This application claims the benefit of United Kingdom Patent application Ser. No. 0404805.4, filed 3 Mar. 2004.
The invention relates to an improvement in the compensation of a magnetic field in a predefined operating region with feedback control, using magnetic field sensors and an arrangement of compensation coils surrounding said operating region.
Many technical applications require surroundings well shielded from external magnetic fields. One example for an apparatus that requires a good compensation of magnetic fields is a particle-optical system such as electron microscopes or ion-beam exposure apparatus. In a system of this kind, a particle (electron or ion) beam is used traveling along a specific path and directed against a target to be imaged or structured, and any external magnetic field may deflect the particle beam off its path, thus deteriorating obstructing the performance of the device; this is the reason why a compensation of magnetic fields is needed. While a vacuum housing, which usually is made of aluminum or another metal of rather high conductivity, provides a sufficient shielding against high-frequency magnetic fields, typically for frequencies above 50 Hz, the compensation of low-frequency and in particular static fields requires an active shielding method, such as using a set of Helmholtz coils.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,073,744 discloses a method and apparatus for controlling the magnetic field value within a specified volume, using four magnetic sensors with four control loops, respectively. The control loops are mutually coupled by the magnetic field. Decoupling is achieved by resistors provided between the loops. Also in the GB 1285 694 use of more than one magnetic sensor is disclosed, namely, to generate a compensation current by means of a closed-loop control for controlling the flux in the gap between two pole pieces, and in order to account for the different flux densities in the gap, different sensors are used and their sensor signals superimposed.
A self-degaussing control loop is disclosed in GB 2154 031 A for compensating stray-fields produced by a magnetic object. In order to account for the magnetization of the magnetic object, which cannot be measured directly, a derived quantity is used, namely the current needed for the compensation. The current signal is combined with the difference field information measured by the magnetic sensors. It should be noted that from the teaching of this document, the inclusion of the current signal only serves for compensation of a magnetization present in the operating region; when the operating region is empty, the use of the current signal would become superfluous.
All the mentioned methods and apparatuses perform the compensation of magnetic fields by using magnetic sensors positioned at the operating region where the magnetic field shall be compensated. Like for other applications, a particle optical system PO (
The present invention sets out to overcome the above-mentioned shortcomings of the state of the art. While it is in general not too difficult to rule out interfering fields from the vicinity of the apparatus, it is often impossible for the operator of the apparatus to avoid intrusion from far-away sources, such as electric supply lines, electric traffic engines and the like, which can cause distinct magnetic fields over distances of several 100 m or even more.
This task is solved according to the invention by a magnetic field compensation method of the kind as mentioned in the beginning with the following steps:
The task is likewise solved by a system with a number of magnetic field sensors and an arrangement of compensation coils surrounding said operating region, comprising
This solution allows an enhanced compensation of static and low-frequency fields of slow spatial variation (wave length well above the overall dimension of the shielding cage) by means of a surprisingly simple addition to the feedback loop despite the fact that the magnetic sensors are not located in the operating region. The signals of the sensors and signals that are proportional to the current in the Helmholtz coils are scaled and added in a mixer unit (viz., the superposing means) in order to obtain signals which directly correspond to the signals that would be produced by a sensor positioned right within the device to be compensated (e.g. in the path of the particle beam). Thus the systematic difference between the mean value of the sensors and the field in the device can be corrected in a simple and reliable manner. It is worthwhile to note that the current signal is used to account for the distance between the sensor position form the (center of) the operating region, not for the stray field of some magnetized object as in GB 2154 031 A.
Preferably the driving signal may be converted by an amplifier to a secondary driving signal from which the additional input signal is derived by means of a calibrating means. The secondary driving signal is then fed to the additional feedback branch via a calibrating means.
In order to allow for compensation of static field gradients or zero point offsets, an external signal may be used as an additional setpoint signal for superposition with the feedback signal.
While the sensors have to be positioned outside the operating region, it will be suitable to position them at the fringe of or close to the operating region. It is advantageous if the sensors are positioned in the vicinity of the operating region at positions symmetric to each other with respect to a symmetry axis of the operating region. In this case the sensor signals of said symmetrically positioned sensors may be superposed by averaging said signals to a mean signal which is then processed as feedback signal.
It should be appreciated that the magnetic field is a vector component, and generally the shielding is to be done for all three vector components. Therefore, the compensation may be implemented as three sub-systems for three magnetic field components, respectively, corresponding to different spatial directions independently of each other, with the sensor positioned in positions adapted to derive feedback signals, each corresponding to a field component and being undisturbed by the other field components. In certain cases, where the field may be treated as two-dimensional, only two components are compensated.
The situation may arise where the compensation of one field component is not possible by adjusting only one compensation field component, due to a coupling between the field components. Possible reasons are the presence of ferromagnetic material or other materials with high magnetic anisotropy, or a choice of sensor positions which does not align with the main axes of the system to be compensated. Then, cross-coupling means which provide a mixing of the compensation signals associated with the three (or two) axes according to the associated coupling matrix will be necessary to account for the coupling between the components. The cross-coupling is parametrized in terms of configuration parameters which describe the coupling between the different components and which are adjustable so as to achieve an effective de-coupling of the compensation loops.
In the following, the present invention is described in more detail with reference to a preferred embodiment illustrated in the drawings, which schematically show:
The preferred embodiment of the invention discussed in the following refers to a field compensation for a particle-optical system. It should be noted, however, that the invention is not restricted to this specific application.
The magnetic field compensation system according to the invention has two flux sensors S1, S2. They are mounted symmetrically to the optical axis cx of the particle optical system PO and symmetrically to the Helmholtz coils of the cage HC (
To avoid this coupling, the sensors Si, S2 are mounted in such a way that the part of the signal s1, s2 which comes from a coil for a different component has the same size and the opposite sign in the two sensors that are used for each field component. By building the mean value ms of the two sensors, the signals for the three components are separated and do not influence each other. The averaging is done by a summation device SUM1 symbolized by a circle with a plus sign. The summation generates a signal corresponding to the average of the input signals; in other variants, which are equally functional, it may realize an addition of the two signals or any other kind of linear superposition of the input signals.
The sensors S1, S2 are mounted as close to the beam as possible, in order to get field values corresponding to the field in the region PO of the beam as closely as possible. However, if the magnetic field in the region of the beam is not completely homogenous, the sensors will measure field values different from the field at the location of the beam. Therefore, two sensors S1, S2 are used placed symmetric to the beam, and from the sensor signals s1, s2 a mean value ms is generated and used as a primary feedback signal for the control system. In particular if the disturbing field has a gradient which is nearly constant, the mean value of the two sensors is a good approximation for the field at the middle position between the sensors.
However, while the method of forming the mean value ms usually serves well for compensation of magnetic field gradients, it cannot compensate for all deviations between the place of the sensors and the place of desired field compensation in all configurations. In the above described system, the part of the flux which comes from the coils is not the same in the particle optical axis cx and at the flux sensors S1, S2. Because of the symmetry of the arrangement, the difference is the same in both sensors belonging to the same field component (Bx, By or Bz); this error cannot be compensated by computing the mean value.
To correct this effect, a further branch BC (‘coil feedback branch’) is introduced into the feedback of the control loop. This branch produces a signal cs which is proportional to the current Ic with which the coil is operated. The signal claims and the signal ms from the flux sensor branch BM are added by summation device SUM2 to obtain an enhanced feedback signal fs.
In another way of speaking, the two sensors S1, S2 and the device which generates the signal proportional to the current in the Helmholtz coil claims, together with the summation device(s), represent a ‘virtual flux sensor’ which generates an enhanced feedback signal. The enhanced feedback signal is very similar to the signal of a real sensor that would be mounted at a position inside the region PO of the particle beam (but would impede operation of the device as it obstructs the propagation of the particle beam).
The feedback signal may, furthermore, be combined with a setpoint signal s0 representing other static field contributions to be compensated. Preferably, this is done by a summation device SUM 3 with a negative weight for the feedback signal fs (subtractor), in order to obtain the negative feedback needed for an overall suppressive action of the feedback loop FL.
The resulting total signal ts is fed as input signal to a controller CR, for instance a PI or PID controller, whose parameters are adapted to the specific configuration and time constants of the Helmholtz coil Hh and the loop FL. The controller CR generates a primary driving signal d1 which defines the strength of the current Ic of the Helmholtz coil Hh. An amplifier AM amplifies the signal d1 output by the controller CR into a secondary driving signal d2 which is used as driving current for the coil Hh.
In the embodiment shown in
A magnetic field compensation system of the type shown in
For calibration of the magnetic field compensation, a third sensor (verification sensor) was placed on the ion optical axis; this was, of course, only possible while the housing is vented.
The result after implementation and calibration of the additional feedback branch BC is shown in
In some cases, e.g. in case of the presence of ferromagnetic material, the measured field components and those generated by the X, Y and Z coils are not rectangular to each other. The reason for this is that the magnetic field produced by, say, the X coil may be distorted and/or rotated due some permeable material which will also be picked up in the magnetic sensor, as illustrated in
Therefore, another solution to decouple the axes may be used. In contrast to the above example with electronically independent X Y Z feedback loops from the basic configuration, the three loops are combined together in the following manner.
As illustrated in
By carefully adjusting the coefficients kx1, kx2, . . . , kz3 it is now possible to generate a field with non-zero components in X, Y and Z directions for compensating a disturbance with only one component in the e.g. X axis at the magnetic sensor without introducing any false compensations in the remaining Y and Z axes.
The three adding circuits of
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Number | Date | Country |
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2 154 031 | Aug 1985 | GB |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050195551 A1 | Sep 2005 | US |