The present invention relates to a laser annealing method and apparatus.
High-power lasers such as excimer lasers, YAG lasers, and the like are presently becoming widespread not only in research applications, but in industrial applications as well. These fields of industrial utilization are expanding not only into general materials processing, but also into the medical and semiconductor fields.
When materials processing is performed using an excimer laser or similar beam, the beam is transformed in a linear cross-sectional dimension by means of an optical system, with scanning in the latitudinal direction (width direction).
The longitudinal direction and the latitudinal direction of the beam cross-section are each severally divided by a cylindrical lens to obtain a high degree of uniformity in the longitudinal direction and latitudinal direction of the beam pattern when the laser beam is transformed to a linear cross-sectional configuration.
The apparatus 1 depicted in the diagram is designed such that a beam 2 from a YAG laser (not shown) is divided into four parts in a vertical direction by a lens group 3 comprising four cylindrical lenses 3a-3d, further subdivided into seven parts in a horizontal direction by a lens group 4 comprising seven cylindrical lenses 4a-4g, and combined by a paired lens 7 comprising a pair of cylindrical lenses 7a and 7b disposed orthogonally to the generatrix, yielding a beam pattern whose light intensity is uniform in the longitudinal direction and the latitudinal direction. (Lens groups 3 and 7 comprise a homogenizer 15.) A beam 8 whose light intensity is uniformized is deflected by a reflecting mirror 9 towards a sample 10 and focused by a cylindrical lens 11 such that the sample 10 placed on a translation stage 13 that moves in the direction of arrow 12 is irradiated by a linear beam 14.
Due to the occurrence of transverse expansion when a YAG laser is used in this arrangement, the shape of the beam in the direction of the minor axis may correspond to that of a Gaussian beam.
It is apparent from
This is because flash lamps 32 and 35 for excitation are disposed at both sides of NdYAG rods 31 and 34.
A description will now be given of the YAG laser depicted in
The YAG laser 20 comprises an output laser oscillator 21 for oscillating a pulsed YAG laser, two laser amplifiers 22 and 23, and reflecting mirrors 25 and 26 for deflecting the path of the beam 24 from the output laser oscillator 1 and inputting the resultant beam into the laser amplifier 22 of the preceding stage.
The output laser oscillator 21 comprises a resonator comprising a total reflection mirror 27 and a diffusion (output) mirror 28, an NdYAG rod 29 disposed at the central axis of the resonator; and a flash lamp 30 for generating pulsed light flashes as excitation light arranged parallel with (in the y-axis) and beneath the NdYAG rod 29.
The laser amplifier 22 of the preceding stage comprises an NdYAG rod 31 disposed along the optical axis of the beam 24 from the reflecting mirror 26, and a flash lamp 32 arranged parallel with (in the y-axis) and beneath the NdYAG rod 31.
The later-described laser amplifier 23 comprises a NdYAG rod 34 disposed along the optical axis of the beam 33 arriving from the laser amplifier 22 of the preceding stage, and a flash lamp 35 arranged parallel with (in the y-axis) and beneath the NdYAG rod 34.
For this reason, the strong portions of the light intensity from the excitation light of the flash lamps 32 and 35 are superimposed on both ends of the beam 24 (depicted by the broken line) emitted from the YAG laser 20 and provided with the Gaussian distribution 24a, thus generating large peaks 36 and 37 as depicted in
A linear beam having large, streaked peaks on both latitudinal (in the direction of arrow 12) ends thereof in the manner depicted in
An object of the present invention is to provide a laser annealing method and apparatus capable of performing uniform beam emission, overcoming the aforementioned problems.
The laser annealing method of the present invention comprises transforming the cross-sectional configuration of a beam from a laser light source to a linear cross-sectional configuration by means of an optical system, and annealing a sample by applying the resulting linear cross-sectional beam thereto, wherein the laser annealing method entails transforming the beam from the laser light source to a linear cross-sectional configuration by means of an optical system after being rotated by rotating means at a prescribed angle.
The laser annealing apparatus of the present invention comprises a laser light source and an optical system for transforming the cross-sectional configuration of a beam from the laser light source to a linear configuration and annealing a sample by applying the resulting linearly configured beam thereto, wherein rotating means for rotating the cross-sectional configuration of the beam from the laser light source about the central axis of the beam at a prescribed angle are provided in the laser annealing apparatus between the laser light source and the optical system thereof.
In addition to the above structure, the optical system of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention may comprise a plurality of cylindrical lens groups arranged parallel to one another and orthogonal with respect to the optical axis of the beam, and designed for dividing the beam in the arrangement direction; and a lens disposed on the transmission side of the cylindrical lens groups and designed for combining the divided beam.
In addition to the above structure, the rotating means of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention may comprise a first mirror for deflecting the beam from the laser light source orthogonally with respect to the optical axis of the beam; a second mirror for deflecting the reflected beam from the first mirror orthogonally with respect to the plane containing the optical axis of the beam from the laser light source and the optical axis of the reflected beam from the first mirror; a third mirror for deflecting the reflected beam from the second mirror orthogonally within a plane identical to the plane containing the optical axis of the reflected beam from the first mirror and the optical axis of the reflected beam from the second mirror; and a fourth mirror for deflecting the reflected beam from the third mirror orthogonally within a second plane.
In addition to the above structure, the fourth mirror of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention may be provided to a moving means capable of moving along the direction of the optical axis of the reflected beam from the third mirror.
In addition to the above structure, the rotating means of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention may comprise a first mirror for deflecting the beam from the laser light source orthogonally with respect to the optical axis of the beam; and a second mirror for deflecting the reflected beam from the first mirror orthogonally with respect to a first plane containing the optical axis of the beam from the laser light source and the optical axis of the reflected beam from the first mirror.
In addition to the above structure, the second mirror of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention may be provided to a moving means capable of moving along the direction of the optical axis of the reflected beam from the first mirror.
In addition to the above structure, the laser light source of the laser annealing apparatus of the present invention preferably comprises a YAG laser light source, an Nd glass laser, or a Q-switch solid-state laser.
By means of the present invention, uniform beam emission can be achieved because a beam having a Gaussian distribution can be utilized and a linear cross-sectional configuration formed in an optical system by rotating the beam from a laser light source at a prescribed angle with the aid of rotating means even when the beam pattern of the beam from the laser light source has a nonuniform intensity distribution.
Embodiments of the present invention will be described in detail hereafter based on the accompanying figures.
The laser annealing apparatus 40 depicted in the same diagram comprises a Near Field pulse YAG laser (hereafter referred to as “YAG laser”) 20 (as seen in FIG. 8A); rotating means 42 for rotating a beam 41 from the YAG laser 20 at a prescribed angle; a lens group 44 for dividing the beam 43 from the rotating means 42 into four parts in a horizontal direction (the number of divisions is not limited), composed of cylindrical lenses 44a-44d; a cylindrical lens 46 for transforming the beam from the lens group 44 into a linear cross-sectional configuration by combining the beam, disposed orthogonally to the generatrix; a total reflection mirror 51 for deflecting the beam 49 from the cylindrical lens 46 towards a sample 50; a cylindrical lens 53 for laser annealing by focusing the beam 52 from the total reflection mirror 51 and applying the beam to the sample 50; and a translation stage 56 that moves in the latitudinal direction (the direction of the arrow 55) of the linear cross-sectional beam 54 focused on the sample 50. The lens group 44 and the cylindrical lens 46 also comprise a homogenizer 57 as the optical system.
The rotating means 42 may comprise, for example, a first mirror 60 for deflecting the beam 41 from the YAG laser orthogonally and upward with respect to the optical axis of the beam 41; a second mirror 62 for deflecting the beam 61 reflected by the first mirror 60 orthogonally with respect to a first plane containing the optical axis of the beam 41 and the optical axis of the beam 61 reflected by the first mirror 60; a third mirror 64 for deflecting the beam 63 reflected by the second mirror 62 orthogonally and downward within a plane identical to a second plane containing the optical axis of the beam 61 reflected by the mirror 60 and the optical axis of the beam 63 reflected by the second mirror 62; a fourth mirror 66 for deflecting the beam 65 reflected by the third mirror 64 orthogonally within the second plane; and moving means 67 for moving the fourth mirror 66 upward and downward along the direction of the optical axis of the beam 65 reflected by the third mirror 64.
The moving means 67 for adjusting the height of the beam 43 comprises a rail 69 mounted along the breadboard 68 of the rotating means 42; and a support 70 for supporting the fourth mirror 66, slidably mounted to the rail 69, 71, shown by the broken line, is a cover.
When the laser annealing apparatus 40 depicted in
The beam 43 incident on the lens group 44 enters the cylindrical lens 46 after being divided into four parts. The beam incident on the cylindrical lens 46 assumes a configuration wherein the beam pattern has a linear form with uniform light intensity in the longitudinal direction (see FIG. 5).
The operating principle of the homogenizer 57 will now be described.
A beam having a Gaussian distribution as depicted in
The homogenizer is thus capable of forming a beam having a different intensity distribution by dividing the beam in the cylindrical lens group 80 and combining the beam again. The intensity distribution of the beam along the line 4C—4C can also be freely adjusted by adjusting the light path after division.
The x-axis direction and the y-axis direction of the beam are divided and a substantially flat characteristic beam is obtained in the homogenizer 15 of FIG. 7.
A case will now be considered in which a homogenizer 57 for dividing only the x-axis direction is used, as in FIG. 1. When a beam enters the homogenizer through the beam pattern 38 having large intensity peaks 36 and 37 on the upper and lower ends thereof as shown in
The beam 49 from the lens group 44 and the cylindrical 46 depicted in
The difference with respect to the rotating means depicted in
Specifically, the rotating means 90 comprises a first mirror 91 for deflecting the beam 41 from the laser light source orthogonally with respect to the optical axis of the beam 41; and a second mirror 93 for deflecting the beam 92 reflected by the first mirror 91 orthogonally with respect to a first plane containing the optical axis of the beam 41 from the laser light source and the optical axis of the beam 92 reflected by the first mirror 91. The second mirror 93 is provided to a moving means 94 capable of moving along the direction of the optical axis of the beam 92 reflected by the first mirror 91. The moving means 94 is designed to adjust the height of the beam 43 and is composed of a rail 96 mounted along the breadboard 95 of the rotating means 90, and a support 97 designed to support the second mirror 93 and slidably mounted to the rail 96 in the same manner as shown in
Not only does using this type of rotating means 90 yield the same effects as the rotating means 42 depicted in
By means of the present invention above:
The present embodiment was described with reference to a 90 degree angle of rotation, but the present invention is in no way limited by this option alone and can be used as long as it is possible to obtain an angle of rotation that allows deviations in the intensity distribution of the beam to be corrected. The present embodiment was also described with reference to a Near Field pulse YAG laser as a laser light source, but the present invention is in no way limited by this option alone and may be adapted to laser light sources whose beam patterns have a nonuniform intensity distribution, such as Nd glass lasers, Q-switch solid-state lasers, and the like.
The claim of priority for the present application is based on Japanese Patent Application No. 2001-5579 (filed Jan. 12, 2001), and the details of the Japanese Application are contained in the description of the present application.
The present invention is applicable to a laser annealing method and apparatus.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2001-5579 | Jan 2001 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCTJP02/00189 | 1/15/2002 | WO | 00 | 10/11/2002 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO0205635 | 7/18/2002 | WO | A |
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5888839 | Ino et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
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6117752 | Suzuki | Sep 2000 | A |
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6190949 | Noguchi et al. | Feb 2001 | B1 |
6248606 | Ino et al. | Jun 2001 | B1 |
6341042 | Matsunaka et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6411906 | Goto | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6528397 | Taketomi et al. | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6548830 | Noguchi et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6580053 | Voutsas | Jun 2003 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2001-127004 | May 2001 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030132209 A1 | Jul 2003 | US |