1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to an assembly including a holder—in particular, a mount—and an optical component adhered to the holder by an adhesive, wherein the optical component is suitable for transmitting radiation in a first region of ultraviolet (UV) radiation, and wherein the adhesive is hardened by UV radiation in a second region of ultraviolet radiation, the adhesive being protected from radiation of the first region of ultraviolet radiation by an adhesive-protecting layer.
2. Description of the Related Art
Japanese Patent Application JP 8-72300 provides an example of an assembly with an ultraviolet curable adhesive. Such assemblies form, among other things, mounted lenses and the like of illumination systems and projection systems for microlithography.
Japanese Patent Application JP 11-014876 describes a protective member for shielding the surface of the adhesive of such an assembly from ultraviolet radiation transmitted by the optical component during use of the optical component.
Thin layers of dielectrics for protecting an adhesive, in particular layers with thicknesses in the micrometer range, are known in the optical field, and are applied by vacuum deposition, PVD or CVD. Such a protective layer for UV hardening bonds is described in Japanese Patent publication JP 9-184917.
It has been found that the known mount adhesives based on epoxy resin, which can be hardened with UV radiation of a region consisting only of wavelengths larger than 300 nm and including an Hg-I line at 365 nm, can be considerably damaged by irradiation with UV radiation from the deep UV region, in particular at about 248 nm, 193 nm or 157 nm. UV absorbing fillers in the adhesive mass do not prevent failure of the boundary layer of the adhesive adjacent to the optical component. U.S. Pat. document No. 6,097,536 describes an assembly comprising a protective layer shielding the adhesive from radiation below approximately 300 nm, but allowing curing of the adhesive at higher wavelengths.
Material properties of optical components transparent for UV radiation may differ considerably from material properties of the adjacent protective layer, a circumstance which may cause the tensile or compression strength between the two to be insufficient to assure long term stability of the mechanical bond between the optical component and the holder.
It is one object of the invention to provide an assembly of the stated kind, wherein the tensile or compression strength between all parts of the assembly is large enough to assure long-term stability of the assembly. Providing a process for producing the assembly, an optical component and microlithography projection exposure equipment including the assembly as part of an illumination and/or projection system also are objects of the invention.
These and other objects are achieved by an assembly including a holder, an optical component suitable for transmitting radiation in a first region of ultraviolet (UV) radiation and adhered to the holder with an adhesive, the adhesive being capable of being hardened by radiation of a second region of ultraviolet radiation. The assembly further includes a first layer disposed between the optical component and the adhesive, the first layer being capable of transmitting radiation of the second region of UV radiation and obstructing to a high degree transmission of UV radiation of the first region by absorption and/or reflection, thus forming an adhesive-protecting layer. The optical component has a transmitting zone, and the first layer is located outside of the transmitting zone. The assembly further includes a second layer for enhancing adhesion between the optical component and the first layer, the second layer being disposed between the first layer and the optical component.
The adhesion-enhancing second layer mediates between mechanical and chemical properties of the optical component and the adhesive-protecting layer. Therefore, it allows using materials for the adhesive-protecting layer whose chemical and mechanical properties do not match directly those of the optical component. The adhesion-enhancing layer should be suitable for assuring a tensile strength of more than 10 N/mm2 between the optical component and the adhesive-protecting layer.
In one embodiment of the invention, a thermal expansion coefficient of the second, adhesion-enhancing layer is closer to a thermal expansion coefficient of the optical component than to a thermal expansion coefficient of the first, adhesive-protecting layer. Thermal expansion coefficients of fluoride materials used for optical components transmitting below 300 nm lie typically in a range of about 10−5 /K. Thermal expansion coefficients of oxide materials which are preferably used for the adhesive-protecting layer lie typically in a range of about 10−6 /K. By choosing the thermal expansion coefficient of the adhesion-enhancing layer closer to the range of values of fluoride materials than to the range of values of oxide materials, a good thermal stability of the adhesion between the optical component and the adhesion-enhancing layer is ensured.
In one embodiment of the invention, the optical component is composed of a first fluoride material, in particular CaF2, and the adhesion-enhancing layer is, at least in a zone adjacent to the optical component, composed of a second fluoride material, particularly one of MgF2, LaF3, GdF3, NdF3, AlF3, cryolite, chiolite, CeFx, YFx, or mixtures thereof. Material properties of the adhesion-enhancing layer and the optical component are similar due to the fact that both are consisting of fluoride materials and therefore sufficient tensile strength between the two is assured.
The adhesive protecting layer may, at least in part, be composed of an oxide material, in particular of Ta2O5.
In one embodiment, the adhesion-enhancing layer is a gradient layer having a first zone adjacent to the optical component consisting of a first material and a second zone adjacent to the adhesion-protecting layer consisting of a second material, the second material being different from the first material. The first material is chosen such that it is suitable for enhancing adhesion between the first zone and the optical component and the second material is chosen such that it is suitable for enhancing adhesion between the second zone and the adhesion-protecting layer. Transition between the first zone and the second zone can be accomplished by a stepwise or a continuous change of composition. Optimum adhesion can thus be obtained on both interfaces of the adhesion-enhancing second layer.
A continuous change of composition between the first and the second material can be advantageously accomplished by a process of ion mixing. During this process, the surface of the first material is irradiated with ions while a deposition of the second material on the first material is taking place, e.g. by physical vapor deposition. As a result, ions of the second material and/or ions of a third material, for example ions of an inert gas, are accumulated inside of the first material on a length ranging from the surface of the material to the maximum ion penetration depth, thereby forming an ion mixing layer. By adjusting the kinetic energy of the irradiating ions it is possible to adjust the thickness of the ion mixing layer.
A stepwise transition may be obtained by alternately depositing thin layers of the first and at least one second material wherein the layer thicknesses vary across the gradient layer to obtain a desired gradient of a mean composition.
It is possible to create an adhesion-enhancing second layer which includes a thin border layer adjacent to the adhesive-protecting layer formed by ion mixing. The remainder of the second layer may be composed by the second material only.
A production process according to the invention involves coating an optical component suitable for transmitting radiation in a first region of ultraviolet (UV) radiation on a surface outside of a transmitting zone with a second layer, coating the second layer with a first layer, the first layer being optimised for obstructing to a high degree transmission of ultraviolet (UV) radiation of the first region by at least one of absorption and reflection and transmitting radiation of a second region of UV radiation in which an adhesive hardens, the second layer enhancing adhesion between the optical component and the first layer, applying the adhesive between the first layer and a holder, and hardening the adhesive by irradiating the adhesive with UV radiation in the second region of radiation that passes through the optical component and the first and second layer.
Coating of the first and/or second layer can be performed by at least one thin film process such as vapor deposition, sputtering, physical vapor deposition (PVD), spraying, chemical vapor deposition (CVD), ion assisted deposition (IAD), plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition (PECVD), spincoating or another deposition technique. It can be particularly advantageous to combine the processes of physical vapor deposition or chemical vapor deposition with ion assistance.
An optical component according to the invention has a transmitting zone and a surface arranged outside of the transmitting zone, the surface being coated by a second layer, the second layer being coated by a first layer suitable for protecting the adhesive from radiation in a first region of ultraviolet (UV) radiation transmitted by the optical component during use of the optical component, the second layer being adapted for enhancing adhesion between the optical component and the first layer. The optical component can be adhered to a holder with an adhesive, to form a mechanically stable assembly.
Beneficial embodiments of the invention are depicted in the accompanying figures and shall be described below. In the accompanying figures:
The assembly schematically shown in
The adhesive-protecting first layer 3 is provided, because the adhesive is photochemically unstable to light with wavelengths of an UV region below 300 nm, in particular radiation from lasers at about 248 nm, 193 nm or 157 nm—as required in some projection exposure equipment for microlithography such as illumination systems or projection systems. For the adhesive-protecting first layer 3 a layer of tantalum pentoxide Ta2O5 is suitable and can be applied like an optical layer, e.g. by vapor deposition or other thin film processes.
The optical component 1 in the embodiment of
The adhesive in this arrangement can be hardened through the transparent optical component 1, the adhesive-enhancing layer 2 and the adhesion-protecting layer 3 with Hg-I light of a high-pressure mercury lamp at about 365 nm. The optical component 1, consisting of CaF2, and the adhesion-enhancing second layer 2, consisting of MgF2, both transmit radiation of a region above 300 nm almost without losses to a high degree. The adhesive-protecting layer, consisting of Ta2O5, attains a transmission of more than 60% in this regime of UV radiation. The reflectivity of the adhesive-protecting layer 2 in a region of UV radiation below 300 nm is lower than 10%, such that the creation of straylight is avoided to a high degree.
The assembly of
The schematic view of the second assembly of
The embodiment of an assembly schematically shown in
It is alternatively possible to change the material composition between the first 7 and the second zone 8 stepwise, for example by applying a plurality of layers of a different material composition between the first zone 7 and the second zone 8.
Depending on the particular embodiment, the adhesion-enhancing layer 2 of
The use of an adhesion-enhancing layer such as layer 2 may also be favourable if the optical component is not polished outside of its transmitting zone, such that the optical component has a relatively high surface roughness outside of the transmitting zone 10. In this case, the adhesion-enhancing layer may also be used to mediate between the large surface roughness of the optical component and the small surface roughness favourable for applying the adhesion-protecting layer.
In addition to the use in projection systems and/or illumination systems, the assemblies according to the invention are also suitable for repair systems or wafer inspection systems for microlithography, for UV laser optics, for UV microscopes and especially for exit windows of lasers.
The above description of the preferred embodiments has been given by way of example. From the disclosure given, those skilled in the art will not only understand the present invention and its attendant advantages, but will also find apparent various changes and modifications to the structures and methods disclosed, e.g. as indicated above. It is sought, therefore, to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims, and equivalents thereof.