The present invention relates generally to the field of nanoimprint lithography and more specifically to methods and means for generating a nano-scale pattern on a substrate.
Quantum devices whose performance is influenced by the materials being structured in the nanometer-scale e.g. single-electron devices, are promising for the coming electronic generations. Developments of nanofabrication technologies are essential for production of such nano-devices. In practice extreme e-beam lithography as well as AFM-based methods (Atomic Force Microscope) for manipulation of nano-particles have made it possible to fabricate structures and patterns with dimensions down to some few nanometers. However, those techniques are working in a serial manner preventing these nano lithographies to be applied for mass fabrication of devices. Nanoimprint lithography, (NIL) has the inherent potential to be a promising candidate for fabrication of such nanodevices in parallel. Here, a stamp patterned with a serial lithography technique, most often e-beam lithography, can be utilised for replications in a stamp-print approach, quite similar to the compact-disc (CD) manufacturing process. The CD production technique was introduced 1975, having shown it's excellent mass production capability. CD production has a total (worst case) yield better then 67% in the full area of each 6″ compact disc being produced.
Nanoimprint lithography (NIL) is a known technique for producing a nano scale pattern on a substrate. The substrate can e.g. be a semiconductor material, such as silicon, indium phosphide or gallium arsenide, and used e.g. for the production of semiconductor components. The substrate can also be of other materials such as ceramic materials, metals or polymers with a relatively high glass transition temperature, in case of other applications such as e.g. biosensors.
The trend in microelectronics is towards ever smaller dimensions. In principle, development has been such that the dimensions are reduced to their half size about every third year. For instance, commercial components are manufactured today with structures of about 130 nm in size, but there is a need to go even further down in dimensions.
The basic principle of NIL is mechanical deformation of a thin film layer, which is coated onto a flat plate of e.g. silicon. The NIL process can be compared with the production process for CD:s and can be described in three stages:
1. Production of a mould (i.e. a mould template): A mould can be produced from various materials, e.g. metal, semiconductor, ceramic or from certain plastics. To create a three-dimensional structure on one surface of the mould, various lithographic methods can be used, depending on the requirements for the size of the structures and their resolution. E-beam and X-ray lithography are normally used for structure dimensions that are less than 300 nm. Direct laser exposure and UV lithography are used for larger structures.
2. Imprint: A thin film layer of a polymer, e.g. polyamide, is applied to a flat substrate of silicon. The layer is heated to a certain temperature, the so-called imprint temperature. The mould and substrate are pressed together so that the inverse structure of the mould is transferred to the polymer layer on the substrate. During the imprint step, the resist is heated to a temperature above its glass transition temperature. At that temperature, the resist, which is thermoplastic, becomes a viscous liquid and can flow and, therefore, can be readily deformed into the shape of the mold. The resist's viscosity decreases as the temperature increases.
3. Structure transfer: In the areas pressed together in the polymer layer, a thin layer of polymer remains. The last stage is removal of this thin remaining layer on the substrate. This can be carried out in a so-called “RIB” or O2-plasma unit or in an anisotropic etching process, such as reactive ion etching, RIE. The thinner this remaining layer is, the finer the structures that can be created using the nanoimprint.
A problem with conventional NIL procedures is that the mould can adhere to the thin film layer during pressing which makes the transferred inverse pattern in the thin film layer less accurate. Therefore, the mould is normally provided with a thin anti-adhesive layer in order to avoid such adhesion.
The article “Step and Flash Imprint Lithography:A New Approach to High-Resolution Patterning”, Proc. SPIE Vol. 3676, 379-389 (1999), by Willson et al, describes a polymer imprint resist layer with integrated anti-adhesive material in the polymer.
Another imprint method uses imprint in combination with UV exposure to cure a polymer. This alternative approach to lithography is based on a bilayer imprint scheme. In this process, a standard quartz mask with a patterned chromium surface is reactive ion etched, producing high-resolution relief images in the surface. The remaining chromium is removed and the template is surface treated with a fluorinated self-assembled monolayer. A low-viscosity, photopolymerizable formulation is introduced into the gap between the two surfaces. The template is then brought into contact with the substrate. This solution, called the etch barrier, is photopolymerized by exposure through the backside of the quartz template. The template is separated from the substrate, leaving a UV-cured replica of the relief structure on the substrate. Features smaller than 40 nm in size have been reliably produced using this imprinting process. A problem/drawback with this technique is that it is not suitable for large area imprint without stepping and stamping/flashing, where the polymer has to be dispensed prior to each imprint step.
There are several challenging problems associated with imprint lithography methods. One critical area is to perform the next level of processing while maintaining the same resolution demonstrated in the polymer layer. The formation of patterned metal layers is one application. Finely patterned metal layers are used as interconnects in integrated circuits. They can also be used as catalysts for subsequent layer growth. If the subsequent metal layers cannot readily be etched, e.g., due to crystal direction dependent etching rates, an additive approach such as lift-off is desirable. However, single polymer layers are problematic when transferring the pattern via metal lift-off. The nonvertical sidewalls resulting from the imprinting process result in tearing and detachment of the metal film during lift-off. Nonvertical sidewalls occur in imprint lithography if the imprinting element does not have vertical sidewalls. Even if the imprinter does have vertical sidewalls, nonvertical sidewalls are formed in the imprinted film due to a descumming step necessary to remove residual polymer from the bottom of the imprinted feature. Therefore, a technique is required that minimizes the problems associated with metal lift-off using single layer resists.
There are other problems with those imprint techniques, which are addressed by the present invention such as changes in surface adhesion properties if substrate and organic materials are varied. This causes the process to be limited to polymer material in combination with specific substrate materials such as silicon, nickel, quartz, glass, silicon nitride etc. Using a release agent on the mold is not safe enough to be sure that the process can be used in industrial production.
It thus exists a need to find nano imprint litography methods and means providing the possibility to transfer even finer nano-scale structures from a mould to a substrate in an economical way and eliminating/alleviating the problem concerning adhesion of the mould to the substrate during imprinting.
The object of the present invention is to eliminate/alleviate above drawbacks/problems.
One object of the present invention is thus to find nano imprint litography methods and means providing the possibility to transfer even finer nano-scale structures from a mould to a substrate.
Another object of the present invention is to find nano imprint litography methods and means, which alleviate the problem concerning adhesion of the mould to the substrate during imprinting.
Still another object of the present invention is to find nano imprint litography methods and means, which improve the accuracy of the imprint pattern on the substrate.
A further object of the present invention is to provide nano imprint litography methods and means which improves imprinting quality by reducing the sticking of polymer on to the mould surface and the release of polymer from the substrate.
Still a further object of the present invention is to provide nano imprint litography methods and means which provide the possibility of economical mass production of nano-structures of higher accuracy.
According to one aspect of the present invention, the invention accomplishes above objects by a method for forming a structured pattern on a substrate wherein said substrate is coated with a plurality of coating layers before pressing, where each coating layer has a specific function.
According to another aspect, the invention accomplishes above objects by providing a method for forming a structured pattern on a substrate wherein the uppermost coating layer on top of the substrate has a pure anti-adhesive function.
According still another aspect of the invention, a substrate is provided for forming a nano scale pattern on said substrate wherein said substrate is coated with a plurality of coating layers each having a specific function.
According to still another aspect, the substrate according to invention has an uppermost coating layer having a pure anti-adhesive function.
Although the present invention has been summarised above, the present invention is defined by the independent claims 1 and 8. Further embodiments of the invention are defined by the dependent claims 2-7, 9 and 10.
The present invention is based on the identification of problems/drawbacks with integrating an anti-adhesive material in the polymer imprint resist layer on the substrate during nano-imprint lithography, as described e.g. in the above mentioned article “Step and Flash Imprint Lithography:A New Approach to High-Resolution Patterning”, Proc. SPIE Vol. 3676, 379-389 (1999), by Willson et al, describes a polymer imprint resist layer with integrated anti-adhesive material in the polymer. This approach gives far from optimal antisticking performance, leading to sticking of polymer to the mould and as a consequence hinders an economical mass production of even finer nano-scale patterns on substrates.
The present invention is illustrated in
Referring to
The present invention overcomes the problems and drawbacks associated with known techniques by providing the substrate with an uppermost anti-adhesive layer on top of e.g. the imprint resist layer. This facilitates an even distribution of the anti-adhesive layer and also makes the evenness of the anti-adhesive layer less critical for the accuracy and fineness of the final imprint result. The invention provides a thin monolayer, such as a Teflon™-like monolayer, as an anti-adhesive layer, on the mould. The thickness of the Teflon™-like monolayer is about 10 nm or less according to the invention, however the thickness might vary depending on the chemistry applied.
By using the imprint technique according to the invention, the imprint result shows a higher quality with practically no sticking of polymer to the mould surface and no release of polymer from the substrate. Furthermore, the imprint result indicates that the above problem regarding nonvertical sidewalls is alleviated. Thus, a nano pattern imprint method providing a higher accuracy, which also permits an economical mass production of even finer structures on a substrate has been disclosed.
The invention has been described by means of illustrative examples. The figures are not to scale but illustrate merely the working principle of the invention. Many modifications are possible for a person skilled in the art, e.g. regarding additional functional layers, e.g. to introduce a so called lift-off layer etc, between the substrate 115 and the anti-adhesive layer 130 without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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03078683.4 | Nov 2003 | EP | regional |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60481686 | Nov 2003 | US |