WO2001029872A1 - Particle optical apparatus - Google Patents

Particle optical apparatus Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2001029872A1
WO2001029872A1 PCT/EP2000/009768 EP0009768W WO0129872A1 WO 2001029872 A1 WO2001029872 A1 WO 2001029872A1 EP 0009768 W EP0009768 W EP 0009768W WO 0129872 A1 WO0129872 A1 WO 0129872A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
substrate
electron
wafer
electrons
particle optical
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP2000/009768
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Petrus H. F. Trompenaars
Bernardus H. W. Hendriks
Jarig Politiek
Original Assignee
Philips Electron Optics B.V.
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 Philips Electron Optics B.V. filed Critical Philips Electron Optics B.V.
Priority to EP00964277A priority Critical patent/EP1145274A1/en
Priority to JP2001531121A priority patent/JP2003512701A/en
Publication of WO2001029872A1 publication Critical patent/WO2001029872A1/en

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Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J37/00Discharge tubes with provision for introducing objects or material to be exposed to the discharge, e.g. for the purpose of examination or processing thereof
    • H01J37/02Details
    • H01J37/026Means for avoiding or neutralising unwanted electrical charges on tube components
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/004Charge control of objects or beams
    • H01J2237/0041Neutralising arrangements
    • H01J2237/0044Neutralising arrangements of objects being observed or treated
    • H01J2237/0045Neutralising arrangements of objects being observed or treated using secondary electrons
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/25Tubes for localised analysis using electron or ion beams
    • H01J2237/2505Tubes for localised analysis using electron or ion beams characterised by their application
    • H01J2237/2516Secondary particles mass or energy spectrometry
    • H01J2237/2522Secondary particles mass or energy spectrometry of electrons (ESCA, XPS)
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/30Electron or ion beam tubes for processing objects
    • H01J2237/317Processing objects on a microscale
    • H01J2237/31701Ion implantation

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a particle optical apparatus, such as an ion implantation apparatus, an Auger electron spectrometer, an XPS analysis apparatus, and the like, with a radiation source by means of which a wafer or substrate brought into the apparatus can be bombarded by radiation providing for at least a positively charged surface layer of the wafer or substrate, the apparatus further comprising a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons.
  • a radiation source by means of which a wafer or substrate brought into the apparatus can be bombarded by radiation providing for at least a positively charged surface layer of the wafer or substrate
  • the apparatus further comprising a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons.
  • an ion source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by positively charged particles.
  • an Auger electron spectrometer an electron source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by electrons.
  • an X-ray source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by X-rays.
  • a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons will be present.
  • a particle optical apparatus as described in the preamble is known from e.g. JP- A-62.98548 and JP-A-03.25846.
  • the means for providing secondary electron emission comprises an electron source for generating primary electrons of relatively high energy, by means of which in a secondary electron generating box secondary electrons of relatively low energy are generated.
  • a secondary electron generating box is designed to prevent the primary electrons from directly reaching a wafer or substrate in the particle optical apparatus, a certain contamination of the secondary electrons with high energy primary electrons will always occur. Such a contamination can damage the wafer or substrate. For this reason it is often necessary to place the contaminated secondary electron source not too close to the wafer or substrate, which, however, leads to an insufficiently controlled implantation process.
  • the purpose of the invention is to obviate or at least to mitigate the above disadvantage and to provide for a particle optical apparatus in which the contamination of the secondary electrons with high energy primary electrons is further reduced.
  • the particle optical apparatus as described in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the charge neutralization device is provided with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission.
  • the hollow insulating structure is an electron duct in vacuum with electrodes at the entrance and exit by means of which the necessary transport field in the duct is realized.
  • Contamination originating from the primary electron source mostly formed by a thermionic cathode and consisting of material that evaporates from the cathode, such as barium or tungsten, are absorbed in the electron duct, so that the exit thereof can be considered as a clean electron source.
  • the invention not only relates to a particle optical apparatus, but also to a charge neutralization device with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission for application in a particle optical apparatus as described above.
  • the invention particularly the ion implantation apparatus, may be applied for the manufacture of semiconductors, SIMM's (single-in-line memory modules), etc.
  • Fig. 1 shows a schematic arrangement of an ion implantation apparatus with a charge neutralization device according to the invention
  • Fig. 2 A and 2B show potential distributions in one direction of the substrate before and after charge neutralization;
  • Fig. 3 shows the secondary electron yield curve, and
  • Fig. 4 shows the secondary electron energy distribution.
  • Fig. 1 shows schematically an ion implantation apparatus in which a positively charged Si semiconductor-substrate 1 for IC fabrication is brought.
  • an ion source 2 ions are brought in the substrate.
  • electrodes 3 are present.
  • the Si-substrate becomes positively charged.
  • the ion implantation apparatus comprises means 4 for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons in the form of a hollow insulating structure, particularly an electron duct 5, which in the embodiment of fig. 1 is arranged within one of the electrodes 3.
  • the electrons must be led to the entrance of the electron duct 5.
  • the entrance of the electron duct is brought on a negative voltage, the value thereof being dependent on the geometry and material properties of the duct and being such that a sufficient transport field in the duct will be obtained.
  • the exit of the duct is set to 0V with respect to the substrate.
  • the electrodes 3, and at least the exit end of the electron duct 5 are mounted within a vacuum chamber; the substrate is brought in said vacuum chamber.
  • the substrate to be locally sprinkled with electrons is assumed to have acquired on that location a positive potential, corresponding with the maximum landing energy energy of the electrons on the substrate as shown by uninterrupted lines in figures 2A and 2B.
  • FIG. 3 shows the secondary electron yield curve, i.e. the secondary electron emission coefficient ⁇ as a function of the energy of the electrons hitting the substrate.
  • the energy of the electrons hitting the substrate will be small; the maximum value of ⁇ will not be reached in the presently described discharging process.
  • fig. 4 the energy distribution of secondary electrons emitted from the substrate is shown.
  • a typical value for E 0 is: 1 to 5 eV, for E . 5 to 20 eV
  • the dynamics of the discharging process is as follows. Since the potential of the substrate is higher than the potential of the surrounding electrodes, secondary electrons emitted from the substrate are recaptured by the substrate and provide for a charge displacement on the substrate. Hence the potential of at least the surface of the substrate decreases. As soon as the potential of the substrate becomes lower than the potential of the surrounding electrodes two cases can arise. First, electrons emerging from the duct hit the substrate with kinetic energies which are lower than the energy value Ei of the secondary electron yield curve of the substrate (see fig. 3). These electrons cause the substrate to be charged negatively, until none of the electrons from the duct can reach the substrate anymore.
  • figures 2A and 2B respectively show the potential distribution in one direction (Z-direction) of the substrate before and after charge neutralization.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • Analysing Materials By The Use Of Radiation (AREA)

Abstract

A particle optical apparatus, such as an ion implantation apparatus, an Auger electron spectrometer, an XPS analysis apparatus, and the like, is provided with a radiation source by means of which a wafer or substrate brought into the apparatus can be bombarded by radiation providing for at least a positively charged surface layer of the wafer or substrate. The apparatus further comprises a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons. This transport means device is provided with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission, particularly in the form of an electron fibre with electrodes at the entrance and exit. The exit of the electron fibre forms a clean secondary electron source.

Description

Particle optical apparatus.
The present invention relates to a particle optical apparatus, such as an ion implantation apparatus, an Auger electron spectrometer, an XPS analysis apparatus, and the like, with a radiation source by means of which a wafer or substrate brought into the apparatus can be bombarded by radiation providing for at least a positively charged surface layer of the wafer or substrate, the apparatus further comprising a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons. In case of an ion implantation apparatus an ion source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by positively charged particles. In case of an Auger electron spectrometer an electron source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by electrons. In case of an XPS analysis apparatus an X-ray source is present by means of which a wafer or substrate can be bombarded by X-rays. In all these cases a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons will be present.
A particle optical apparatus as described in the preamble is known from e.g. JP- A-62.98548 and JP-A-03.25846.
The means for providing secondary electron emission comprises an electron source for generating primary electrons of relatively high energy, by means of which in a secondary electron generating box secondary electrons of relatively low energy are generated. Although in JP-A-62.98548 the secondary electron generating box is designed to prevent the primary electrons from directly reaching a wafer or substrate in the particle optical apparatus, a certain contamination of the secondary electrons with high energy primary electrons will always occur. Such a contamination can damage the wafer or substrate. For this reason it is often necessary to place the contaminated secondary electron source not too close to the wafer or substrate, which, however, leads to an insufficiently controlled implantation process. The purpose of the invention is to obviate or at least to mitigate the above disadvantage and to provide for a particle optical apparatus in which the contamination of the secondary electrons with high energy primary electrons is further reduced.
According to the invention, the particle optical apparatus as described in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the charge neutralization device is provided with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission. Particularly the hollow insulating structure is an electron duct in vacuum with electrodes at the entrance and exit by means of which the necessary transport field in the duct is realized. Contamination originating from the primary electron source, mostly formed by a thermionic cathode and consisting of material that evaporates from the cathode, such as barium or tungsten, are absorbed in the electron duct, so that the exit thereof can be considered as a clean electron source. Furthermore, high energy primary electrons entering the electron duct loose most of their energy and will not reach the exit of the duct, so that at the exit of the duct only secondary electrons are emitted. So, the exit of the duct cannot only be considered as a clean electron source but indeed as a clean secondary electron source. For these reasons and because the electron duct can be shaped in almost every form, the exit of the electron duct can be put into the vicinity of the location where a wafer or substrate can be brought into the apparatus without this secondary electron source causing any deterioration thereof. A secondary electron source in the vicinity of the wafer or substrate opens the possibility to flood the wafer or substrate with electrons having a reduced kinetic energy, thus practically preventing damaging the wafer or substrate.
The invention not only relates to a particle optical apparatus, but also to a charge neutralization device with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission for application in a particle optical apparatus as described above.
The invention, particularly the ion implantation apparatus, may be applied for the manufacture of semiconductors, SIMM's (single-in-line memory modules), etc.
Now, the invention will be explained in more detail with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which
Fig. 1 shows a schematic arrangement of an ion implantation apparatus with a charge neutralization device according to the invention;
Fig. 2 A and 2B show potential distributions in one direction of the substrate before and after charge neutralization; Fig. 3 shows the secondary electron yield curve, and
Fig. 4 shows the secondary electron energy distribution.
Fig. 1 shows schematically an ion implantation apparatus in which a positively charged Si semiconductor-substrate 1 for IC fabrication is brought. By means of an ion source 2 ions are brought in the substrate. To focus the ions on the substrate 1 electrodes 3 are present. During the ion implantation process the Si-substrate becomes positively charged. For stable operation of the ion implantation apparatus, this charge must be neutralized continuously. For this purpose the ion implantation apparatus comprises means 4 for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons in the form of a hollow insulating structure, particularly an electron duct 5, which in the embodiment of fig. 1 is arranged within one of the electrodes 3. As any known type of means for generating primary and secondary electrons can be used, these means are not further described. The electrons must be led to the entrance of the electron duct 5. In the present embodiment the entrance of the electron duct is brought on a negative voltage, the value thereof being dependent on the geometry and material properties of the duct and being such that a sufficient transport field in the duct will be obtained. The exit of the duct is set to 0V with respect to the substrate. The ion source 2. the electrodes 3, and at least the exit end of the electron duct 5 are mounted within a vacuum chamber; the substrate is brought in said vacuum chamber. The substrate to be locally sprinkled with electrons is assumed to have acquired on that location a positive potential, corresponding with the maximum landing energy energy of the electrons on the substrate as shown by uninterrupted lines in figures 2A and 2B.
When the substrate is positively charged with respect to the ducts's exit, electrons emerging from the duct hit the substrate and lead to secondary electron generation. Fig. 3 shows the secondary electron yield curve, i.e. the secondary electron emission coefficient δ as a function of the energy of the electrons hitting the substrate. Below the value δ=l, thus when the energy of the electrons hitting the substrate is less than Ei or higher than En less electrons are emitted from the substrate than are hitting the substrate. Above the value δ=l, more electrons are emitted from the substrate than are hitting the substrate. As, to prevent damaging of the substrate, the energy of the electrons hitting the substrate will be small; the maximum value of δ will not be reached in the presently described discharging process. In fig. 4 the energy distribution of secondary electrons emitted from the substrate is shown. A typical value for E0 is: 1 to 5 eV, for E . 5 to 20 eV
The dynamics of the discharging process is as follows. Since the potential of the substrate is higher than the potential of the surrounding electrodes, secondary electrons emitted from the substrate are recaptured by the substrate and provide for a charge displacement on the substrate. Hence the potential of at least the surface of the substrate decreases. As soon as the potential of the substrate becomes lower than the potential of the surrounding electrodes two cases can arise. First, electrons emerging from the duct hit the substrate with kinetic energies which are lower than the energy value Ei of the secondary electron yield curve of the substrate (see fig. 3). These electrons cause the substrate to be charged negatively, until none of the electrons from the duct can reach the substrate anymore. Second, electrons emerging from the duct can hit the substrate with kinetic energies which are larger than the energy value Ei of the secondary electron yield curve of the substrate, but lower than En. These electrons cause the substrate to charge positively. The surplus of generated secondary electrons are captured by the surrounding electrodes because these have a higher potential than the substrate. The charging stops when the potential of the substrate becomes equal to that of the surrounding electrodes, because further positive charging would lead to recapturing of the secondary electrons emitted from the substrate by the substrate.
Consequently, there are two ways to discharge the substrate:
Using an electron beam with low kinetic energy, i.e. low in comparison with the energy value Ei, in which case the substrate becomes negatively charged, such that none of these electrons can reach the substrate anymore, indicated by the interrupted line in fig. 2A; - Using an electron beam with kinetic energy which is larger than the energy value Ei, but lower than En. The potential distribution of the substrate becomes than practically equal to that of the surrounding electrodes, indicated by the interrupted line in fig. 2B.
For both cases figures 2A and 2B respectively show the potential distribution in one direction (Z-direction) of the substrate before and after charge neutralization.
In practice both processes occur. The steady state potential distribution along the substrate stabilizes somewhere in between the two extreme cases, illustrated in figs 2A and 2B.

Claims

CLAIMS:
1. Particle optical apparatus, such as an ion implantation apparatus, an Auger electron spectrometer, an XPS analysis apparatus, and the like, with a radiation source by means of which a wafer or substrate brought into the apparatus can be bombarded by radiation providing for at least a positively charged surface layer of the wafer or substrate, the apparatus further comprising a charge neutralization device with means for providing secondary electron emission and transport means for transporting secondary electrons, characterized in that the charge neutralization device is provided with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission.
2. Particle optical apparatus according to claim 1, characterized in that the hollow insulating structure is an electron duct in vacuum with electrodes at the entrance and exit thereof.
3. Particle optical apparatus according to claim 2, characterized in that the exit of the hollow insulating structure is brought in the vicinity of the location where the wafer or substrate can be placed into the apparatus.
4. Charge neutralization device with a hollow insulating structure for controlled electron transport based on secondary electron emission for application in a particle optical apparatus according to any one of the preceding claims.
PCT/EP2000/009768 1999-10-15 2000-10-04 Particle optical apparatus WO2001029872A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP00964277A EP1145274A1 (en) 1999-10-15 2000-10-04 Particle optical apparatus
JP2001531121A JP2003512701A (en) 1999-10-15 2000-10-04 Particle optics

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP99203394 1999-10-15
EP99203394.4 1999-10-15

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2001029872A1 true WO2001029872A1 (en) 2001-04-26

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ID=8240748

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Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/EP2000/009768 WO2001029872A1 (en) 1999-10-15 2000-10-04 Particle optical apparatus

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US6462332B1 (en)
EP (1) EP1145274A1 (en)
JP (1) JP2003512701A (en)
WO (1) WO2001029872A1 (en)

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2009007668A1 (en) * 2007-07-09 2009-01-15 Medical Research Council Transmission electron microscope

Families Citing this family (4)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6930309B1 (en) 2004-03-26 2005-08-16 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corporation Dual-energy electron flooding for neutralization of charged substrate
JP4911567B2 (en) * 2005-12-16 2012-04-04 株式会社トプコン Charged particle beam equipment
US7560691B1 (en) 2007-01-19 2009-07-14 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corporation High-resolution auger electron spectrometer
EP3040714A1 (en) 2014-12-30 2016-07-06 Fei Company Charged Particle Microscope with improved spectroscopic functionality

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EP0397120A2 (en) * 1989-05-09 1990-11-14 Sumitomo Eaton Nova Corporation Ion implantation apparatus capable of avoiding electrification of a substrate
WO1991013458A1 (en) * 1990-03-02 1991-09-05 Varian Associates, Inc. Charge neutralization apparatus for ion implantation system
JPH06267468A (en) * 1993-03-17 1994-09-22 Hitachi Ltd Electron gun for electrificatyion neutralization

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US5633506A (en) * 1995-07-17 1997-05-27 Eaton Corporation Method and apparatus for in situ removal of contaminants from ion beam neutralization and implantation apparatuses
JP3604227B2 (en) * 1996-02-01 2004-12-22 マイクロン ジャパン株式会社 High current ion implantation apparatus and ion implantation method using the same
JP3993691B2 (en) * 1997-09-24 2007-10-17 関西ペイント株式会社 Resist pattern forming method

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0397120A2 (en) * 1989-05-09 1990-11-14 Sumitomo Eaton Nova Corporation Ion implantation apparatus capable of avoiding electrification of a substrate
WO1991013458A1 (en) * 1990-03-02 1991-09-05 Varian Associates, Inc. Charge neutralization apparatus for ion implantation system
JPH06267468A (en) * 1993-03-17 1994-09-22 Hitachi Ltd Electron gun for electrificatyion neutralization

Non-Patent Citations (2)

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Title
KAWATA S ET AL: "INTENSE-ELECTRON-BEAM TRANSPORT THROUGH A SHORT INSULATOR BEAM GUIDE", JAPANESE JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS,JP,PUBLICATION OFFICE JAPANESE JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS. TOKYO, vol. 35, PART 2, no. 1B, 15 January 1996 (1996-01-15), pages L120 - L122, XP000730553, ISSN: 0021-4922 *
PATENT ABSTRACTS OF JAPAN vol. 018, no. 672 (E - 1646) 19 December 1994 (1994-12-19) *

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2009007668A1 (en) * 2007-07-09 2009-01-15 Medical Research Council Transmission electron microscope
US8362428B2 (en) 2007-07-09 2013-01-29 Medical Research Council Transmission electron microscope

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Publication number Publication date
EP1145274A1 (en) 2001-10-17
US6462332B1 (en) 2002-10-08
JP2003512701A (en) 2003-04-02

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