Specific Process Knowledge/Lithography/Coaters
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Coater Comparison Table
Equipment | Spin Coater: Gamma UV | Spin Coater: Süss Stepper | Spin Coater: Gamma E-beam and UV | Spin Coater: RCD8 | Spin Coater: LabSpin 02 | Spin Coater: LabSpin 03 | Spray Coater | |
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Purpose |
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Performance | Substrate handling |
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Permanent media |
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Only manual dispense |
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Manual dispense option |
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Process parameter range | Spindle speed |
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Gyrset |
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Substrates | Substrate size |
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Batch size |
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Allowed materials |
No resist or crystalbond allowed in the HMDS module |
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No resist or crystalbond allowed in the HMDS module |
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Spin coating
The typical spin coating process consists of the following steps:
- Priming (typically HMDS)
- Resist dispense (static or dynamic)
- Optional: Acceleration to a low spin speed if dynamic dispense is used
- Optional: Resist spreading at low spin speed
- Spin-off
- Backside rinse (typically during spin-off)
- Optional: Edge-bead removal
- Softbake (contact or proximity)
After priming, the wafer is is transferred to the spin coater. If static dispense is used, the wafer remains static during the resist dispense. In the case of dynamic dispense, the wafer rotates at low spin speed during the dispense. Using too high spin speed during dispense can cause surface wetting issues, while a too low spin speed causes the resist to flow onto the backside of the wafer. After dispense, a short spin at low spin speed may be used in order to spread the resist over the wafer surface before spin-off.
Spin-off
The spin-off cycle determines the thickness of the resist coating. For a given resist, the thickness is primarily a function of the spin-off speed and the spin-off time, both following an inverse power-law:
The acceleration to the spin-off speed also influences the thickness, but the effect is dependent on previous steps. The spin-off is usually a simple spin at one speed, but it may be comprised of several steps at different spin speeds. After spin-off, the wafer is decelerated.
The coated thickness, , as a function of the spin-off speed, , follows an inverse power-law:
The constant, , is a function of the resist viscosity and solid content, as well as the spin-off time. The exponent, , is dependent on solvent evaporation, and is typically ~½ for UV resists. This means that from the thickness achieved at spin speed , one can estimate the spin speed needed to achieve thickness using the relation:
For thick SU-8, however, is observed to be ~1 (probably due to the low solvent content and/or the formation of skin). In this case, the relation simply becomes:
Backside rinse
If the spin speed is too low during resist dispense, resist may creep over the edge of the wafer and onto the backside. Some resist tend to leave fine strings of resist protruding from the edge of the wafer, or folded onto the backside, an effect sometimes referred to as "cotton candy".
Any resist on the edge and backside of the wafer will contaminate the end effector, softbake hotplate, and subsequent wafers.
In a backside rinse step, solvent administered through a nozzle to the backside of the wafer, while spinning at low or medium spin speed, dissolves the resist and washes it away. After the rinse, a short spin at medium spin speed dries the wafer before the softbake.
During the backside rinse solvent inevitably creeps onto the front side of the wafer. This effect may be used to dissolve and subsequently remove an edge-bead, but it may also leave the rim of the wafer exposed. As an alternative to backside rinse, a wafer, which is contaminated on the backside, may be softbaked in proximity, in order to protect the hotplate from contamination. This leaves front side coating intact, but also leaves the backside dirty.
Edge bead
During spin coating, resist builds up at the edge of the wafer due to the change in surface tension at the edge, as well as extra drying from turbulence created by the wafer edge.
This phenomenon is called edge-bead. Dependent on spin coating parameters, the coating may be several times thicker at the edge than in the central area. In a subsequent hard contact exposure step (mask aligner), this edge-bead introduces an undesired proximity gap, which reduces the lateral resolution, and may even cause the wafer to stick to the mask.
In an edge-bead removal step, solvent administered through a nozzle positioned at the edge of the wafer, while spinning at low or medium spin speed, dissolves the resist and washes it away. After the removal, a short spin at medium spin speed dries the wafer before the softbake. Dependent on the viscosity (solvent content) of the resist after the edge-bead removal, this drying spin may cause the resist to re-flow and create a secondary edge-bead. In some cases, it may be necessary to (partially) softbake the resist before edge-bead removal.
Softbake
After spin coating, the solvent in the resist must be evaporated in a baking step, in order to solidify the resist. This softbake can be carried out as a contact bake or a proximity bake. In a contact bake, the wafer is held in close contact to the hotplate surface while resting on shallow bumps only 150 µm above the hotplate. In a proximity bake, the wafer is first moved into proximity, e.g. 1mm, of the hotplate surface, then held there (on the lift pins) for the duration of the bake.
Spin coaters at DTU Nanolab
Spin Coater: Gamma UV
Spin Coater: Gamma UV was installed at DTU Nanolab in March 2015. It is a Gamma 2M cluster from Süss MicroTec with spin coating, HMDS vapour priming, and baking modules.
The system handles 4" and 6" wafers without size conversion, and can be set up to handle 2" or 8".
The coater is equipped with 3 different resist lines, as well as 1 syringe line:
- AZ MiR 701
- AZ nLOF 2020
- AZ 5214E
- Syringe, which can be used for various resists
The processes that are available on the system are developed by Nanolab. Upon request, it is possible to establish new processes. Use of the syringe requires special training, and would as a starting point require batches in excess of 20 wafers.
The user manual, quality control procedures and results, user APVs, and contact information can be found in LabManager - requires login
Process information
Purpose |
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Resist |
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Performance | HMDS contact angle |
60 - 80° |
Coating thickness |
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Process parameters | Priming temperature |
120 °C |
Spin speed |
10 - 6000 rpm | |
Spin acceleration |
10 - 10000 rpm/s | |
Hotplate temperature |
25 - 200 °C | |
Cool plate temperature |
21 °C | |
Substrates | Substrate size |
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Allowed materials |
Silicon and glass Resists and crystalbond are not allowed in the HMDS module | |
Batch |
1 - 25 |
1) Requires tool change.
Spin coater: Süss stepper
This spinner is dedicated for spinning DUV resists. The spinner is fully automatic and can run up to 25 substrates in a batch 4", 6", and 8" size (8" requires tool change). The machine is equipped with the 3 resist lines (DUV42S-6, KRF M230Y, and KRF M35G), as well as a syringe dispense system.
The user manual, quality control procedures and results, user APVs, and contact information can be found in LabManager:
Equipment info in LabManager - requires login
DUV resist overview
The spinning process will be performed by the customer together with the Photolith group of Nanolab. In case you would like to do DUV lithography please contact Lithography team, who will consult you and run your wafers together with you.
Bottom Anti Reflection Coating (BARC):
Positive DUV resist for spin coating in 600-300nm thickness range:
Positive DUV resist for spin coating in 1600-800nm thickness range:
Negative DUV resist for spin coating in 1400-800nm or diluted with EC Solvent in 1:1 in 400-200nm thickness range:
- Manufacturers website: UVN2300-0.8
- Datasheet: UVN2300-0.8 - requires login
Process information
Purpose |
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Resist |
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Performance | Coating thickness |
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Process parameters | Spin speed |
10 - 5000 rpm | |
Spin acceleration |
100 - 10000 rpm/s | ||
Hotplate temperature |
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Substrates | Substrate size |
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Allowed materials |
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Batch |
1 - 25 |
Spin Coater: Gamma E-beam and UV
Spin Coater: Gamma E-beam and UV was installed at DTU Nanolab in June 2017. It is a Gamma 4M cluster from Süss MicroTec with spin coating, HMDS vapour priming, and baking modules. The system handles 2", 4", and 6" wafers without size conversion, using two separate coater stations.
The 2" coater station is equipped with 1 resist line, as well as 1 syringe line:
- AR-P 6200.09 (CSAR)
- Syringe, which can be used for various resists (anisole-based or PGMEA-based). We currently recommend against using the syringe, as the process setup is quite demanding. Use a manual spin coater instead.
The 4"/6" coater station is equipped with 4 different resists lines:
- AZ 5214E
- AZ MiR 701
- AR-P 6200.09 (CSAR)
- AZ 4562
The processes that are available on the system are developed by Nanolab. Upon request, it is possible to establish new processes. Use of the syringe requires special training, and requires batch processing - it is not for processing a few wafers now and then.
The user manual, quality control procedures and results, user APVs, and contact information can be found in LabManager - requires login
Process information
Purpose |
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Resist |
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Performance | HMDS contact angle |
60 - 80° (on Silicon) |
Coating thickness |
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Process parameters | Priming temperature |
120 °C |
Spin speed |
10 - 6000 rpm | |
Spin acceleration |
10 - 10000 rpm/s | |
Hotplate temperature |
25 - 200 °C | |
Cool plate temperature |
21 °C | |
Substrates | Substrate size |
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Allowed materials |
Silicon, III-V, and glass Resists and crystalbond are not allowed in the HMDS module | |
Batch |
1 - 25 |
Spin Coater: RCD8
Spin Coater: RCD8 is a model RCD8 T spin coater from Süss MicroTec with a motorized media arm and Gyrset functionality. It's primary purpose is spin coating of SU-8 resist.
However, due to the possibility of using a non-vacuum chuck, the spin coater is also suitable for coating of substrates with e.g. textured backsides or membranes.
The user manual, user APV, and contact information can be found in LabManager - requires login
Process information
Purpose |
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Resist |
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Performance | Coating thickness |
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Process parameters | Spin speed |
Vacuum chuck: 10 - 5000 rpm |
Spin acceleration |
10 - 3000 rpm/s | |
Substrates | Substrate size |
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Allowed materials |
All cleanroom materials ? | |
Batch |
1 |
Spin coater: Labspin
Spin Coater: Labspin 02 | Spin Coater: Labspin 03 + fumehood 11 |
Loacted in wetbench 08 in E-5 | Located in wetbench 09 in E-5 |
LabSpin 6, Süss MicroTec | LabSpin 6, Süss MicroTec |
Training video: LabSpin02 + 03
Process information
Spin curves (LabSpin 6):
More information on resists (incl. spin curves) is available in the resist overview.
Available bowlsets:
Bowlset name | Component solvent | Cleaning solvent | List of resists | Comments |
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AZ resist | PGMEA/Ethyl Lactate | Acetone |
AZ 5214E |
Two bowlsets available |
CSAR/ZEP/mrEBL/PMMA | Anisole | Remover 1165 |
AR-P 6200 series (CSAR 62) |
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HSQ/AR-N 8200 | MIBK/PGMEA | Acetone |
HSQ (FOx series) |
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OrmoComp/OrmoStamp | Propyl Acetate | Acetone |
OrmoComp |
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BCB/CYCLOTENE | Mesitylene | T1100 |
3022-X |
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Epoxy/Acrylate | Cyclopentanone/PGMEA | Acetone |
SU-8 2000 series |
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AR-P 617/AR-N 7520 | PGME/PGMEA | Acetone | AR-N 7500 series | |
Polymer Ps-b-PDMS/block copolymer | Heptane | Ethyl Acetate | ||
DIRTY bowlset | Anything Organic | Use the appropriate cleaning reagent for your resist |
Purpose | Labspin |
Spin coating of resist ONLY in dedicated bowlsets Please do NOT use substances which is not for the dedicated bowlsets |
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All purpose |
Spin coating of dirty substances in All purpose
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Process parameters | Spin speed |
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Spin acceleration |
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Substrates | Substrate size |
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Allowed materials |
All cleanroom materials Please ONLY use substances which is for the dedicated bowlsets in labspins | |
Batch |
1 |
Spray Coater
The spray coater at DTU Nanolab is located in Cleanroom C-1. The machine is an ExactaCoat from Sono-tek which can be fitted with one of three different nozzles depending on the nature of the spray coating tasks at hand. The three different nozzles (Impact, AccuMist and Vortex) are optimized for different applications such as spray coating of large areas (e.g. entire wafers), smaller areas (e.g. wafer pieces or other small samples) or already structured samples that cannot be coated uniformly by spin coating. All nozzles use an ultrasonic tranducer for atomizing the solution to be spray coated. It is therefore a prerequisite that all components are compatible with this process. This is the case with most substances, although process parameters may need optimization to give satisfactory results.
Practically any sample that will fit inside the spray coater can be processed. Spray patterns are easily programmed either using predefined spray patterns (1D line, 2D rectangles/circles/meanders/spirals) or custom 3D spray patterns.
The spray coating process as well as major features of the three nozzles are described into more detail in the manual which can be found via the Equipment Info page in LabManager under the Documents sections. The manual can also be found in Labmanager - requires login
Further information about the spray coater (manual, process log, technical information etc.) can be found in LabManger:
Spray coater in LabManager - requires login
Process development
Spray coating using TI spray:
The TI spray resist is the standard spray coater resist used at DTU Nanolab. It requires no dilution and performs well.
Spray coating using other resists:
Other resists are allowed, but most require dilution, as the spray coater will not work with any resist viscosity higher than 20 cP.
Equipment | Spray Coater | |
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Purpose |
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Performance | Substrate handling |
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Permanent media |
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Manual dispense option |
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Process parameter range | Solution viscosity |
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Chemical properties |
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Substrates | Batch size |
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Allowed materials |
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