1 / 17

Developing FIB GAE Recipes: Practical Application of “Unfinished Theory”

PBS&T. Developing FIB GAE Recipes: Practical Application of “Unfinished Theory”. Valery Ray vray@partbeamsystech.com. Outline. Yield Enhancement and Milling Rate criteria for characterizing beam GAE processes Choosing beam raster parameters to maximize Milling Rate

Télécharger la présentation

Developing FIB GAE Recipes: Practical Application of “Unfinished Theory”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PBS&T Developing FIB GAE Recipes: Practical Application of “Unfinished Theory” Valery Ray vray@partbeamsystech.com 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC

  2. Outline • Yield Enhancement and Milling Rate criteria for characterizing beam GAE processes • Choosing beam raster parameters to maximize Milling Rate • Numerical and image examples • Conclusion 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 2

  3. GAE Recipe Development:Dose Enhancement vs. Milling Rate • Established GAE theory (K. Edinger, JVST B 18(6) 2000 and Microelectron. Eng. 57–58, 2001, also I. Utke et. al. JVST B 26(4) 2008) is developed with emphasis on yield enhancement criteria • Miling rate is better suitable for practical applications: • Recipes with maximized milling rates are required for etching High Aspect Ratio vias • Recipes with minimized milling rates are required for uniform deprocessing of Cu with minimal dielectric over-etch • Recipes with highest ratio of chemical milling rate to physical sputtering rate are required for high material selectivity 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 3

  4. GAE Recipe Development:Yield Equation Removed Atoms AR + AS Yield = ------- = ---------- JtD Incident Ions AR (Atoms Reacted) – FAST, parameter-sensitive, not limited by aspect ratio. AS (Atoms Sputtered) – SLOW, limited by aspect ratio J - Ion Beam Current Density tD – Time of beam dwell within the pixel 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 4

  5. Parameter and Limit Pixel Dwell 50 nSec Pixel Overlap ~ 0 Pixel Refresh 1~ 10mSec Effect on AR (Reactive Yield) GAE Recipe Development:Reactive Yield vs. Mill Parameters 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 5

  6. GAE Recipe Development:Phases of GAE Within Dwell Point Chemical reactions occur on pico-second scale FIB dwell times are 10s or 100s of nanoseconds tD = tAR + tAS High-Rate GAE within dwell point requires shortest practically possible dwell time tD→ tAR , and tAS→ 0 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 6

  7. GAE Recipe Development:View from the Dwell Point • GAE process is happening within dwell point • Replenishment of gas begins when primary particle beam moves away from the dwell point • Therefore refresh time of each dwell point (not the “raster”) is critical for gas replenishment 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 7

  8. tRaster = tRefresh = ΣtDi n i=0 GAE Recipe Development:Optimal Raster Time Raster time equivalent to optimal refresh time provides most efficient GAE 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 8

  9. tRefresh NDP = ----------------- tD(Min.) GAE Recipe Development:Refresh Time and Number of Dwell Points Practical t D(Min.) for modern FIBs is in the range of 200nSec to 50nSec 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 9

  10. L dX = dY = -------------------- (Sqrt (N) - 1) GAE Recipe Development:Via Size Defines Dwell Point Distance Dwell points are desirable on the edges of the via 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 10

  11. GAE Recipe Development:Dwell Point Distance = Beam Size For uniform orthogonal raster: • Beam diameter equivalent to pixel distance ensures high reactive yield • Corresponding beam current value is controlled by ion optics; diffused beam is desirable DBeam = dX = dY 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 11

  12. GAE Recipe Development:Numerical Example of HAR Recipe 2μm x 2μm via in Si milled with Cl2 (tRefresh = 1 mSec) on system with minimal dwell 0.2 μSec: N = 1000μSec / 0.2μSec = 5000 pixels / raster Beam Diamter = dX = dY = 2μm / (Sqrt(5000) – 1) = ~ 30 nm Corresponding beam current depends on FIB system, but typically will be around 20pA to 10pA or even lower Beam current can be increased for low (less then 5:1) aspect ratio work (surface micromachining) 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 12

  13. GAE Recipe Development:10:1 HAR Via Etching Example Needle gas injector Trifluoroacetic Acid Precursor SiO2 substrate ~10min. etching time ~0.6um/min etching rate for 10:1 aspect ratio 6.2μm 0.68μm 0.67μm 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 13

  14. GAE Recipe Development:10:1 to 25:1 HAR Via Etching Example Dose nC Time min. All vias are 5μm deep XeF2 precursor on SiO2 substrate Flat ~0.7um/min milling rate with gas concentrator for aspect ratios 10:1 to 25:1 “Proof of Concept” test, milling small HAR vias with Beehive concentrator on FEI Vectra 986+ system Contact, μm 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 14

  15. GAE Recipe Development:Cu deprocessing Examples 100nm Cu line cut over 100nm dielectric Flat deprocessing through four layers of “Dummy” Cu 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 15

  16. Conclusions • Milling rate criteria is better suitable for characterizing practical GAE processes • Reviewing GAE process from the perspective of beam dwell point allows converting yield-based theory to rate-based practical applications • Rate-optimized GAE process establishes direct relationship between size of repair and beam diameter 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC 16

  17. www.partbeamsystech.com 02/24/2012 5th FIB/SEM User Group Meeting, Washington DC

More Related