Proceedings Article | 29 September 2010
KEYWORDS: Etching, Reactive ion etching, Silicon, Chemistry, Anisotropic etching, Plasma etching, Ions, Plasma, X-ray optics, Zone plates
Reactive ion etching (RIE) has been employed in a wide range of fields such as semiconductor fabrication,
MEMS (microelectromechanical systems), and refractive x-ray optics with a large investment put towards the
development of deep RIE. Due to the intrinsic differing chemistries related to reactivity, ion bombardment, and
passivation of materials, the development of recipes for new materials or material systems can require intense effort and
resources. For silicon in particular, methods have been developed to provide reliable anisotropic profiles with good
dimensional control and high aspect ratios1,2,3, high etch rates, and excellent material to mask etch selectivity.
A multilayer Laue lens4 is an x-ray focusing optic, which is produced by depositing many layers of two
materials with differing electron density in a particular stacking sequence where the each layer in the stack satisfies the
Fresnel zone plate law. When this stack is sectioned to allow side-illumination with radiation, the diffracted exiting
radiation will constructively interfere at the focal point. Since the first MLLs were developed at Argonne in the USA in
20064, there have been published reports of MLL development efforts in Japan5, and, very recently, also in Germany6.
The traditional technique for sectioning multilayer Laue lens (MLL) involves mechanical sectioning and polishing7,
which is labor intensive and can induce delamination or structure damage and thereby reduce yield. If a non-mechanical
technique can be used to section MLL, it may be possible to greatly shorten the fabrication cycle, create more usable
optics from the same amount of deposition substrate, and perhaps develop more advanced structures to provide greater
stability or flexibility. Plasma etching of high aspect-ratio multilayer structures will also expand the scope for other
types of optics fabrication (such as gratings, zone plates, and so-on). However, well-performing reactive ion etching
recipes have been developed for only a small number of materials, and even less recipes exist for concurrent etching of
more than one element so a fully material specific process needs to be developed. In this paper, sectioning of WSi2/Si
multilayers for MLL fabrication using fluorinated gases is investigated. The main goals were to demonstrate the
feasibility of this technique, achievement of high anisotropy, adequate sidewall roughness control and high etching rates.
We note that this development for MLL sidewalls should be distinguished from work on improving aspect ratios in
traditional Fresnel zone plates. Aspect ratios for MLL sidewalls are not similarly constrained.