GB2382156A - Manufacture of optical devices - Google Patents

Manufacture of optical devices Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2382156A
GB2382156A GB0127390A GB0127390A GB2382156A GB 2382156 A GB2382156 A GB 2382156A GB 0127390 A GB0127390 A GB 0127390A GB 0127390 A GB0127390 A GB 0127390A GB 2382156 A GB2382156 A GB 2382156A
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United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
wafer
stepper
mask
devices
image fields
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
GB0127390A
Other versions
GB0127390D0 (en
Inventor
Richard Beanland
Leslie Kennedy
Andrew Moseley
Mark Stott
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Marconi Optical Components Ltd
Original Assignee
Marconi Optical Components Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Marconi Optical Components Ltd filed Critical Marconi Optical Components Ltd
Priority to GB0127390A priority Critical patent/GB2382156A/en
Publication of GB0127390D0 publication Critical patent/GB0127390D0/en
Priority to AU2002343026A priority patent/AU2002343026A1/en
Priority to PCT/GB2002/005162 priority patent/WO2003042759A2/en
Publication of GB2382156A publication Critical patent/GB2382156A/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03FPHOTOMECHANICAL PRODUCTION OF TEXTURED OR PATTERNED SURFACES, e.g. FOR PRINTING, FOR PROCESSING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; MATERIALS THEREFOR; ORIGINALS THEREFOR; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
    • G03F9/00Registration or positioning of originals, masks, frames, photographic sheets or textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. automatically
    • G03F9/70Registration or positioning of originals, masks, frames, photographic sheets or textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. automatically for microlithography
    • G03F9/7003Alignment type or strategy, e.g. leveling, global alignment
    • GPHYSICS
    • G03PHOTOGRAPHY; CINEMATOGRAPHY; ANALOGOUS TECHNIQUES USING WAVES OTHER THAN OPTICAL WAVES; ELECTROGRAPHY; HOLOGRAPHY
    • G03FPHOTOMECHANICAL PRODUCTION OF TEXTURED OR PATTERNED SURFACES, e.g. FOR PRINTING, FOR PROCESSING OF SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; MATERIALS THEREFOR; ORIGINALS THEREFOR; APPARATUS SPECIALLY ADAPTED THEREFOR
    • G03F7/00Photomechanical, e.g. photolithographic, production of textured or patterned surfaces, e.g. printing surfaces; Materials therefor, e.g. comprising photoresists; Apparatus specially adapted therefor
    • G03F7/70Microphotolithographic exposure; Apparatus therefor
    • G03F7/70425Imaging strategies, e.g. for increasing throughput or resolution, printing product fields larger than the image field or compensating lithography- or non-lithography errors, e.g. proximity correction, mix-and-match, stitching or double patterning
    • G03F7/70475Stitching, i.e. connecting image fields to produce a device field, the field occupied by a device such as a memory chip, processor chip, CCD, flat panel display

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Exposure And Positioning Against Photoresist Photosensitive Materials (AREA)

Abstract

In a method of manufacture of optical devices from wafers (190) using a stepper photolithographic process (Fig.5), at least one device is fabricated by defining at least one component layer on a resist layer (420) on a semiconductor wafer (190) by a step-and-repeat process in which the stepper apparatus utilizes registration marks (703 Fig.2) located on the wafer (190) to indicate the orientation of the crystal planes. The device is defined by a plurality of stitched together portions formed from different image fields.

Description

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Manufacture of optical Devices Field This invention relates to the manufacture of optical devices and in particular, but not exclusively to devices made from large semiconductor wafers.
Background of the Invention Semiconductor devices are typically manufactured in processes in which a semiconductor substrate undergoes a series of deposition cycles during which further semiconductor materials, metals or insulators are deposited.
These layers may undergo various photolithographic stages that delineate the required features, and these features are subsequently defined by wet or dry etching processes.
Typically a large number of discrete semiconductor devices may be formed on a single wafer and once formed these are separated by dicing or cleaving operations. The individual devices are then available for further processing.
Improvements in technology have increased the size of wafers from about 50mm upto 200mm, and even larger wafers of 300mm have been developed in silicon. In semiconductor production the single crystal wafers are of a particular crystallographic orientation. For silicon and III-V wafers the preferred orientations are chosen to facilitate wet or dry etching where depending upon orientation the etch rate can be highly anisotropic.
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In the field of opto-electronic device fabrication where devices are made from semiconductor compounds such as GaAs, the processes may require accurate alignment relative to the crystal planes. It is common in opto-electronic devices to utilise crystal planes to form smooth cleaved facets acting as mirror surfaces for laser cavities and input/output facets of integrated waveguide devices e. g modulators. For cleaving to be effective as a means of generating mirror surfaces the cleave line must be parallel to or at a predefined angle to specific features of the device and thus there is a requirement for accurate alignment of the device relative to the crystal planes.
A problem faced in opto-electronics manufacture is that a GaAs modulator can be 30mm in length or longer and this has manufacturing implications when it is necessary to cleave a wafer for forming individual components. If a device is not accurately aligned to the crystal planes of the wafer then the cleaved edge may divert from the edge of the device and if the packing density of individual devices per wafer is high, then the cleaved edge may intersect with a neighbouring device. To prevent this occurrence the density of devices per wafer would have to be reduced.
Conventionally, smaller semiconductor wafers, of 100mm dia. or less, are supplied with ground and polished flats at the edge of the wafer which are aligned to a particular crystal plane. Larger semiconductor wafers are supplied with
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alignment notches formed in the edges.
The photolithographic apparatus mechanically registers the alignment features and aligns the lithographic pattern for the devices with the underlying crystal planes typically within an accuracy of 0.5 degrees of arc. This degree of accuracy may arise because a typically accuracy of alignment of a notch or flat is about 0.5 degrees and the detection apparatus of a lithographic machine may align to the flat or notch with an accuracy of í 0. 1 degrees. This degree of accuracy is unacceptable for larger optoelectronic devices and high packing density of small devices.
One solution is to cleave a precison edge at the start of the process, however such cleaved edges make wafers prone to breakage during processing and precludes the use of many types of automated equipment which cannot handle incomplete wafers. For larger wafers the cleave makes the wafer unstable during spinning of a resist in the photolithographic process. Also since a cleaved edge is not bevelled it distorts the resist profile leading to poor contact and resolution during a contact printing process.
With an increase in the size of wafers above 100mm then problems arise due to the lithographic process itself. It becomes harder to maintain line width resolution over the entire wafer. With devices having dimensions of several
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centimetres it also becomes difficult to use standard contact or proximity photolithographic techniques.
GB-A-2356786 describes a process in which the lithographic pattern on a mask is accurately aligned with the crystal planes of a wafer using X-ray diffraction.
Object of the present Invention The present invention provides a method of manufacture of accurately large opto-electronic devices on a wafer by photolithographic techniques Statements of Invention A first aspect of the present invention provides that in a method of manufacture of optical devices from wafers using a stepper photolithographic process, at least one device being fabricated by defining at least one component layer on a resist layer on a semiconductor wafer by a step-andrepeat process in which the stepper apparatus utilizes registration marks located on the wafer to indicate the orientation of the crystal planes.
The term optical devices includes opto-electronic devices made from semiconductor materials, optical devices made from non-semiconductor materials such as lithium niobate, and electro-optic polymers.
Preferably at least one device is defined on at least one
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resist layer on the surface of the wafer by a plurality of image fields. The image fields may be formed on a single lithographic mask, sometimes called a reticule, or on a plurality of masks. The image fields are stitched together during the stepper process to produce a complete image field for a single layer of the device being fabricated, wherein the device geometry exceeds the image field size of the stepper apparatus.
Where devices are defined by a plurality of layers, each layer may be defined by one or masks each formed with one or more image fields.
A second aspect of the present invention provides that in a method of manufacture of optical devices using a stepper photolithographic process, at least one device is fabricated by defining at least one component layer which comprises the device on a respective resist layer on a wafer by a step and repeat process, and at least one device is defined on the surface of the wafer using a plurality of image fields which are stitched together during the stepper process to define said device.
Preferably the stepper apparatus aligns itself to registration marks previously placed on the wafer to accurately indicate the orientation of the crystal planes.
Preferably the orientations of the crystal planes are
<Desc/Clms Page number 6>
determined using X-ray diffraction techniques by passing the X-ray radiation through the wafer or reflecting the radiation from a surface of the wafer.
After placement of the registration marks by photolithography and subsequent processing, the wafer is subsequently transferred to the stepper (sometimes called step & repeat) photolithographic process which utilises the registration marks to orientate wafer relative to the print image.
The devices are typically fabricated from multiple layers of the wafer, and each mask, or set of masks are used to form a specific layer of the device. Within each layer the adjacent images are aligned with a high degree of precision, such that there is optical continuity along the device, using a method called image field stitching.
Preferably, the image fields of multiple mask sets overlap, and respective portions of devices defined by the masks also overlap, and respective portions of devices defined by said mask sets also overlap, the overlapping images of said portions being designed to reduce optical loss mechanisms such as light scatter in the resultant device.
Apparatus for the alignment of a print mask relative to the orientation of the crystal planes of a wafer is disclosed in GB-A-2356 786. For the purposes of the present invention
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the lithographic print mask is adapted to print registration marks which are usable by a stepper apparatus.
The present invention provides for the manufacture of optical devices from a plurality of stitched together optical images.
According to the present invention there is also provided an optical device made by a method according to the first and second aspects of the present invention.
Yet another aspect of the invention provides a wafer having a resist layer with an optical device defined therein by a plurality of overlapping stitched together photolithographic image sets.
A further aspect provides a optical device formed from a wafer, wherein the device comprises a plurality of stitched together portions.
Description of the Drawings The invention will be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which: Fig. 1 is schematic view of apparatus for placing registration marks on a semiconductor wafer in accordance with the present invention, Fig. 2 is a representation of a stepper apparatus
<Desc/Clms Page number 8>
registration mark, Fig. 3 is a illustration of image field stitching, Fig. 4 is a schematic representation of mask pattern designs, and Fig. 5 is a schematic drawing of a step-and repeat apparatus.
Detailed Description of the Invention With reference to Fig. 1 there is shown an apparatus 10 for use in a method according to the present invention. The apparatus 10, with suitable alternative apparatus, and their operation are disclosed on GB-A-2356 786 but will be described herein to provide an understanding of the present invention. Such apparatus can handle large wafers of 150mm or more including wafers upto 300mm.
The apparatus 10 comprises a conventional lithographic tool 20, an X-ray diffraction apparatus 100, a wafer support, or chuck, 40 and controls 50 and 60.
The lithographic tool 20 includes a radiation source 25, an optical unit 30 and a lithographic mask 35 having a lithographic pattern thereon. The optical unit 30 collimates the radiation from the source 25 which passes through the mask 35 and onto the organic resist layer 420 coating the exposed side of a wafer 190. The mask 35 may be moved by a mask actuator 65 which controls the angular rotation of the mask.
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The wafer chuck 40 has a slot 180 therein over which a portion of a wafer 190 may be located and is linked to an actuator 45 which is connected via control path 41 to the wafer alignment control unit 50. The control unit 50 includes programmable means and operates the actuator 45 for angular rotation of the chuck 40 in response to signals received from the X-ray diffraction apparatus 100 through control path 51. The control unit 50 may also be manually controlled by an operator for orientation of the chuck 45.
The control unit 50 is connected to the lithography control unit 60 via control paths 52. The control unit 60 is connected to the radiation source 25 through control path 61 and to the mask actuator 65 via control path 62. The control unit 60 controls the radiation emission and the orientation of the mask.
The X-ray diffraction apparatus 100 comprises an X-ray emitter 101 located beneath the chuck 40, and detector 102 located above the chuck 40. The X-ray emitter 101 comprises a shield 120 with a point X-ray source 110 and a collimator 130 located within the shield 120. The shield 120 extends to the underside of the chuck 40 and shields the chuck 40, the wafer 190 and human operators from stray radiation. The source 110 is a 35 kV water cooled commercial X-ray source which may include a copper target and which is operable to emit predominantly X-ray radiation at a wavelength of 0.154nm although radiation of other
<Desc/Clms Page number 10>
wavelengths may also be emitted. The collimator 130 may be made from brass or other metal, and forms an X-ray beam 170 having a maximum semi-angle greater than the cut-off angle of any wafer to be loaded on the chuck 40 such that at least some of the X-ray directed towards the wafer 190 are at an angle that can be Bragg diffracted.
The detector 102 comprises a shield 150 which encloses a beam discriminator 140, and part of a detector unit 160.
The shield 150 extend from the detector unit 160 to the upperside of the chuck 40. The discriminator 140 uses a four-bounce channel cut crystal which exhibits a high transmission factor and high sensitivity to beam direction.
The discriminator 140 also functions as a monochromator to remove unwanted X-ray components away from 0. 154nm wavelength. The detector unit 160 is connected to the control unit 50 through the control path 51.
For a GaAs wafer 190 it is preferred that the angle 6 subtended by the X-rays from a normal A-A or C-C to the major plane of the wafer should be in the order of 20-25 degrees for a first order diffraction. This angle 6 will change depending upon the chosen wafer material. A beam 170 of X-ray radiation predominately at 0.154nm propagates through the slot 180 in the chuck 40 and through an edge portion of a semiconductor wafer 190 on the chuck. The Xray beam 170 is diffracted (in accordance with Braggs Law) and collected through the discriminator 140 and detector
<Desc/Clms Page number 11>
unit 160. The detector unit generates an output signal S in the form of a series of pulses corresponding to X-ray photons and which is used by control 50 for controlling the orientation of the wafer 190 relative to the X-ray beam.
The diffraction apparatus is aligned relative to the chuck 40 to collect radiation diffracted from a preferred crystal plane of the wafer.
The apparatus 10 is initially calibrated to set the mask 35 for angular alignment relative to a test wafer whose crystal planes are known. After calibration, a production wafer 190 is loaded onto the chuck 40 and X-rays are propagated through the wafer as before. The control unit 50 monitors the signal S and instructs the actuator 45 to orientate the wafer until a maximum signal is detected at which point crystal planes within the wafer 190 are aligned to an acceptance angle of the discriminator 140. The alignment control 50 then generated a signal A to the lithography control unit 60 which activates the lithographic tool 20 to print thereby transferring the mask feature, that is the registration mark (s), to the exposed organic resist coating 420 on the wafer 190.
Fig. 2 shows a wafer 190 with lines 701,702 representing the underlying crystal planes. A plurality of registration marks 703 are positioned with reference to those planes and after exposure the wafer 190 is removed from the chuck 40 and the resist layer developed in an appropriate solvent.
<Desc/Clms Page number 12>
The resulting pattern is used in a subsequent process to transfer the registration marks to the wafer. The registration marks 703 are then usable for further processing in stepper apparatus.
The registration marks 703 transferred from the mask 35 onto the wafer resist layer are utilised for the subsequent lithographic process in a step-and-repeat photolithographic apparatus represented schematically in Fig. 5. Fig. 5 illustrates a reduction step-and-repeat apparatus. The image field is stepped over the wafer surface by two dimensional translation of the wafer whilst the photolithographic mask M is held stationary. After exposure of one device site on the wafer, the wafer is moved to the next device site and the process repeated. The translation stage accurately moves a wafer with respect to the imaging optics and exposes adjacent new areas of the wafer surface. An example of a suitable apparatus is the PAS 5500/60 manufactured by ASML which is accurate to a resolution of 0.45 microns and alignment accuracy of 70nm.
Referring now to Fig. 3, an optical device is fabricated by defining the device image on several layers of a wafer, one layer at a time. Once the image is defined on a resist layer a fabrication process such as etching, deposition etc. is carried out. Once the process is completed the resist layer is removed. A new resist layer is spun down and the next layer of the device is defined. This process
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is repeated until the device is completed. The registration marks are located on ground zero and protected from the process steps for the different multiple layers.
When the device is large, a layer image may not fit within a mask and the stepper process uses the registration marks to enable a semiconductor device 712 to be formed by image field stitching of sections of the device using different image fields 713,714, 715. The example device requires three passes of the stepper over the wafer. The machine vision system of the stepper locates the registration marks 703 and allows very accurate alignment of an image field and the wafer. A first image field 713 is exposed onto a resist surface of the wafer and its mask then removed and a second mask for a second image field 714 installed. The stepper then aligns the second image 714 very accurately with the initial image field 713, that is within an accuracy of 70nm. The two image fields 713,714 are precisely aligned before the second exposure occurs. A third mask for a third image field 715 is then installed in the stepper following the same procedure.
In an alternative procedure a plurality of image fields, in this example three, may be placed on a single mask an each image is exposed singly.
The mask patterns 713-715 are designed so as to prevent defects occurring where the patterns for the device 712
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align. Such defects will act as a source of optical discontinuity. Different interfaces between adjacent patterns are shown in Fig. 4.
Case 1 represents a butt joint between two images 704 and 705. Since the stepper can align images only with 70nm accuracy this joint may cause some discontinuity and is not a preferred arrangement.
Case 2 represents an overlap joint 707 between two images 706 and 708 in say for example a waveguide. A misalignment of such joints may result in a bulge in the pattern at the point of intersection.
Case 3 represents the preferred joint 711 between overlapping images 709 and 710. The overlapping areas are shaped, e. g. tapered, to reduce the possibility of forming a bulge in the joint.
Once a waveguide has been delineated in the resist layer 420, the layer 420 is developed and the wafer passed on to a suitable process e. g etching, deposition etc.
The above method provides for the fabrication of large complex optical devices and circuits on wafers, particularly semiconductor wafers, with the devices accurately aligned with the crystal planes of the wafers without need for ground or cleaved flats on wafers.

Claims (11)

  1. Claims 1. In a method of manufacture of optical devices from wafers using a stepper photolithographic process, at least one device is fabricated by defining at least one component layer on a resist layer on a semiconductor wafer by a step-and-repeat process in which the stepper apparatus utilizes registration marks located on the wafer to indicate the orientation of the crystal planes.
  2. 2. In a method according to Claim 1, at least one device is defined on at least one resist layer of the wafer by a plurality of image fields which are stitched together during the stepper process.
  3. 3. In a method of manufacture of optical devices using a stepper photolithographic process, at least one device is fabricated by defining at least one component layer which comprises the device on a respective resist layer on a wafer by a step and repeat process, and at least one device is defined on the surface of the wafer using a plurality image fields which are stitched together during the stepper process to define said device at respective process stages.
  4. 4. In a method as claimed in Claim 2 or Claim 3, at least one image field may be formed on each of a plurality of lithographic masks.
  5. 5. In a method as claimed in Claim 3 or Claim 4 a plurality
    <Desc/Clms Page number 16>
    of image fields are formed on at least one lithographic mask.
  6. 6. In a method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 5 registration marks for the stepper process are placed on the wafer using a photolithographic process in which a print mask is aligned relative to the crystal planes in the wafer using Bragg diffraction techniques.
  7. 7. A method as claimed in any one of Claims 2 to 6 wherein the adjacent stitched together image fields overlap, and respective portions of devices defined by the image fields also overlap.
  8. 8. A method as claimed in Claim 7 wherein the over lapping areas of said respective portions of the devices are profiled to minimise optical losses.
  9. 9. An optical device formed by a method as claimed in any one of Claims 1 to 8.
  10. 10. A wafer having a resist layer with an optical device defined thereon by a plurality of overlapping stitched together photolithographic image fields from at least one mask.
    <Desc/Clms Page number 17>
  11. 11. A optical device formed from a wafer, wherein the device is defined by a plurality of stitched together portions.
GB0127390A 2001-11-15 2001-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices Withdrawn GB2382156A (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0127390A GB2382156A (en) 2001-11-15 2001-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices
AU2002343026A AU2002343026A1 (en) 2001-11-15 2002-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices
PCT/GB2002/005162 WO2003042759A2 (en) 2001-11-15 2002-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0127390A GB2382156A (en) 2001-11-15 2001-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB0127390D0 GB0127390D0 (en) 2002-01-09
GB2382156A true GB2382156A (en) 2003-05-21

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GB0127390A Withdrawn GB2382156A (en) 2001-11-15 2001-11-15 Manufacture of optical devices

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AU (1) AU2002343026A1 (en)
GB (1) GB2382156A (en)
WO (1) WO2003042759A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7261982B2 (en) 2003-08-07 2007-08-28 Jds Uniphase Corporation Planar circuit optimization
US7687210B2 (en) 2007-06-25 2010-03-30 International Business Machines Corporation Space tolerance with stitching
DE112022002914T5 (en) * 2021-06-03 2024-03-28 Fujikura Printed Circuits Ltd. METHOD FOR PRODUCING A FLEXIBLE PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS63155722A (en) * 1986-12-19 1988-06-28 Hitachi Ltd Aligner
US5298761A (en) * 1991-06-17 1994-03-29 Nikon Corporation Method and apparatus for exposure process
US6003223A (en) * 1998-11-19 1999-12-21 Headway Technologies, Inc. Common alignment target image field stitching method for step and repeat alignment in photoresist
GB2356786A (en) * 1999-11-29 2001-05-30 Marconi Electronic Syst Ltd Substrate alignment using an X-ray diffraction angle measuring tool

Family Cites Families (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
NL8903108A (en) * 1989-12-20 1991-07-16 Philips Nv METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING AN APPARATUS AND MASK GROUP FOR THE METHOD
KR100468234B1 (en) * 1996-05-08 2005-06-22 가부시키가이샤 니콘 Exposure method, exposure apparatus and disc
AU4167199A (en) * 1998-06-17 2000-01-05 Nikon Corporation Method for producing mask
US6225013B1 (en) * 1999-05-20 2001-05-01 Tower Semiconductor Ltd. Stitching design rules for forming interconnect layers

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JPS63155722A (en) * 1986-12-19 1988-06-28 Hitachi Ltd Aligner
US5298761A (en) * 1991-06-17 1994-03-29 Nikon Corporation Method and apparatus for exposure process
US6003223A (en) * 1998-11-19 1999-12-21 Headway Technologies, Inc. Common alignment target image field stitching method for step and repeat alignment in photoresist
GB2356786A (en) * 1999-11-29 2001-05-30 Marconi Electronic Syst Ltd Substrate alignment using an X-ray diffraction angle measuring tool

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
AU2002343026A1 (en) 2003-05-26
WO2003042759A2 (en) 2003-05-22
GB0127390D0 (en) 2002-01-09
WO2003042759A3 (en) 2003-11-27

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