For advanced nodes, a robust metrology is required to estimate EPE and its contributors. Especially when moving to late process development steps (Ramp-Up and High Volume Manufacturing (HVM)) where inter and intra wafer variations are small but crucial. In this study, we used 8um by 8um SEM images to assess the benefit of large Field-of-View (LFOV) metrology. The result proves the capability of LFOV metrology in capturing not only intra-wafer EPE behavior and its sensitivity to minor variations but also the minor wafer-to-wafer (W2W) variations which is not possible using a small FOV (SFOV) metrology (0.5um by 0.5um) due to larger noise level.
In this paper, budget characterization and wafer mapping of the Edge Placement Error (EPE) is studied to manage and improve pattern defects with a use case selected from SK Hynix’s most advanced DRAM 1x nm product. To quantify EPE, CD and overlay were measured at the multiple process steps and then combined for the EPE reconstruction. Massive metrology was used to capture extreme statistics and fingerprint across the wafer. An EPE budget breakdown was performed to identify main contributors and their variations. The end result shows EPEmax is mostly driven by local CD and overlay components while EPE variation is dominated by overlay and global CD components. Beyond EPE budget, a novel EPE wafer mapping methodology is introduced to visualize the temporal and spatial EPE performance which captures variation not seen from CD and overlay. This enables root-cause analysis of the pattern defects, and provides a foundation towards a better process monitoring solution. For EPE improvement, serial CD and overlay optimization simulation was performed to verify opportunities for reduction of the EPE and variation using the available ASML applications. The potential improvement for this use-case was confirmed to be 4.5% compared to baseline performance.
Utilizing a unique high NA optical system, a new methodology to measure device overlay accurately has been developed with a key differentiation. Historically, optical techniques to measure features below the image resolution require supporting measurement techniques to be used as a reference to anchor the optical measurement. This novel selfreference methodology enables accurate and robust optical metrology for device features after etch eliminating the need for external reference measurements such as Decap, x-sections or high landing energy SEMs. In this paper, we discuss how a high NA Optical Metrology system enables measurements on small area device replica targets, which enables the ability to create a reference target for device measurements. The methodology utilizes this reference target to enable accurate direct on device overlay measurements without the need for an external reference. Furthermore, the technique is expanded to improve the robustness of the measurement and monitor live in production the health of the recipe, ensuring accuracy overtime. This ultimately leads to a method to extend the recipes in real-time based on the health KPIs. The improved accurate and robust device overlay measurements have proven to improve the overlay performance compared to other techniques. This, combined with the speed of optical systems, enables unconstrained dense measurements directly on device structures after etch, allowing for improved overlay control.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.