex, France) and the International Organization of Legal Metrology (OIML—Paris, France). In addition, national testing authorities also include other laboratories delegated by the national laboratories.
There are many different types of structures that may be used as the calibration standard 205. For example,
The two oxide layers provide a contrast in SEM images taken of the sidewall 312. The layer of single crystal material 306 can serve as a calibrated feature of the standard 300. A thickness D of the single crystal layer provides a known dimension. Thickness metrology techniques having high accuracy and traceability to NIST may be used to measure thickness D. Such thickness metrology techniques may include, for example, optical ellipsometry, optical spectrophotometry, optical interferometry, profilometry, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (“EDS”), thermal and acoustic wave techniques, cross-sectional TEM, and X-ray techniques. The thickness D can be traceably measured. By way of example, the substrate 302 and oxide layer 304 and single crystal layer 306 may be formed from a silicon on insulator (SOI) wafer. The single crystal layer 306 can also be <110> silicon 0.5 μm thick and the top oxide layer 308 may be a 0.05 μm thick thermal oxide grown on top of the single crystal layer 306.
An additional problem that may arise with some FIB/SEM systems is that the sidewall 312 formed by ion beam milling with the FIB may not necessarily be vertical, i.e., perpendicular to the wafer surface. In such a case, the sidewall angle introduces an error in the measurement since a vertical feature will appear to be thicker or thinner due to the angling of the sidewall. If the standard 300 is sufficiently similar to the sample being analyzed it is reasonable to assume that, even if the sidewall angles are not vertical, the trenches in the standard and sample have essentially the same sidewall angles. If this is so the dimensions of the sample feature can be determined from direct comparison with measurements of the standard feature since the effects of the two sidewall angles would cancel each other out. However, if the two sidewall angles are different, a proper comparison of the sample and standard measurements would require knowledge of the sidewall angles.
To provide some information about the sidewall angle, a second trench can be formed in the sample and/or the standard that intersects the trench used to reveal the sample feature or standard feature. An example of this is depicted in
Additional embodiments of the present invention allow for calibration of measurements made parallel to the plane of a wafer. For example, as depicted in
By way of example, the standard 400 may be fabricated as follows. A structure having a SOI wafer providing the substrate 402 and first oxide layer 404, silicon <110> as the single crystal layer 406 and thermal oxide as the second oxide layer 408 may be used as a starting material. A grating with a suitable pitch, e.g., 2 μm pitch, can be formed by etching the trenches 410 through the oxide layers 404, 408 and through the silicon of the single crystal layer 406 with an anisotropic silicon etchant. e.g. tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH). A dry etch technique can be used instead of a wet etch technique, for example, to obtain vertical features where <110> silicon may not be commercially available.
An advantage of <110> silicon is that it tends to produce vertical features that are highly perpendicular to the wafer surface when etched with standard techniques. Thus the crystalline orientation of sidewalls of features 412 containing a layer of <110> silicon can be used as a standard to certify perpendicularity. Alternatively, the crystallography of the single crystal layer 406 may alternatively have a <100> orientation to obtain cross-sectional features at a 54 degree angle instead of vertical.
The pitch can be certified with a calibrated optical microscope. Alternatively, a calibrated CD-SEM may be used instead of an optical microscope to measure the pitch of the grating. Alternatively light diffraction may be used to measure the pitch of the grating. The height of the features 412 can be certified with a stylus profilometer on appropriately larger features. As an alternative to profilometry, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) could be used to traceably determine the height of the features 412. In addition, the height of the features 412 can be traceably certified using thin film metrology techniques, such as ellipsometry.
There are many other variations on the standard 400 described above. For example, the size of the pitch and the thickness of the single crystal layer 406 can be altered to match the size of the features to be measured. Realistic sizes range from state-of-the-art lithographic patterning techniques, which today can be as small as 100 nm pitch, up to tens of microns in the lateral dimension, and from a few nanometers to hundreds of microns in the vertical direction. In addition, the shape of the trenches 410 and features 412 may be different than shown in
The distinction between linewidth and pitch is illustrated with reference to
Embodiments of the invention thus utilize a calibration standard having features with traceably measured dimensions to be used for the calibration of dimensions measured by a dual beam tool, e.g., FIB/SEM. The standard includes features built and certified in a direction perpendicular to the plane of the wafer. Embodiments of the present invention allow for calibration of measurements made with dual beam systems in a way that was not previously possible.
Specifically, embodiments of the present invention allow for in-situ calibration in a dual system (e.g., FIB/SEM). By contrast, prior art calibration standards for TEM, such as the MAG*I*CAL® standard, have been built by depositing layers and then sawing a sliver from the sample and mechanically thinning the sliver to a few microns in thickness (in the center only of the piece that has been sawed, with a technique called dimpling). The sliver is then ion milled to about 100 nm in thickness, so that the sample becomes transparent to an electron beam and can be used for TEM. The resulting tiny sliver sawed from the sample is mounted onto a TEM grid and inserted into the TEM to calibrate the TEM, or possibly sold already mounted onto the grid or other suitable substrate. However, such a sample cannot be used to calibrate a dual system FIB/SEM in-situ since the features of the sample are revealed in a vertical plane and the features of the calibration standard are oriented in a horizontal plane. A key feature of embodiments of the present invention is the fact that the calibration sample and the actual sample to be measured are prepared and viewed in a similar way, in the same tool, so that parameters affecting calibration, such as the viewing angle and the cutting angle, can be calibrated out.
While the above is a complete description of the preferred embodiment of the present invention, it is possible to use various alternatives, modifications and equivalents. Therefore, the scope of the present invention should be determined not with reference to the above description but should, instead, be determined with reference to the appended claims, along with their full scope of equivalents. In the claims that follow, the indefinite article “A” or “An” refers to a quantity of one or more of the item following the article, except where expressly stated otherwise. The appended claims are not to be interpreted as including means-plus-function limitations, unless such a limitation is explicitly recited in a given claim using the phrase “means for.”
This application is a divisional of prior U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/119,056 filed Apr. 28, 2005, the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11119056 | Apr 2005 | US |
Child | 12116890 | US |