Measuring and testing – Vibration – Sensing apparatus
Reexamination Certificate
2002-03-18
2003-12-16
Williams, Hezron (Department: 2856)
Measuring and testing
Vibration
Sensing apparatus
Reexamination Certificate
active
06662661
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method for optically measuring a oscillatory and preferably structured membrane in an environment which is exposed to gas streams and/or acoustic excitations, wherein a device is focused on the membrane in order to measure it. The invention also relates to utilizing a pellicle in the above method for the purpose of damping and/or shielding gas streams and/or acoustic excitations.
In the course of progressive miniaturization in semiconductor fabricating technology, techniques such as electron or ion beam lithography are being increasingly applied instead of optical exposure techniques, with which it is only possible to generate microstructures up to the size of the utilized wavelength. For instance, ions are projected onto a mask which is perforated with structure-forming openings through which the ions reach the substrate that will be exposed, where they form an image of the mask structure. The stencil masks utilized in this technique are produced from semiconductor substrates, which are etched from the back side nearly to the margin, leaving a residual thickness of typically 3 &mgr;m, and which include the structure-forming openings in this region. Prior to the exposure process, the stencil masks, specifically their 3-&mgr;m-thick membranes, are measured for control purposes. The fabrication and measuring of stencil masks is described in “Stencil Mask Technology for Ion Beam Lithography” (
Proceedings of BACUS
(Bay Area Chromemask User Symposium, California), SPIE 1998).
The substrates utilized therein, which have a diameter of 150 nm, have a membrane with a diameter of 126 nm. Test structures are disposed on the membrane whose position is optically measured.
The measurement of the structures takes place in the clean rooms that are built for semiconductor fabrication, wherein an upward laminar flow of air effectuates a continuous air filtration and purification. The airflow leads to problems in the measurement of the above mentioned semiconductor membranes of stencil masks. The membranes, being only a few microns (&mgr;m) thick and furthermore being perforated by a number of structural openings and therefore extremely instable, are very easily excited into vibration by air movements. In the measurement of such a membrane, a measuring device must be focused on the membrane plane. When the membrane plane vibrates vertically, for instance, besides unsharpnesses, horizontal position displacements of the structural openings which are to be measured also occur. Besides being induced by air movements, these measurement errors are also acoustically induced. But these acoustic or flow-related air movements above the membrane being measured cannot be shielded by non-vibrating media such as glass wafers or quartz substrates, because utilizing these would impair the quality of the optical imaging and would complicate focusing.
Measuring is thus complicated by the membrane vibrations which occur, or is no longer reproducible given the exceeding of a defined excursion. Above all, membranes having a very small mechanical initial tension and a correspondingly small distortion cannot yet be measured by conventional means owing to their large vibration amplitudes. It is therefore necessary to find a method which makes possible, or makes easier, a reproducible measurement of vibrating membranes.
On the other hand, so-called “pellicles” (i.e. optically transparent films which are stretched on a frame) are used in semiconductor fabrication. In the optical exposure, pellicles are installed through a reticle, i.e. through a quartz plate which is covered by a structured chrome layer, onto same, and serve to keep small particles from the structured chrome layer. Particles occurring in clean rooms do not settle on the reticle but rather several millimeters above it on the pellicle film, and they do not cause fading or scattering of the light beam in the optical imaging. The pellicle thus keeps microparticles and other impurities from the reticle surface.
The utilization of pellicles is described in VDI/VDE Richtlinien 3717, p. 6 (March 1999) (see
VDI/VDE
-
Handbuch Mikro
-
und Fernwerktechnik
). The described pellicles have a film thickness from 0.8 to 2.85 &mgr;m and are used for optical exposure with wavelengths between 360 and 450 nm.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a method, which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices and methods of this general type and which renders it possible to measure, with greater reliability and accuracy, vibrating, and particularly structured, membranes, particularly of stencil masks. It should be possible to carry out this method simply, economically, and as far as possible with the aid of conventional devices for measuring massive and therefore barely oscillatory reticles.
With the foregoing and other objects in view there is provided, in accordance with the invention, a membrane measurement method, which comprises:
providing an oscillatory membrane (in particular a structured membrane) in an environment that subjects the membrane to oscillatory excitations (e.g., gas flows and/or acoustic excitations);
providing an optically transparent film and arranging the membrane and the film such that the oscillatory excitations reach the membrane substantially only through the film; and
focusing a device for optically measuring the membrane onto the membrane, and measuring the membrane.
In other words, the objects of the invention are achieved in that an optically transparent film is provided, and the film and membrane are arranged in such a way that the gas streams and/or acoustical excitations reach the membrane only through the film.
Although the film is just as thin as, or as emerges from the above cited VDI/VDE guidelines, even thinner than the membrane, and therefore is itself able to vibrate, the acoustic and air vibrations and therefore also the vibrations of the membrane are damped enough that a reliable measurement result is achieved, or in many cases a measurement is possible in the first place.
The term “oscillatory” membrane is to be understood to mean that the membrane is capable of oscillating and/or vibrating, especially when excited on being subjected to a gas flow and/or an acoustic excitation.
A preferred embodiment provides that the membrane be placed on a base, which is impermeable to the gas flows and/or acoustic excitations, and covered with the film, so that it is encapsulated by the base and the film. Depending on the film mounting, the base can be flat on the side facing the membrane or can have an elevated margin. According to a preferred embodiment, the base comprises a closed, non-oscillatory plane surface under the membrane. Given placement of the membrane onto the plane surface, and of the film—or rather the frame bearing the film—onto the membrane or the plane surface, vibration-exciting influences can reach the membrane only through the film.
Preferred embodiments with respect to the film provide that the film consist substantially of nitro-cellulose; that it be less than 5 &mgr;m thick; and that it be a pellicle, i.e. a component of a pellicle. The pellicles customarily utilized for protecting chrome reticles from particulate contamination can be misappropriated for suppressing membrane vibrations, whereby a particularly simple and economical shielding of the membrane is achieved.
Preferred embodiments with respect to the membrane provide that the membrane be a stencil mask, and that it consist substantially of silicon.
The membrane is preferably mounted horizontally, and in this orientation lateral position deviations of membrane structures are measured, which occur as a consequence of the causes of error that are to be controlled as well as the vertical membrane vibrations.
With the aid of the film, i.e. the pellicle, in many cases it is possible to utilize measuring devices which are designed solely for measuring non-oscillatory objects such as chrome masks or massive semic
Stach Gerd
Struck Thomas
Bellamy Tamiko
Foley & Lardner
Leica Microsystems Semiconductor GmbH
Williams Hezron
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