In extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL)[
Chinese Optics Letters, Volume. 18, Issue 5, 051405(2020)
Laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma and its EUV spectra
Laser-induced discharge plasmas (LDPs) have the potential to be inspection and metrology sources in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. An LDP EUV source was developed to avoid tin electrode erosion in which a tin pool was used as a cathode. A CO2 pulse laser was focused on the liquid tin target surface, and then a breakdown occurred in a very short time. The voltage-current characteristics of the discharge oscillated, lasting for several microseconds, and an RLC fitting model was used to obtain the inductance and resistance. An intensified charge-coupled device (ICCD) camera was used to investigate the dynamics of LDP, which can explain the formation of a discharge channel. The EUV spectra of laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma were detected by a grazing incident ultraviolet spectrometer, compared with a laser-produced tin droplet plasma EUV spectrum. To explain the EUV spectrum difference of laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma and laser-produced tin droplet plasma, the collision radiation (CR) model combined with COWAN code was used to fit the experimental EUV spectrum, which can estimate the electron temperature and density of the plasma.
In extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL)[
In 2002, Koshelev et al.[
In the scheme of rotating disc electrodes in a tin pool, when the rotating speed is high, the liquid tin will splash from the rotating electrode due to the centrifugal force. The stable control of tin layer thickness is not easy, and the thickness of tin layers will change with the rotating speed. So a wiper and other devices[
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As shown in Fig.
Figure 1.LDP plume and EUV spectrum detection experimental setup.
A pulsed
An ICCD camera (Stanford 4 Quik E) with a zoom lens facing toward the discharge axis recorded the visible light images of the LDP. The actual size of a single pixel was calibrated with a micrometer. A mid-infrared photovoltaic detector (VML 10T4) was used to detect the laser signal that triggered the ICCD camera.
A grazing incidence EUV spectrometer worked in a vacuum system, was perpendicular to the discharge axis, and detected the extreme ultraviolet spectra produced radially. A zirconium (Zr) film was placed between the chamber and the spectrometer as a filter of 6–18 nm. The thickness of the Zr film was 500 nm. The wavelength was calibrated using the absorption edge of the Zr film at 6.0 nm. The integration time of the X-ray CCD was 1 s.
With a voltage of 10 kV, the waveforms of the laser signal (black line), discharge voltage (blue line), and current (red line) are shown in Fig.
Figure 2.Waveforms of the laser signal, discharge voltage, and current.
Because the inductance is the key factor influencing the discharge rising speed, it is important to know the discharge parameters. An RLC circuit[
The ICCD camera was applied to record the process of discharge at 10 kV. The exposure time was set to 5 ns; 8 images with different delays shown by the arrows in Fig.
Figure 3.Images of the laser-induced discharge plasma plume.
With the voltage of 10 kV, the spectra of the LDP EUV source with a liquid cathode (blue line) and a solid cathode (red line) are shown in Fig.
Figure 4.Sn LDP spectrum versus the calculated spectrum.
A liquid droplet Sn LPP EUV source was set up in our previous work; the experimental device was described in Chen’s article[
Figure 5.Sn droplet LPP spectrum versus the calculated spectrum.
The COWAN code[
Figure 6.Transition radiation spectra of the Sn ions.
With the collision radiation model proposed by Colombant and Tonon[
Assuming an electron temperature of 20 eV and density of
In this Letter, laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma was investigated. The voltage-current characteristics were obtained at a
The EUV spectrum of laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma was obtained and compared with that of laser-produced solid tin plasma. Both plasmas had the same EUV spectral profile, while the intensity of liquid tin discharge plasma was slightly stronger. By comparing with the EUV of laser produced tin droplet plasma, we found that the LDP EUV had a stronger intensity and was more concentrated at 13.5 nm. The COWAN code was used to calculate the UTAs of
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Junwu Wang, Xinbing Wang, Duluo Zuo, Vassily Zakharov, "Laser-induced liquid tin discharge plasma and its EUV spectra," Chin. Opt. Lett. 18, 051405 (2020)
Category: Lasers and Laser Optics
Received: Nov. 12, 2019
Accepted: Jan. 16, 2020
Published Online: Apr. 29, 2020
The Author Email: Junwu Wang (wjw1546112421@163.com)