Direct Measurement of the Reaction Front in Chemically Amplified Photoresists

The continuing drive by the semiconductor industry to fabricate smaller structures using photolithography will soon require dimensional control at length scales comparable to the size of the polymeric molecules in the materials used to pattern them. The current technology, chemically amplified photo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science) 2002-07, Vol.297 (5580), p.372-375
Hauptverfasser: Lin, Eric K., Soles, Christopher L., Goldfarb, Dario L., Trinque, Brian C., Burns, Sean D., Jones, Ronald L., Lenhart, Joseph L., Angelopoulos, Marie, Willson, C. Grant, Satija, Sushil K., Wu, Wen-li
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The continuing drive by the semiconductor industry to fabricate smaller structures using photolithography will soon require dimensional control at length scales comparable to the size of the polymeric molecules in the materials used to pattern them. The current technology, chemically amplified photoresists, uses a complex reaction-diffusion process to delineate patterned areas with high spatial resolution. However, nanometer-level control of this critical process is limited by the lack of direct measurements of the reaction front. We demonstrate the use of x-ray and neutron reflectometry as a general method to measure the spatial evolution of the reaction-diffusion process with nanometer resolution. Measuring compositional profiles, provided by deuterium-labeled reactant groups for neutron scattering contrast, we show that the reaction front within the material is broad rather than sharply defined and the compositional profile is altered during development. Measuring the density profile, we directly correlate the developed film structure with that of the reaction front.
ISSN:0036-8075
1095-9203
DOI:10.1126/science.1072092