The present invention relates to a stage device and, more particularly, is suitably used by a stage device in an exposure apparatus in which an alignment system and exposure system are formed independently of each other.
In an exposure apparatus, a structure in which an alignment system and exposure system are formed independently of each other and a plane motor is employed as a positioning stage is disclosed in Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2001-217183.
Referring to
The plane motor has a magnet group (not shown) arrayed on the lower surfaces of the movable stages (WST1 and WST2) and a coil group 98 arrayed in a matrix in the stator 112. The Lorentz force generated by the mutual operation of the magnetic fluxes of the magnet group and a current flowing through the coil group can move the movable stages (WST1 and WST2) relative to the stator 112.
Generally, stage operation for performing alignment measurement and stage operation for performing exposure are often different from each other. In an exposure process, scanning must be performed for every shot of the exposure target. Thus, the stage moves uniformly to a certain degree through the entire region. In alignment measurement, the movement required of the stage varies depending on the accuracy to be obtained and a measuring method. Therefore, usually, the energization amount for the coil group arranged in the exposure region and that for the coil group arranged in the measurement region are different, and naturally the heat values of the two coil groups are expected to be different.
For example, in the alignment measurement, assume that a scheme that does not measure the entire wafer but measures only a certain representative point is employed. The movement of the stage required in the alignment measurement may be smaller than that required in the exposure region, and the energization amount and energization time of the coils are accordingly smaller than those for the coils in the exposure region. Therefore, the heat amount of the coil group in the measurement region becomes smaller than that in the exposure region. In fine, heat generation of the coil group in the stator largely differs between the two regions.
For this reason, in an exposure apparatus having two independent regions, i.e., an exposure region and measurement region, as in
In the structure in which the coil group in the stator is cooled collectively, if variations in coil heat generation are large, a coil with small heat generation is cooled by an excessively large amount of refrigerant. As a result, although a large amount of refrigerant is supplied as a whole, the maximum coil temperature cannot be suppressed easily.
It is an object of the present invention to efficiently remove, in a stage device having different process regions, heat generated by driving of a movable element having an object thereon.
In order to achieve the above object, according to the present invention, there is provided a stage device for driving a movable element, mounted with an object thereon, by using a plane motor, comprising a stator unit having a coil group, and the movable element which moves on the stator unit, the stator unit comprising a first region where the object is to be subjected to a first process, and a second region where the object is to be subjected to a second process, wherein the coil group in the stator unit is temperature-controlled independently between the first and second regions.
According to the present invention, in a stage device having different process regions, heat generated by driving of a movable object mounted with an object thereon can be removed efficiently.
On stator units 3, two movable stages (WST1 and WST2) can perform exposure operation and measurement operation in the corresponding regions. The movable stages WST1 and WST2 can be swapped between the exposure region and measurement region. For example, the movable stage WST2 where wafer measurement operation has been finished swaps regions with the movable stage WST1 where exposure has been finished. The movable stage WST2 continuously starts exposure operation. The movable stage WST1 transfers an exposed wafer to a wafer transport system (not shown) and receives a new wafer to start alignment operation. When the system is formed to perform exposure operation and measurement operation such as alignment simultaneously in this manner, the wafer process time as a whole can be shortened, and the throughput can be improved.
Magnet groups (not shown) are arranged on the lower surfaces of the plate-like top plates of the movable stages WST1 and WST2, respectively. The stator units 3 facing the movable stages include coil groups 4 and 5, each formed of a large number of layers of coil arrays, and cooling jackets 6 and 7 which seal the coil groups 4 and 5. Thus, the Lorentz force generated by the interaction of the magnet groups of the movable stages and a current supplied to the coil groups moves the movable stages WST1 and WST2 with respect to the stator units 3.
A refrigerant such as temperature-controlled pure water or an inert refrigerant flows through the cooling jackets 6 and 7 to be able to cool the coils directly. Alternatively, the coils may be cooled by providing cooling pipes among the coils.
Similarly, a coil array 12 at the second layer from the top is a coil array that contributes to driving in a Y-axis direction and the ωz direction. The coil array 12 is formed by arranging a plurality of coils 19, having straight portions elongated in the X-axis direction as shown in
The arrangement of the coil group is not limited to this. As shown in
The respective coil arrays are supported on a base surface plate 17 through support members 10. The gaps among the coil arrays form refrigerant flow channels. More specifically, the upper and lower surfaces of the coils come into contact with the circulating refrigerant so that they can be cooled directly. When the coil group is cooled in this manner by circulating the refrigerant in the cooling jacket that surrounds the coil group, heat generated by the coils is removed quickly to prevent excessive temperature rise of the coils and temperature rise of the stator unit.
The cooling jackets 6 and 7 are provided to the exposure region and measurement region independently of each other, and can optimally cool the corresponding regions independently of each other. If all the stators of a plane motor are cooled collectively as in the prior art, the entire cooling efficiency is poor, and the refrigerant temperature controlling unit, refrigerant circulating unit, and the like may become bulky. When the measurement region and exposure region where the stages move differently can be cooled independently of each other, the respective regions can be cooled (e.g., flow rate of the refrigerant, temperature, and the type of the refrigerant) optimally for the movement of the stages. Then, an increase in the cooling efficiency can be expected, and units related to temperature control can be made compact.
This will be described in more detail. When cooling aims at prevention of overheating of the coils, the cooling amount (the flow rate of the refrigerant, the temperature of the refrigerant, and the type of the refrigerant) is adjusted for a coil with the largest heat generation. When the two regions, i.e., the measurement region and exposure region, are to be cooled collectively, the cooling amount is set to a value for the coil with the largest heat generation among all the coils.
Usually, however, the stages move in the measurement region and exposure region largely differently from each other, and accordingly the heat generation amount of the coils is largely different between the measurement region and exposure region. For example, assume that the stage in the exposure region moves actively while the stage in the measurement stage does not move very actively so much as a stage because of wafer transfer or the like. Then, only the coil group in the exposure region generates heat largely, and the coil group in the measurement region rarely generates heat.
If the two regions are to be cooled collectively, the refrigerant in a cooling amount for the coils in the exposure region is supplied to the entire cooling jacket, so that an excessively large amount of refrigerant flows to the coil group in the measurement region wastefully. For example, an excessively large flow rate of the refrigerant is required for all the stators. The cooling efficiency (the removing rate of heat generated by the coils to the flow rate of the refrigerant) decreases, and the units concerning temperature control become bulky.
In view of these situations, in
As shown in
The above example mainly aims at optimizing cooling in the measurement region and exposure region independently. Naturally, as a result of optimization of the cooling in each region, sometimes the flowing direction of the refrigerant becomes the same between the two regions, and the flow rate of the refrigerant may become the same between the two regions. Therefore, the cooling method (the flow rate of the refrigerant, the temperature, the type of the refrigerant, and the like) need not be changed between the measurement region and exposure region.
In
The background for providing the stator units 3 to the exposure region and measurement region independently of each other as in
In a plane motor in an exposure apparatus having independent alignment system and exposure system, problems arise also in terms of the fabrication and maintenance of the stators. More specifically, the minimum size of the stator unit of the plane motor is substantially determined by the wafer size. When a 12-inch (300-mm) wafer is the object to be processed, the necessary stroke of the movable stage in each of the measurement region and exposure region is about 400 mm (distance necessary for movement through the entire wafer region+distance necessary for the acceleration/deceleration region of the stage). In other words, assuming that the size of the movable stage (WST1 and WST2) is about 400 mm, the stator unit is assumed to require a size of 700 mm (300 mm as wafer size+400 mm for stroke) or more at the minimum.
Therefore, the size of a stator unit including the measurement region and exposure region is at a minimum of 700 mm (X direction in
As shown in
The above description has been made by exemplifying a stage device using a plane motor. In a stage device provided with separate linear motors to drive respective stages for the exposure region and measurement region as well, to temperature-control the respective driving means independently of each other is effective in terms of the cooling efficiency. Note that the stage device using a plane motor is effective because the exposure region and measurement region can be cooled independently of each other with a simple structure and the heat generation amount of the coils is large.
This exposure apparatus is used to manufacture devices having fine patterns, e.g., a semiconductor device such as a semiconductor integrated circuit, a micromachine, and a thin-film magnetic head. Exposure light (this is a generic term for visible light, ultraviolet light, EUV light, X-rays, an electron beam, a charged particle beam, or the like) serving as an exposure energy from an illumination system unit 501 through a reticle as an original irradiates a semiconductor wafer W as a substrate through a projection lens 503 (this is a generic term for a dioptric lens, reflecting lens, cata-dioptric lens system, charged particle lens, or the like) serving as a projecting system to form a desired pattern on a substrate mounted on a wafer stage 504. As the wavelength of the exposure light becomes short, the exposure apparatus requires exposure in a vacuum atmosphere.
A wafer (object) as a substrate is held on a chuck mounted on the wafer stage 504. The pattern of the reticle as the original mounted on a reticle stage 502 is transferred onto the respective regions on the wafer by the illumination system unit 501 in accordance with step & repeat or step & scan. In this case, the stage device described above is used as the wafer stage 504.
When the stage device described above is applied to an exposure apparatus in the above manner, an exposure apparatus requiring a decreased operation cost can be provided.
A semiconductor device manufacturing process which uses this exposure apparatus will be described.
In step 3 (wafer manufacture), a wafer is manufactured using a material such as silicon. In step 4 (wafer process) called a preprocess, an actual circuit is formed on the wafer by the above exposure apparatus in accordance with lithography using the above mask and wafer. In the next step 5 (assembly) called a post-process, a semiconductor chip is formed from the wafer fabricated in step 4. This step includes assembly processes such as assembly (dicing and bonding) and packaging (chip encapsulation). In step 6 (inspection), inspections including operation check test and durability test of the semiconductor device fabricated in step 5 are performed. A semiconductor device is finished with these processes and shipped in step 7.
The wafer process of the above step 4 includes the following steps (
When the exposure apparatus described above is used in part of the device manufacturing process in this manner, an,inexpensive device can be manufactured.
While the present invention has been described with respect to what is presently considered to be the preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed embodiments. The present invention is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
This application claims priority from Japanese Patent Application No. 2004-087078 filed on Mar. 24, 2004, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2004-087078 | Mar 2004 | JP | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11074642 | Mar 2005 | US |
Child | 11871328 | Oct 2007 | US |