Berliner Glas is a privately owned, mid-sized manufacturer of precision opto-mechanics in Germany. One
specialty of Berliner Glas is the design and production of high performance vacuum and electrostatic wafer
chucks. Driven by the need of lithography and inspection for smaller overlay values, we pursue the production
of an ideally flat wafer chuck. An ideally flat wafer chuck holds a wafer with a completely flat backside and
without lateral distortion within the wafer surface.
Key parameters in influencing the wafer chucks effective flatness are thermal performance and thermal
management, roughness of the surface, choice of materials and the contact area between wafer and wafer
chuck. In this presentation we would like to focus on the contact area. Usually this is decreased as much as
possible to avoid sticking effects and the chance of trapped particles between the chuck surface and the
backside of the wafer. This can be realized with a pin structure on the chuck surface. Making the pins smaller
and moving pins further apart from each other makes the contact area ever smaller but also adds new
challenges to achieve a flat and undistorted wafer on the chuck. We would like to address methods of
designing and evaluating such a pin structure.
This involves not only the capability to simulate the ideal pattern of pins on the chuck’s surface, for which we
will present 2D and 3D simulation results. As well, we would like to share first results of our functional models.
Finally, measurement capability has to be ensured, which means improving and further development of
Fizeau flatness test interferometers.