Paper
1 July 1991 Deep-UV diagnostics using continuous tone photoresist
Joseph P. Kirk, Michael S. Hibbs
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Lines with steep sidewalls formed in high contrast photoresist with low absorption tend to hide the character of the dose distribution that formed them. For highly absorbing resists, the depth removed during development is directly proportional to Log(dose) and therefore gives a continuous tone record of the exposure dose distribution. Many photoresists useful at 436 nm with low absorption coefficients become highly absorptive at 248 nm and no longer produce sharp profiles. This continuous record of the dose distribution is used to measure uniformity of dose within a field, stability of dose control from exposure to exposure, dose unit matching, and the recording of high resolution dose profiles. Application of continuous tone photoresist to deep-UV lithography tool diagnostics is presented along with a model describing performance.
© (1991) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Joseph P. Kirk and Michael S. Hibbs "Deep-UV diagnostics using continuous tone photoresist", Proc. SPIE 1463, Optical/Laser Microlithography IV, (1 July 1991); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.44817
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KEYWORDS
Deep ultraviolet

Absorption

Photoresist materials

Calibration

Diagnostics

Optical lithography

Lithography

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