So far (September 2014) three wafers with CSAR have been e-beam exposed with dosetests and inspected in SEM. Thickness of resist, e-beam dose and development time has been changed somewhat from wafer to wafer:
! colspan="4"| SEM inspection of wafer 3.05, 20 nm exposed pattern, shot pitch 5 nm
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! 230 [muC/cm2]
| [[File:CSAR20nmoverview.png|280px]]
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! 242 [muC/cm2]
| [[File:CSAR20nmoverview+5%.png|280px]]
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! 253 [muC/cm2]
| [[File:CSAR20nmoverview+10%.png|280px]]
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== Etch Tests ==
== Etch Tests ==
Revision as of 15:37, 14 February 2024
Simple e-beam pattern in this resist has been tested, the results showed on this page. If you have questions to the process or wish to use this e-beam resist, please contact lithography at DTU Nanolab.
Spin Curves
The thickness is measured on VASE Ellipsometer using a simple Cauchy model for a transparent polymer on Si. The measurements are performed at one incidence angle (70 degrees) only. 9 points on each 4" wafer has been measured; the standard deviation thus representing the homogeinity of the film on the 4" wafers.
Around 2 ml of resist per wafer has been used when fabricating these curves. If you use less than 2 ml, the thickness of the final resist might be smaller than reported here.
AllResist AR-P 6200.09 (> 2ml per 4" wafer) spinning on Spin Coater: Manual LabSpin A-5, TIGRE, 09-04-2014. Softbake 5 min @ 150 degC.
Spin Speed [rpm]
Acceleration [1/s2]
Thickness [nm]
2000
4000
226
3000
4000
194
4000
4000
170
5000
4000
151
6000
4000
142
7000
4000
127
AllResist CSAR 6200.09 1:1 in anisole (< 2ml per 4" wafer), Spin Coater: Manual LabSpin A-5, TIGRE, 16-06-2014. Softbake 2 min @ 150 degC.
Spin Speed [rpm]
Acceleration [1/s2]
Thickness [nm]
2000
4000
84
3000
4000
67
4000
4000
59
5000
4000
53
6000
4000
49
AllResist CSAR 6200.18 (< 2ml per 4" wafer), Spin Coater: Manual Standard Resists, E-5, TIGRE, 15-06-2016. Softbake 2 min @ 180 degC.
Spin Speed [rpm]
Acceleration [1/s2]
Thickness [nm]
2000
2000
1003
3000
2000
809
4000
2000
721
5000
2000
639
6000
2000
586
7000
2000
549
Contrast Curves
CSAR 6200.09
100 nm lines in both ~70 nm and ~188 nm thick CSAR has been developed with AR-600-546 (standard CSAR developer) at room temperature.
CSAR Contrast Curve, Processed by TIGRE, FEB-MARCH 2016
Resist
Spin Coat
E-beam exposure
Development
Characterisation
CSAR AR-P6200.09 AllResist, CSAR AR-P6200.09 diluted 1:1 in Anisole
16-06-2016, Fumehood E-4, AR-600-546, 30s/60s/90s, rinsed in IPA 60s.
JUNE/JULY 2016 SEM Supra 2, 10 keV
Dark Erosion
Dark erosion has been measured on a un-exposed 4" wafer spin coated with CSAR 6200.18 to a thickness of approximately 549 nm. The resist thickness has been measured by VASE Ellipsometer before development, and after 3 minutes, 13 minutes, and 30 minutes of development in AR 600 546.
The graphs shows the measured thicknesses; the errorbars represents the standard deviations from the ellipsometric measurements. The average etch rate of CSAR is ~0.1 nm/min.
Development
Many resists can be developed in different developers, CSAR can be developed in: AR 600-546, AR 600-548, ZED N-50 and mix of MIBK and IPA among others.
CSAR and ZEP520A are in principle the same chemical, however the pretreatment (filtration and temperature control) can differ.
Some users have reported residues and residual layers when using ZED N-50 on CSAR and vice verca, hence we recommend to use AR 600-546 or AR 600-548 (3 times stronger) to develop CSAR and not ZED N-50.
When this is said some users still observe residues when using AR 600-546, the producer "All resist GMBH" have recommended to use 3-5s, dip in pure MIBK to remove residues.
AR 600 546 will dissolve different plastic materials, hence never use it on PS compounds.
Etch Tests
If you have wafers or chips with CSAR you would like to have tested, please send me an [email].
Chlorine versus flourine-based etches
We have experienced problems with removal of CSAR after chlorine-based dry etch, see the file File:DryEtchTestsCSAR.pdf. It seems the chlorine etch forms particles of chlorinated CSAR on the surface, and these particles remains on the surface after resist removal with AR-600-71. The C4F8/SF6 etch also forms particles on the surface, but much smaller than those formed in the chlorine etch. It seems these particles are removed after 3 minutes in AR-600-71.
How to mount chips in dry etch tools
All etch rates presented here are measured on chips (i.e. diced 4" wafers) crystal bonded to a carrier. The carrier is either a blank Si wafer, a Si wafer spin coated with resist or a Si wafer coated with ALD grown Al2O3.
Etch Tests of CSAR, recipe 'nano1.42', DRIE PEGASUS, A-1. CSAR thickness measured on Ellipsometer VASE at 70 degrees
Sample
CSAR Etch rate nm/min
Full 4" Si wafer with non-patterned ~180 nm CSAR
~56.5 (based on 2 runs)
Full 4" Si wafer with non-patterned ~240 nm CSAR, postbaked 60 sec @ 130 degC
~56.5 (based on 2 runs)
1/4 4" Si wafer with non-patterned ~125 nm CSAR, not crystal bonded to Si carrier
~83.3 (based on 3 runs)
1/4 4" Si wafer with non-patterned ~125 CSAR, crystal bonded to 4" Si carrier
~54 (based on 1 run)
Etch rates and profile inspection
Continous Etches
Recipe nano1.42 on Deep Reactive Ion Etch PEGASUS A-1
Recipe
Gasses
C4F8 75 sccm, SF6 38 sccm
Profiles of lines exposed at 300 µC/cm2, etched 2:30 minutes (150s) with recipe 'nano1.42'