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Materials development for step and flash imprint lithographyJacobsson, Borje Michael 23 September 2011 (has links)
The quest for smaller and faster integrated circuits (ICs) continues, but traditional photolithography, the patterning process used to fabricate them, is rapidly approaching its physical limits. Step and Flash Imprint Lithography (S-FIL®) is a low-cost patterning technique which has shown great potential for next generation semiconductor manufacturing. To date, all methods of imprint lithography have utilized a sacrificial resist to produce device features. Our goal has been to develop functional materials such as insulators that can be directly patterned by S-FIL and then remain as a part of the end product. Directly patternable dielectric (DPD) materials must meet multiple mechanical and physical requirements for application in microelectronic devices. In some cases these requirements are conflicting, which leads to material design challenges. Many different materials and curing methods have been evaluated. Thiol-ene based approaches to patterning hyperbranched materials incorporating Polyhedral Oligomeric Silsesquioxanes (POSS) have shown the greatest promise. Thiol-ene polymerization takes place by a free radical mechanism, but it has the advantage over acrylates of not being inhibited by the presence of oxygen. This greatly eases some engineering design challenges for the S-FIL process. A number of thiol-ene formulations have been prepared and their mechanical and electrical properties evaluated.
SFIL-R has been introduced as an alternative technology to SFIL. SFIL-R offers improvements to SFIL in several ways, but requires a high silicon content, low viscosity, planarizing material. Photopolymerizable branched siloxanes were synthesized and evaluated to function as a planarizing topcoat for this technology.
Both SFIL and SFIL-R require a clean separation of the template from the resist material. Fouling of templates is a major concern in imprint lithography and fluorinated materials are used to treat templates to lower their surface energy for better separation. It has been observed that the template treatment degrades over time and needs to be replaced for further imprinting. A fluorinated silazane was designed to repair the degraded areas. This material was evaluated and functions as designed. / text
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Multiscale modeling using goal-oriented adaptivity and numerical homogenizationJhurani, Chetan Kumar 16 October 2009 (has links)
Modeling of engineering objects with complex heterogeneous material
structure at nanoscale level has emerged as an important research problem. In
this research, we are interested in multiscale modeling and analysis of mechanical
properties of the polymer structures created in the Step and Flash Imprint
Lithography (SFIL) process. SFIL is a novel imprint lithography process designed
to transfer circuit patterns for fabricating microchips in low-pressure
and room-temperature environments. Since the smallest features in SFIL are
only a few molecules across, approximating them as a continuum is not completely
accurate. Previous research in this subject has dealt with coupling
discrete models with continuum hyperelasticity models. The modeling of the
post-polymerization step in SFIL involves computing solutions of large nonlinear
energy minimization problems with fast spatial variation in material properties. An equilibrium configuration is found by minimizing the energy of
this heterogeneous polymeric lattice.
Numerical solution of such a molecular statics base model, which is
assumed to describe the microstructure completely, is computationally very
expensive. This is due to the problem size – on the order of millions of degrees
of freedom (DOFs). Rapid variation in material properties, ill-conditioning,
nonlinearity, and non-convexity make this problem even more challenging to
solve.
We devise a method for efficient approximation of the solution. Combining
numerical homogenization, adaptive finite element meshes, and goaloriented
error estimation, we develop a black-box method for efficient solution
of problems with multiple spatial scales. The purpose of this homogenization
method is to reduce the number of DOFs, find locally optimal effective material
properties, and do goal-oriented mesh refinement. In addition, it smoothes
the energy landscape.
Traditionally, a finite element mesh is designed after obtaining material
properties in different regions. The mesh has to resolve material discontinuities
and rapid variations. In our approach, however, we generate a sequence
of coarse meshes (possibly 1-irregular), and homogenize material properties on
each coarse mesh element using a locally posed constrained convex quadratic
optimization problem. This upscaling is done using Moore-Penrose pseudoinverse
of the linearized fine-scale element stiffness matrices, and a material independent
interpolation operator. This requires solution of a continuous-time Lyapunov equation on each element. Using the adjoint solution, we compute
local error estimates in the quantity of interest. The error estimates also drive
the automatic mesh adaptivity algorithm. The results show that this method
uses orders of magnitude fewer degrees of freedom to give fast and approximate
solutions of the original fine-scale problem.
Critical to the computational speed of local homogenization is computing
Moore-Penrose pseudoinverse of rank-deficient matrices without using
Singular Value Decomposition. To this end, we use four algorithms, each
having different desirable features. The algorithms are based on Tikhonov
regularization, sparse QR factorization, a priori knowledge of the null-space
of the matrix, and iterative methods based on proper splittings of matrices.
These algorithms can exploit sparsity and thus are fast.
Although the homogenization method is designed with a specific molecular
statics problem in mind, it is a general method applicable for problems
with a given fine mesh that sufficiently resolves the fine-scale material properties.
We verify the method using a conductivity problem in 2-D, with chessboard
like thermal conductivity pattern, which has a known homogenized
conductivity. We analyze other aspects of the homogenization method, for
example the choice of norm in which we measure local error, optimum coarse
mesh element size for homogenizing SFIL lattices, and the effect of the method
chosen for computing the pseudoinverse. / text
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Materials and processes for advanced lithography applicationsJen, Wei-Lun Kane 25 January 2011 (has links)
Step and Flash Imprint Lithography (S-FIL) is a high resolution, next-generation lithography technique that uses an ambient temperature and low pressure process to replicate high resolution images in a UV-curable liquid material. Application of the S-FIL process in conjunction with multi-level imprint templates and new imprint materials enables one S-FIL step to reproduce the same structures that require two photolithography steps, thereby greatly reducing the number of patterning steps required for the copper, dual damascene process used to fabricate interconnect wirings in modern integrated circuits. Two approaches were explored for the implementation of S-FIL in the dual damascene process: sacrificial imprint materials and imprintable dielectric materials. Sacrificial imprint materials function as a pattern recording medium during S-FIL and a three-dimensional etch mask during the dielectric substrate etch, enabling the simultaneous patterning of both the via and metal structures in the dielectric substrate. Development of sacrificial imprint materials and the associated imprint and etch processes are described. Application of S-FIL and the sacrificial imprint material in a commercial copper dual damascene process successfully produced functional copper interconnect structures, demonstrating the feasibility of integrating multi-level S-FIL in the copper dual damascene process. Imprintable dielectric materials are designed to combine the multi-level patterning capability of S-FIL with novel dielectric precursor materials, enabling the simultaneous deposition and patterning of the interlayer dielectric material. Several candidate imprintable dielectric materials were evaluated: sol-gel, polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane (POSS) epoxide, POSS acrylate, POSS azide, and POSS thiol. POSS thiol shows the most promise as functional imprintable dielectric material, although additional work in the POSS thiol formulation and viscous dispense process are needed to produce functional interconnect structures. Integration of S-FIL with imprintable dielectric materials would enable further streamlining of the dual damascene fabrication process. The fabrication of electronic devices on flexible substrates represents an opportunity for the development of macroelectronics such as flexible displays and large area devices. Traditional optical lithography encounters alignment and overlay limitations when applied on flexible substrates. A thermally activated, dual-tone photoresist system and its associated etch process were developed to enable the simultaneous patterning of two device layers on a flexible substrate. / text
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Studies of nontraditional high resolution thin film patterning techniquesCollister, Elizabeth Ann 06 August 2012 (has links)
This thesis discusses two patterning techniques: Step and Flash Imprint Lithography, a nanoimprint technique, and patterning thin films utilizing electrohydrodynamic instabilities. Step and Flash Imprint Lithography, SFIL, is promising alternative approach to photolithography. SFIL replicates the relief pattern of a template in a photocurable liquid that has been dispensed on a substrate. The pattern is then crosslinked when the photocurable liquid is exposed to UV light through the template. In order to study the volume change in the created features upon exposure, a stochastic mesoscale model was formulated. This model allows the study of the possibility of defects forming, from under cured etch barrier, or particle contamination of the template. The results showed large defects should not occur regularly until the minimum feature size is below 3 nanometers. The mesoscale model proved to computationally intensive to simulate features of engineering interest. A base multiscale model was formulated to simulate the effects of the densification of the photocurable liquid as well as the effects of the polymerization on the feature integrity. The multiscale model combines a continuum model (compressible Mooney-Rivlin) coupled to the mesoscale code using the Arlequin method. The multiscale model lays the framework that may be adapted to the study of other SFIL processes like template release. Patterning thin films utilizing electrohydrodynamic instabilities allows for the creation of periodic arrays of pillar like features. These pillars form due to the electric field destabilizing the thin film. Prior work has focused on utilizing polymeric films heated above their glass transition temperatures. In order to decrease the process time in the pillar formation process, work was done to study photocurable systems. The systems which proved favorable to the pillar creation process were the thiol-ene system as well as the maleimide systems. Further work was done on controlling the packing and ordering of the formed pillar arrays by using patterned templates. The result of these studies is that control was only able to be achieved to the third generation of pillars formed due to the inability to fully control the gap over the entire active area. / text
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Electromigration enhanced kinetics of Cu-Sn intermetallic compounds in Pb free solder joints and Cu low-k dual damascene processing using step and flash imprint lithographyChao, Huang-Lin 02 June 2010 (has links)
This dissertation constitutes two major sections. In the first major section, a
kinetic analysis was established to investigate the electromigration (EM), enhanced
intermetallic compound (IMC) growth and void formation for Sn-based Pb-free solder
joints to Cu under bump metallization (UBM). The model takes into account the
interfacial intermetallic reaction, Cu-Sn interdiffusion, and current stressing. A new
approach was developed to derive atomic diffusivities and effective charge numbers
based on Simulated Annealing (SA) in conjunction with the kinetic model. The finite
difference (FD) kinetic model based on this approach accurately predicted the
intermetallic compound growth when compared to empirical observation. The ultimate
electromigration failure of the solder joints was caused by extensive void formation at the
intermetallic interface. The void formation mechanism was analyzed by modeling the vacancy transport under electromigration. The effects of current density and Cu
diffusivity in Sn solder were also investigated with the kinetic model.
The second major section describes the integration of Step and Flash Imprint
Lithography (S-FIL®) into an industry standard Cu/low-k dual damascene process. The
yield on a Back End Of the Line (BEOL) test vehicle that contains standard test
structures such as via chains with 120 nm vias was established by electrical tests. S-FIL
shows promise as a cost effective solution to patterning sub 45 nm features and is capable
of simultaneously patterning two levels of interconnect structures, which provides a low
cost BEOL process. The critical processing step in the integration is the reactive ion
etching (RIE) process that transfers the multilevel patterns to the inter-level dielectrics
(ILD). An in-situ, multistep etch process was developed that gives excellent pattern
structures in two industry standard Chemical Vapor Deposited (CVD) low-k dielectrics.
The etch process showed excellent pattern fidelity and a wide process window.
Electrical testing was conducted on the test vehicle to show that this process renders high
yield and consistent via resistance. Discussions of the failure behaviors that are
characteristic to the use of S-FIL are provided. / text
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Fluid management in immersion and imprint microlithographyBassett, Derek William 31 January 2011 (has links)
The important roles of fluid dynamics in immersion lithography (IL) and step-and-flash imprint lithography (S FIL) are analyzed experimentally and theoretically. In IL there are many challenges with managing a fluid droplet between the lens and the wafer, including preventing separation of the fluid droplet from the lens and deposition of small droplets behind the lens. Fluid management is also critical in S FIL because the imprint fluid creates capillary and lubrication forces, both of which are primarily responsible for the dynamics of the template and fluid motion. The fluid flow and shape of the wafer determine how uniform the gap height between the wafer and the template is, and they affect the resistance during the alignment phase.
IL was investigated as a methodology to improve laser lithography for making photomasks. The fluid flow in IL was investigated by building a test apparatus to simulate the motion of the fluid droplet during microlithographic production, and using this apparatus to conduct experiments on various immersion fluids and wafer topcoats to determine what instabilities would occur. A theoretical model was used to predict the fluid separation instabilities. Finite element simulations were also used to model the fluid droplet, and these simulations accurately predict the fluid instabilities and quantitatively agreed with the model and experiments.
It is shown that the process is viable: capillary forces are sufficient to keep the fluid droplet stable, heating effects due to the laser are negligible, and other concerns such as evaporation and dissolution are manageable.
Euler beam theory and the lubrication equation were used to model the bending of an S FIL template and the flow of the fluid between the template and a non-flat wafer. The template filling time, conformance of the template to the wafer, and the alignment phase are investigated with an analytical model and finite element simulations. Analysis and simulations show that uniformity of the residual film thickness and ease of proper alignment depend greatly on the planarity of the wafer, the properties of the template, and the surface tension of the fluid. / text
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