All rights in connection with this application are assigned to Intel Corporation.
This application relates to phase shifting masks used in photolithography.
A phase mask used in photolithography is a template imprinted with a desired spatial pattern for microstructures, integrated circuits, or a combination of one or more microstructures and one or more integrated circuits. Such a phase mask may have transmissive regions with pre-assigned relative phase shifts within the pattern. In operation, the phase mask is illuminated with radiation and the transmission of the radiation through the phase mask is imaged by a lens imaging system onto a photoresist layer on a substrate. This exposure of the photoresist layer and the subsequent patterning process transfer the pattern in the phase mask to the photoresist layer. The phase mask may be an alternating phase shift mask (APSM) that has adjacent transmissive regions or apertures with a relative phase shift of 180 degrees. Light fields from two adjacent transmissive apertures interact when they overlay to produce destructive interference in the imaging process and thus produce sharp images of the features in the phase mask. In comparison with amplitude masks with opaque and transmissive features without the relative phase shifts, phase masks can improve the image resolution and reduce the critical dimension (CD) of the patterned photoresist.
This application describes, among others, techniques for combining imaging imbalance compensation and optical proximity correction (OPC) in designing a phase mask prior to manufacturing of the phase mask to reduce distortions in the final image projected on the photoresist layer when such a phase mask is used in photolithography. Image imbalance may be represented by the difference between intensities of images from different transmissive phase apertures on the phase mask with different phase delays. The phase apertures may be in various shapes such as polygons. An alternating phase shift mask, for example, may have phase apertures with relative phase values of 0 degree and 180 degrees. A trench for a 180-degree phase aperture is deeper than a trench for a 0-degree phase aperture. The scattering from the side walls of the trenches 15 can make the intensity of light from a 180-degree phase aperture less than that from a 0-degree phase aperture. As a result, this image imbalance can alter desired patterns imaged onto the photoresist. For example, the image of the 180 degree aperture can become smaller than the image of the 0 degree aperture and the position of the line edge formed on the wafer may be shifted due to the image imbalance. One way to correct the adverse image imbalance in phase masks is to create a chrome undercut in forming phase apertures by etching during the mask manufacturing process.
One feature of the present techniques is to incorporate the image imbalance compensation into the optical proximity correction (OPC) in designing a phase mask. Hence, the capability of the image imbalance compensation is built into the design of the phase apertures. The image imbalance can be partially or entirely compensated by simply using this specially designed phase mask in the photolithographic process.
As an example, the phase mask with built-in compensation for image imbalance may be designed as follows. The phase apertures for a phase mask may be first designed according to a structure pattern to be formed a photoresist layer in a photolithography process that uses the phase mask. Next, the sizes of the phase apertures are reduced. Optical proximity correction is then applied to the phase apertures in reduced sizes. After the optical proximity correction (OPC), the sizes of the phase apertures are increased. Two adjacent phase apertures in the above design example may have phase values that are shifted by 180 degrees and may be reduced in size in the above size-reducing step by different amounts.
This application of the image imbalance compensation in the design stage of a phase mask has a number of advantages. For example, the techniques can be applied to smaller CD patterning and hence are scalable. The compensation for the image imbalance during the design stage may allow for elimination of the chrome undercut for compensating the image imbalance during manufacturing of the phase mask and thus simplifies the mask manufacturing process. The compensation for image imbalance during the design stage of a phase mask may also be combined with the chrome undercut formed during the manufacturing stage to compensate for image imbalance in both the design and manufacturing of the phase mask. As yet another example, the present techniques include the effect of the image imbalance and its compensation in the mask design modeling to improve the capacity of the mask design modeling so that optical proximity correction algorithms can be designed to be more accurate and faster than other algorithms without such built-in compensation for the image imbalance.
After the optical proximity correction, the sizes of the modified phase apertures are enlarged at step 240. The sizes of the phase apertures after the optical proximity correction may be increased by the same amount as the amount of reduction of the phase apertures prior to the optical proximity correction. The sizing operations in steps 220 and 240 are used to compensate for the image imbalance and may depend on certain properties of the phase mask, such as the etch depth and presence of the chrome undercut. Aperture resizing may adversely affect certain mask constraints due to the photolithography process.
The optical proximity correction applied in step 220 performs edge adjustments to compensate for the proximity effects based on the targeting done in step 210. Due to the down sizing in step 220, the OPC process starts from a different target (usually larger Cr CD than desired), the step 240 increases sizes of the phase regions by the same amounts used at step 220 for phase apertures, respectively, so that when the phase mask is used to project a pattern onto the photoresist in the fabrication, the final image on the wafer comes at the desired wafer image CD which is the desired Cr CD generated in step 210. Therefore, the upsizing in step 240 does not undo the downsizing in step 220 and is an integral part of the image imbalance compensation implemented in the design of the phase mask.
To preserve the mask constraints, the phase apertures after the step 240 are adjusted at step 250 based on the required mask constraints. This step essentially finalizes the design of the phase apertures and the finalized phase mask design is now ready for use in manufacturing the actual phase masks.
In the above design flow, image imbalance is compensated through simultaneous aperture sizing at steps 220 and 240 and the proximity effect correction at step 220. Additional checking steps may be further added after the step 250 to examine the finalized phase mask design. In one implementation, for example, the finalized phase apertures may be reduced in size to produce reduced phase apertures by the same amounts used in steps 220 and 240 in
The design data at the end of step 250 is ready for making the phase mask. The additional two checking steps are only for lithography verification of the completed phase mask design and are not part of the design process. However, these verification steps can be important to ensure the quality of the OPC process.
In applying the above design flow, the thick mask effect, which is accountable for image imbalance, may be simulated through a thin mask formalism using the phase aperture sizing method. The sizing depends on the properties of the mask, such as etch depth, the presence of the chrome undercut, and the combination of these and other effects. The validity of this modeling approach may be verified by comparing AIMS (Aerial Image Measurement System) data to simulation as well as comparison between the wafer print data and simulation. Software algorithms are used to accommodate the above modeling approach. Rules-based aperture sizing and model-based proximity effects correction are applied to each of the 180-degree phase and 0-degree phase apertures through a combination of simultaneous targeting model evaluations/edge adjustments and Boolean operations. Image imbalance compensation through aperture sizing could have negative impact on CD control and mask manufacturing capability without effective mask constraints preservation. Preservation of mask constraints is achieved through rules-based edge-to-edge and corner-to-corner adjustments of the 0-degree and 180-degree polygon apertures.
The flow in
The above operations in the exemplary design flow may be written as computer instructions or routines stored on a machine-readable medium such as a computer storage device. The storage device may be, for example, an optical disk, a magnetic disk, a memory IC chip, or other storage devices. The instructions are executable to cause the a machine such as a computer or other information device to carry out the desired operations for designing a phase mask. The pattern of the finalized phase mask design may be converted into mask data in a binary data exchange format such as a GDS format (e.g., GDSII). The mask data is sent to a mask fabrication facility and is read into a computer-controlled mask fabrication machine or system. The system then makes a physical pattern on a mask substrate according to the mask data. The mask data generated by the mask designer may be stored on a storage medium such as a portable storage device and the storage medium is sent to the mask fabrication facility. Alternatively, the mask data may be stored on a networked storage device connected to a communication network and is then fetched from the storage device and transferred to the mask fabrication facility via the communication network.
The above compensation of the image imbalance implemented in the design of a phase mask may completely eliminate the need for the chrome undercut during the fabrication of the phase mask so that the phase mask is made without the chrome undercut and the actual image imbalance in the photolithography process using such a phase mask is small and within an acceptable tolerance level. Alternatively, a phase mask may be designed to utilize the chrome undercut during the mask fabrication to compensate for the image imbalance. Such a phase mask may still be designed to include the above compensation for the image imbalance by resizing and OPC to further compensate for any residual image imbalance that is not completely compensated by the chrome undercut. In this design, for a given chrome undercut, the typical residual image imbalance may be measured from testing phase masks. This information of the typical residual image imbalance is then used to configure the resizing and the OPC during the design of the phase mask to effectuate the finalized phase apertures that can compensate for the typical residual image imbalance.
Only a few implementations are described. However, it is understood that variations and enhancements may be made.