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Lifer
- Mar 27, 2009
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More information on how EUV light is produced:
http://www.eejournal.com/archives/articles/20120302_uav/
NOTE: LPP (in the text below) stands for "Laser Produced Plasma", Cymer has a description with pictures here.
http://www.eejournal.com/archives/articles/20120302_uav/
NOTE: LPP (in the text below) stands for "Laser Produced Plasma", Cymer has a description with pictures here.
Simply put, an LPP source fires a laser at droplets of tin. The tin responds by radiating in the desired EUV range. The art comes in supplying a reliable stream of tin droplets and getting as much out of that stream as possible.
There are a number of aspects of LPP that Cymer says contributes advantages when it comes to efficiency. Probably the most straightforward one is the collector. Its one thing to generate the EUV radiation; its quite another to gather it up and deliver it to the wafer. The structure that does this gathering is called, logically enough, the collector.
For a setup like LPP, you can well imagine that you have a droplet that glows, giving off radiation spherically. So you can create a collector that more or less surrounds the droplet, capturing a big chunk of the emitted radiation
One of the challenges of LPP has been the stream of droplets, many of which might not even be hit by the laser. Timed too close together, one droplet being hit might impact the reaction of the next droplet. Cymer says that theyve spaced the droplets out further so that every one of them gets hit without interference. They run at the rate of 50-60 kHz, which translates to tens of thousands of droplets hit per exposure field.
When tin is blasted, well, it tends to go places. Like the collector. This creates a concern about maintenance, since tin debris will cloud the clarity of the collector, reducing its effectiveness. And yet no one wants to have to take the machine down frequently to clean it up.
One of the approaches Cymer uses to minimize this is to have hydrogen in the chamber. The tin vapor reacts with this to create tin hydride, which is volatile. They can pump this out, reducing (although not eliminating) the amount of tin that ends up depositing itself elsewhere.
All of this was fine, but there was one more issue keeping the full energy in a droplet from being exploited. The droplets are 30 µm across, and yet, due to diffusion limits, the laser beam is 100 µm wide. Three times as big as the droplet, meaning that a large amount of the energy in the laser is wasted.
What they found is that they could apply a laser pre-pulse, which seemed to me like a red-eye reduction flash in a camera. This pre-pulse, of less energy than the main pulse, would puff up the droplet so that its size was more like that of the laser beam. So now much more of the laser beam is actually interacting with tin, making the EUV generation much more efficient.
But, as a reminder, all of this gets us only half-way to the goal of 100 W. More is needed, which takes us to the other part of their announcement, where they blow past 100 in the lab. There are three components to their getting much higher power. One is simply generating more CO2 power a more powerful laser. The second involves improving the collector. Collector design seemed to come up a lot in the conversation; theres a lot of focus (so to speak) on making sure that, after you work so hard to generate the EUV radiation, it doesnt leak away without getting shipped to the wafer.
Finally, having developed this pre-pulse technology, they plan to improve the power output by refining that technology.