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1.IntroductionElectron-beam microcolumns have practical advantages over the traditional columns because of their high resolution and compactness. They are also capable of achieving ultralow landing electron energy for niche applications. Because of their compactness, microcolumns can be arranged into massive arrays for parallel electron-beam lithography. This massive-parallel scheme enables the use of small beam current for each microcolumn to achieve a high total beam current that exceeds the throughput of shaped beam lithography and cell-projection lithography system.1,2 High-throughput parallel microcolumns have attracted many interests because of their potentials in the applications of electron-beam lithography and imaging. In the past two decades, researchers have developed a variety of miniature electron-beam columns.3–10 Most of these prototypes utilized the conventional Schottky emitter with high operation temperature (), but thermal issues become the biggest obstacle in its development.11 The use of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) as electron emitters was proposed to replace Schottky emitters; however, there is still no practical approach to fabricate the CNT emitters with the desired consistency and uniformity.12 Although there is much research on electron optical systems,13–19 none of them considered microcolumn designs for nanoscale photocathodes. Laser-excited nanoscale cathodes have been studied by many groups, with source sizes in the range of a few nanometers to several hundreds of nanometers.20–22 Compared with other cathodes, a nanoscale photocathode can bring many advantages such as high emission brightness, low energy dispersion, low extraction voltage, and easiness of optically switching without using beam blankers. These features allow us to greatly simplify the microcolumn structure and improve the compactness. It is worthwhile to point out that the low initial electron energy and compactness of the microcolumn structure can also allow us to eliminate the use of a limiting aperture and to utilize all of the emitted electrons to obtain reasonably good resolutions. In this paper, we study the possibility of designing an ultracompact electron optical microcolumn with an overall length as short as for a nanoscale photocathode of in size. A conceptual microcolumn has to be designed and optimized. Our optimized designs show the possibility of focusing all of the emitted photoelectrons at nanoscale into a 16-nm spot or smaller in full-width half-maximum (FWHM) at an electron landing energy of 1 keV. Similar structures are sometimes classified as microelectron-guns in many applications. Here, we still named it microcolumn, mainly because it carries more functions than a traditional microgun and can also have beam-deflecting capability. This microcolumn design is compatible with current microfabrication because of its structure simplicity. We also numerically examined microcolumn design for the Coulomb interaction within an individual microcolumn and their fabrication and operation tolerances. It is estimated that an array of microcolumns can achieve a lithography throughput of about 0.5 wafers per hour (WPH) with a beam current of 1 nA per column. 2.Microcolumn Configuration and OptimizationA traditional electron optical system usually consists of basic components including electrostatic and/or electromagnetic lenses, blankers, and deflectors. For compactness and simplicity considerations, our microcolumns are designed using all electrostatic components. Figure 1(a) shows the conceptual schematic of our miniaturized electron optics design optimized for a nanoscale photoemission source. The photoemission source is modeled as nanoscale photoelectron-emitting site in a metal film (e.g., gold and chromium) deposited on a transparent substrate such as quartz. We anticipate that nanoscale photoemission sources are very sensitive to surface contamination, and a vacuum environment better than is typically required to avoid source degradation and also electrical breakdown. A possible microcolumn array structure is fabricated, shown in Fig. 1(b) as an example, where the inset shows the sectioned microcolumn with layered structures. During the operation of the photoemission source, it is back-illuminated by a laser beam and generates a nanoscale beam of photoelectrons, which will be accelerated and focused into a Gaussian spot by the microcolumn. The electrons can be guided by a deflector [shown in Fig. 3(a)] and rastered over the resist. Compared with the traditional microcolumn, the blanking of the beam can be easily achieved by modulating the incident laser beams; therefore, the electron-beam blanker is not needed, which can significantly reduce the complexities of the fabrication and operation process. We studied the geometry scaling of a microcolumn design as illustrated in Fig. 1. While keeping the electrode voltages and photocathode size unaffected, all geometric parameters of the microcolumn are presented in a scaling factor using a dimension , where is the distance between source and extractor. As shown in Fig. 1, the source voltage was fixed at (), and a bias potential was applied to the extractor electrode of (). The focus voltage was optimized, which is approximately (), and the resist substrate was grounded (0 V). All electrodes were electrostatic apertures with a diameter of . The distances between the source and the extractor and between the extractor and the focus electrode are and , respectively. The thickness of each electrode was . The working distance (WD), which is the distance between the bottom of the focusing electrode and the surface of the resist, was fixed at in the following discussion unless otherwise specified here. The overall column length was , which is the total distance from source location to resist surface. The column was designed with a demagnification factor of 0.4. Applied voltages and the structure of electron optics (the aperture diameter, the electrode thickness, and so on) can influence and determine the performance of final probe beam. Thus, it is necessary to evaluate and analyze the influence on the characteristics of the spot size. Figure 2 shows the resolution dependence for three different scaling factors when varying one design parameter and fixing all others parameters at their optimized values. Influences of different design parameters on the resolution are shown in , 5, and , where a constant source size of 10 nm in diameter is maintained when scaling the column size. The obtained results help to examine the manufacturing tolerances and operational parameters of the column designs to meet the desired resolution of 16-nm FWHM beam size. Our simulation indicates that a few percent of variation in dimensions will be acceptable for manufacturing such a microcolumn, which is possible to achieve using state-of-the-art tools. As shown in Fig. 2, the optimized spot size increases as the microcolumn is scaled up. Although scaling up can provide a safer field strength in the insulators, the changes of resolution become more sensitive to the variation of design parameters. The case of is explained here to understand the performance dependence on these parameters. As shown in Figs. 2(a) and 2(b), maintaining the voltage between and for extractor and a voltage between and for the focusing electrode is necessary to maintain a spot size . As shown in Figs. 2(c) and 2(d), a tolerance of 80 nm for the distance between source and extractor and a tolerance of 200 nm for the distance between extractor and focusing electrode are acceptable to maintain the spot size . Figures 2(e) and 2(f) suggest that the aperture diameter needs to be kept to be with a variation of 40 nm while the thickness of each electrode does not have significant effects on the performance. When fixing the source size at 10 nm, the optimized design for the cases of and is listed in Table 1. During the geometry scaling, the values of optimized parameters scale accordingly but the performance trends to become relatively more sensitive to the same fraction of variations for most of the parameters. These fabrication and operation tolerances are likely affected by the convolution effect between the optical aberrations and the finite source size. In all simulations, the initial energy spread is set to be uniformly distributed from 0.1 to 0.2 eV, and the initial emitting angle with respect to the optical axis is from 0 deg to 90 deg, which are typical for typical photocathodes. In these simulations and the following simulations, we use a commercial electron-optical design software SIMION (version 8.1) to calculate the electrical potential and simulate the electron trajectories. In the case of , the optimized focus voltage was determined to be at a WD of . The electric-field strength of this design is around for the case of , which is demanding but still safe if high-quality dielectric materials such as fused silica are chosen as the insulators.23 As the column size scales up (for the cases of and ), the field strength will decrease accordingly and a broader range of materials become available. Table 1Optimized design parameters.
As shown in Fig. 3(a), a set of quadruple deflectors can be added at away from the focusing electrode and is connected to a center potential of without causing significant disturbances to the optimized performance and parameters of the microcolumns. The choice of center potential is to maintain original potential distribution after adding the deflector. The diameter of the deflector is chosen to be same as with a thickness of 200 nm. During its operation, the counter electrodes are offset by the same amount of voltages with opposite polarities. The deflecting performance is analyzed for three scaling factors as shown in Fig. 3. Microcolumn with a larger scaling factor can provide a larger deflection range but causes more beam blur. In the case of , a maximum deflecting voltage of 50 V can be used to obtain a deflection distance of 400 nm while maintaining the beam size of 16 nm. Although the deflectors of the microcolumn array can only cover a fraction of the resist surface, incorporating additional mechanical scanning would allow patterning of a full wafer. To better demonstrate the design guideline and the tolerance, main parameters with tolerances are summarized in Table 1. Although the electrode potentials are relatively unaffected during the scaling, a trade-off between material requirements and manufacturability is obvious judging from these three scaling factors. A smaller column tends to be more robust in the variation of design parameters but requires better electrical insulation and higher vacuum to avoid breakdowns. While a larger column has safer field gradients but requires tighter fabrication tolerances. 3.Performance Analysis and Maximum Operating CurrentThe optimized beam profiles on the resist surface results using parameters in Table 1 are shown in Fig. 4 under three scaling factors. To achieve practically high-lithography throughput, large landing beam currents are desired. However, extremely large beam current will cause noticeable electron–electron interaction (Coulomb interaction). The image blur due to Coulomb interaction increases with beam current, optical column length, and demagnification but decreases with convergence angle, source size, and acceleration voltage.24 The Coulomb interaction can be negligible by distributing the total beam current among microcolumn array, reducing microcolumn length and source size and increasing the acceleration voltage and so on. In Fig. 5, all optimized parameters in Table 1 are applied and the figure shows the effect of beam blur induced by Coulomb interaction using a 10-nm-diameter source. It is shown that the microcolumn can operate at a large beam current reaching tens of nanoamperes without noticeable beam blur for and the current limit reduces to several nanoamperes and hundreds of picoamperes for and , respectively. The source voltage of was fixed in investigating the intercolumn interaction. 4.Microcolumn Fabrication and Operational TolerancesThe off-axis aberrations and the depth of focus (DOF) in three scaling factors are numerically evaluated for the fabrication and operational tolerances of the microcolumn. In Figs. 6(a)–6(c), the electrons are emitted from an off-axis distance () in the source plane, the focus distributions are plotted at the targeted plane for the center offset (), and the FWHM is shown as error bars. The seven sources are simulated with 5-nm spacing. At the image plane, the deviation was plotted as the function of source position. Figure 6(a) shows that as the source offset increases, the beam spot shifts according to the magnification factor of the microcolumn. An offset of less than 30 nm can keep the spot size in all three scales. This alignment accuracy of 30 nm is achievable using existing microfabrication facilities to accurately align the photocathode without a significant loss in resolution. In practice, it may not be trivial to achieve an alignment accuracy of 30 nm within all columns. The influence of DOF on the probe beam diameter is shown in Fig. 6(b). Our design was optimized at WD of . Figure 6(d) indicates that a WD variation between and is acceptable which still maintains a spot size but a larger variation can cause severe blur. Obviously the resolution performance is more sensitive to WD for a larger scale which could lead to challenges in the lithography operation. 5.Intermicrocolumn InteractionAlthough electron-beam direct writings using microcolumns provide a superb lithography resolution, the low throughput is the main obstacle in their applications. Using a massive number of microcolumns in parallel can largely increase throughput. Many efforts have been devoted to developing microcolumn arrays and multiple miniature columns to improve the throughput.25–31 The analysis indicates that larger number of microcolumns can provide the potential opportunity to increase throughput. However, the number of microcolumns is limited by several factors. The major one is space charge effect (Coulomb interactions); however, this can be neglected in our design if the operating beam current is well below 100 nA for each microcolumn. The second is the beam aberration and drift caused by the fringing fields of the adjacent apertures. It is important to ensure that the microcolumns are positioned far enough to minimize the intermicrocolumn interactions. To evaluate a reasonable footprint size of a microcolumn array, we analyzed the interaction between two microcolumns with at a spacing in the range of 4 to . We constructed two microcolumns in three-dimensional (3-D) model and varied their center-to-center distance while keeping their distances from the boundaries of the simulation domain to be large enough ( and larger) to minimize the boundary influence. Figure 7 shows the drift of the beam center caused by the fringing field from adjacent microcolumn for the case of . The beam drift reduces rapidly when their aperture center-to-center distance increases in the range of 4 to . As the distance further increases, the discretization errors from the 3-D model will start to take over, leading to noise floor of a few nanometers. The trend shown in Fig. 7 indicates that the fringing field from adjacent microcolumn can be neglected when their aperture center-to-center distance is larger than . Simulations for the cases of and are not performed due to compute-intensive nature of the 3-D models. We expect the beam drift to scale linearly with respect to , which would require further scaling up the center-to-center distance to a value even higher than in order to the same magnitude of beam drift. Because of the compactness of the microcolumns, it is possible to scale up the total number of microcolumns to achieve an adequate throughput in lithography. The overall lithography throughput depends on the number of microcolumns and the current of each column. The writing time can be evaluated as , where is the wafer surface area, is the resist sensitivity, is the number of microcolumns in use, and is the beam current of each microcolumn. If we assume microcolumn array needs to scan over the whole area (i.e., 100% surface coverage) and an emission current of 1 nA is achievable for each photocathode, a throughput of 0.5 WPH on 12-in. wafers is achievable with the resist sensitivity of using 10,000 microcolumns. Limited by the compute-intensive nature of the 3-D model, above intermicrocolumn simulation neglects the influence of the deflectors. In addition to the influence of adjacent deflectors, a thorough investigation of the intermicrocolumn interaction is yet to be done with considerations of more factors such as distortion of spot shape and size. 6.SummaryWe proposed an electrostatic microcolumn to use with a new nanoscale photoemission source. 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BiographyYe Wen received his MS degree in mechanical engineering from the School of Mechanical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA, in 2015. His work focuses on design of microscale electron optics system in electron-beam lithography. |