WO2008101713A2 - High throughput sem tool - Google Patents

High throughput sem tool Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2008101713A2
WO2008101713A2 PCT/EP2008/001413 EP2008001413W WO2008101713A2 WO 2008101713 A2 WO2008101713 A2 WO 2008101713A2 EP 2008001413 W EP2008001413 W EP 2008001413W WO 2008101713 A2 WO2008101713 A2 WO 2008101713A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
electron
beams
electron beam
common
scanning
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/EP2008/001413
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2008101713A3 (en
Inventor
Gilad Almogy
Avishai Bartov
Jürgen Frosien
Pavel Adamec
Helmut Banzhof
Original Assignee
Applied Materials Israel 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 Applied Materials Israel Ltd. filed Critical Applied Materials Israel Ltd.
Priority to US12/528,307 priority Critical patent/US9153413B2/en
Priority to PCT/EP2008/001413 priority patent/WO2008101713A2/en
Priority to JP2009550679A priority patent/JP2010519697A/en
Priority to EP08715964.6A priority patent/EP2132763B1/en
Publication of WO2008101713A2 publication Critical patent/WO2008101713A2/en
Publication of WO2008101713A3 publication Critical patent/WO2008101713A3/en

Links

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
    • H01J37/04Arrangements of electrodes and associated parts for generating or controlling the discharge, e.g. electron-optical arrangement or ion-optical arrangement
    • H01J37/05Electron or ion-optical arrangements for separating electrons or ions according to their energy or mass
    • 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
    • H01J37/04Arrangements of electrodes and associated parts for generating or controlling the discharge, e.g. electron-optical arrangement or ion-optical arrangement
    • H01J37/10Lenses
    • 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
    • H01J37/04Arrangements of electrodes and associated parts for generating or controlling the discharge, e.g. electron-optical arrangement or ion-optical arrangement
    • H01J37/147Arrangements for directing or deflecting the discharge along a desired path
    • 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
    • H01J37/26Electron or ion microscopes; Electron or ion diffraction tubes
    • H01J37/28Electron or ion microscopes; Electron or ion diffraction tubes with scanning beams
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/06Sources
    • H01J2237/063Electron sources
    • H01J2237/06325Cold-cathode sources
    • H01J2237/06341Field emission
    • H01J2237/0635Multiple source, e.g. comb or array
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/15Means for deflecting or directing discharge
    • H01J2237/1508Combined electrostatic-electromagnetic means
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/244Detection characterized by the detecting means
    • H01J2237/2449Detector devices with moving charges in electric or magnetic fields
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J2237/00Discharge tubes exposing object to beam, e.g. for analysis treatment, etching, imaging
    • H01J2237/26Electron or ion microscopes
    • H01J2237/28Scanning microscopes
    • H01J2237/2813Scanning microscopes characterised by the application
    • H01J2237/2817Pattern inspection

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a multi-beam electron microscope, in particular a high throughput tool for the semiconductor industry. Specifically it relates to a multi-beam scanning electron beam device, a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device, and uses of a multi-beam scanning electron beam device.
  • a modern semiconductor device is component of approximately 20-30 pattern layers that collectively implement the intended functionality of the designer.
  • the designer describes the chip functionality with high level, behavior design languages like VHDL, and then a series of EDA tools translate the high-level description into a GDSII file.
  • the GDSII file contains a geometrical description of polygons and other shapes that describe the patterns of the different layers.
  • the GDSII file accompanied with process design rules for the fabrication process to be used to make the device describes the intended geometry on the layout with the relevant tolerances.
  • Electron beam systems for multiple electron beams which may be used for a fast wafer inspection, are generally realized by either an array of
  • a multi-beam scanning electron microscope according to independent claim 1 a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to independent claims 12 and 13 are0 provided. According to one embodiment, a multi-beam scanning electron beam device is provided.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device having a column includes a multi-beam emitter for emitting a plurality of electron beams, at least one common electron beam optical element having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, at least one individual electron beam optical element for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams, a common objective lens assembly for focusing the plurality of electron beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and being adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen for generation of a plurality of signal beams, and a detection assembly for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element.
  • a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device for generation of an image of a wafer including two or more dies includes scanning a first region of a first die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the first region, scanning a second region of a second die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the second region, and combining the image of the first region and the image of the second region to an image of a virtual die.
  • a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device having at least a first and a second electron beam for generation of an image of a wafer including at least one die includes scanning a non-overlap first region of the die with a first electron beam current of the first electron beam for generating an image of the first region, scanning a non-overlap second region of the die with a second electron beam current of the second electron beam for generating an image of the first region, and scanning an overlap region between a scanning area of the first and the second electron beam with the first beam having a first overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the first electron beam current and with the second beam having an second overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the second electron beam current.
  • Embodiments are also directed to apparatuses for carrying out the disclosed methods and including apparatus parts for performing each described method step. These method steps may be performed by way of hardware components, a computer programmed by appropriate software, by any combination of the two or in any other manner. Furthermore, embodiments according to the invention are also directed to methods by which the described apparatus operates. It includes method steps for carrying out every function of the apparatus.
  • Fig. 1 shows a schematic view of a multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 2A shows a schematic view of an achromatic beam separator for multi- beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 2B shows another schematic view of an achromatic beam separator for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein
  • Fig. 2C shows a schematic enlarged view of an achromatic beam separator and an off-axis correction thereof according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 2D shows a schematic enlarged view of an achromatic beam separator and a further off-axis correction thereof according to embodiments described herein;
  • Figs. 3A to 3E show results of model simulations for an achromatic beam separator according to embodiments described herein;
  • FIG. 4 shows a schematic view of a detection scheme for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein
  • Figs. 5 A and 5B illustrate scanning schemes that can be used for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 6 illustrates a further scanning scheme that can be used for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 7 shows a schematic view of a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 8 shows a schematic view of a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 9 shows a schematic view of yet a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
  • Fig. 10 shows a schematic view of an even further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
  • Figs. HA to HC show schematic views of multi-beam emitters usable for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein; and Fig. 12 shows a schematic view of a primary beam path of a further multi- beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein.
  • the charged particle beam device or components thereof will0 exemplarily be referred to as a charged particle beam device including the detection of secondary electrons.
  • the present invention can still be applied for apparatuses and components detecting corpuscles such as secondary and/or backscattered charged particles in the form of electrons or ions, photons, X- rays or other signals in order to obtain a specimen image.
  • corpuscles it is to be understood as a light signal, in which the corpuscles are photons, as well as particles, in which the corpuscles are ions, atoms, electrons or other particles.
  • a "specimen” as referred to herein includes, but is not limited to, semiconductor wafers, semiconductor workpieces, and other workpieces such as memory disks and the like. Embodiments of the invention may be applied to any workpiece on which material is deposited, which is inspected or which5 is structured.
  • a specimen includes a surface to be structured or on which layers are deposited, an edge, and typically a bevel.
  • the term “common” as used herein is generally understood as referring to elements acting commonly on two or more beams, e.g., all beams, in the multi-beam system.
  • the term “individual” as used herein0 is generally understood as referring to elements acting on individual beams only such that the individual beams can be independently controlled, modified, influenced or the like.
  • a multi-beam system with beam spacing that allows to separate between secondary beams (signal beams) without further restrictions, that allows for individual as well as common beam corrections, deflections, adjustment and/or focusing, and/or that allows the size of beam array not to be bigger than a few dies, e.g., one, two or three dies, in order to allow simultaneous inspection of the same die or neighboring dies is provided.
  • a high throughput multi-beam CD-SEM tool can be provided.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron microscope includes a multi-beam emitter 110. As sown in Fig. 1, the emitter tip 102 of the multi-beam emitter 110 emits an electron beam as indicated by the dashed lines.
  • the aperture plate 106 of the multi-electron-emitter 106 generates electron beams 12, 13 and 14 respectively.
  • Embodiments described herein are not limited to a line of three electron beams. According to further embodiments, lines of 2 to 10 or even 20 electron beams or more as well as arrays having from 2 to 10 or even 20 electron beams or more in one dimension of the array can be realized.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 includes common electron beam optics 120.
  • a common electron beam optical element acts simultaneously on more than one, e.g., all of the electron beams (e.g. electron beams 12, 13 and 14 in Fig. 1.)
  • the common electron beam optics can be selected from the group consisting of: condenser lenses (see, e.g. 120 in Fig. 1), alignment deflectors, field stigmators, and scanning deflectors. As a further example, it might be a rotation lens for rotating the line or array of electron beams.
  • two or more electron beams can pass through the same opening of the common electron beam optical element, e.g.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 includes individual beam optics 140, which can be selected from the group consisting of: scanning deflectors, stigmators, individual focus adjustment units or individual focusing units for adjusting the individual focus of the electron beams.
  • the individual electron beam optics may be a pre-lens octupole system for individual beam alignment, beam scanning, lens alignment, stigmation correction and adjustment of individual focusing.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 further includes a common lens assembly 150 being an objective lens and focusing the line or array of electron beams simultaneously.
  • the common objective lens assembly 150 can be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic.
  • the array lens can be an electrostatic lens array, typically in an acceleration mode, a magnetic lens array or a combined electrostatic-magnetic lens array. If according to yet further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, at least a scanning element is close to the front focal plane of the objective lens assembly, telecentricity can be improved.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device includes a detection assembly 170 with a detection element corresponding to each individual beam. Accordingly, as shown in figure 1, there is one detection element for detecting secondary and/or backscattered particles for each of the electron beams 12, 13, and 14, respectively.
  • Figure 1 shows an example of a multi-beam high throughput tool.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 can include a high current, high-resolution SEM, no electron-electron interaction in light of separated beams, individual scan, fine focus and stigmation correction for the individual beams, a high telecentricity in light of the position of the scanner in front of the focal plane, for example, an electronics and the detector at ground potential, separate detection elements for each beam, e.g. scintillator fiber detection with subsequence multipliers, and a scalability starting from a 4x4 array to a 10x10 array and beyond.
  • multi-beam scanning electron beam devices can be provided and have a typical distance between two adjacent beams of a line of beams or an array of beams in the range of 0.5 to 5 mm, typically 1.5 to 3.5 mm, for example, 2 to 3 mm.
  • embodiments described herein may include common electron beam optics, individual electron beam optics, common objective lens systems and individual detection, wherein for example also a separation between the beams to be detected can be conducted in an improved manner.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 may have a multi-beam emitter 110 including a single emitter tip 102, one or more elements for extracting, accelerating and/or shaping the electron beams and a grid aperture 106 for generating individual electron beams.
  • the emitter tip 102 of the multi-beam emitter emits one beam which is serparated into the multiple beams by the aperture 106 of the multi-beam emitter 110.
  • an emitter array with individual emitters for each electron beam can be used.
  • a spot grid array wherein the emission of one emitter tip is shaped and formed to exit in parallel and as corrected beams can also be used.
  • the grid aperture array or two or more grid aperture arrays can be used at one ore more potentials in order to shape and/or focus the beam.
  • the emission of one emitter can appear in the column as multiple sources.
  • subsequent optical elements or in combination with subsequent optical elements the multiple beams at the specimen appear to be generated by multiple sources.
  • two or more emitters can be used for generation of the multiple beams.
  • one emitter can be used.
  • one source or two or more sources can be provided by the one emitter.
  • the multi-beam emitter Le. the gun condenser area
  • a single emitter electron gun typically the TFE source can be used.
  • the aperture array for multi-beam generation can be included in an upper part of the column for generating the individual electron beams as early as possible. Thereby, the total beam current can be reduced as early as possible for avoiding electron-electron interaction. Thus, the overall current is reduced as early as possible in the column by generating the beamlets out of the common beam.
  • the condenser for adjusting the virtual source z-location (z denoting the optical axis) and/or for matching the aperture array with the objective lens array can be included.
  • an X-Y stage for the aperture array can be provided in order to align the apertures for individual beam generation to the objective lens array.
  • the mechanical aperture stage can be rotated or an axial magnetic field for rotation adjustment of the apertures to the objective lens array can be provided.
  • a common achromatic deflector 130 or common achromatic beam separator 130 having an electrostatic deflection element 132 and the magnetic deflection element 134 can be provided.
  • Fig. 1 only the magnetic field is indicated for illustrating the magnetic deflection element.
  • the achromatic deflector 130 will be described in more detail with respect to the figures 2A and 2B below.
  • the achromatic deflector 130 deflects the primary electron beams 12, 13 and 14, respectively (in figure 1) and separates the primary electron beams 12, 13 and 14 from the secondary electron beams, i.e., the signal beams 12', 13', and 14'.
  • FIG. 1A shows an enlarged view of the achromatic separator.
  • FIG. 2A illustrates one embodiment of an achromatic bender or achromatic beam splitter 130.
  • coil windings 163 and plate-shaped electrodes 165 are shown.
  • the coils 163 generate a magnetic field 31.
  • the magnetic field generates a magnetic force 32 for an electron beam 170.
  • the magnetic force is generated according to equation 2.
  • Substantially perpendicular to the magnetic field 31 an electric field is generated between the electrodes 165.
  • an electric force 33 which is substantially opposite to the magnetic force, is generated.
  • Fig. 2A The embodiment shown in Fig. 2A generates perpendicular, uniform magnetic and electric fields.
  • the electron beam path 170 is slightly inclined with respect to the axis 142 when the electrons enter the achromatic deflector.
  • the deflection angle is independent of the velocity of the electrons if the condition that the magnetic force equals twice the electric force is fulfilled. In Fig. 2A this is illustrated by the lengths of the force indicating arrows 32 and 33.
  • the achromatic deflector 162 can be described at least by one of the following features. According to one embodiment, 20 to 80 ampere turns (Aturns), e.g., 40 Aturnes may be provided. According to an even further embodiment, about 10 to 400 coil windings can be provided. Yet according to another embodiment, 50 to 500 coil windings can be provided. Nevertheless, it might be possible to provide even more coil windings, for example, up to a few thousand.
  • Aturns ampere turns
  • about 10 to 400 coil windings can be provided.
  • 50 to 500 coil windings can be provided. Nevertheless, it might be possible to provide even more coil windings, for example, up to a few thousand.
  • the achromatic deflection angle can be between 0.3° and 7°. According to another further embodiment, the deflection angle is between 1° and 3°.
  • achromatic beam deflector or beam splitter shown in figure 2 A can be used in accordance with the present invention.
  • electrostatic deflection is given by:
  • Fig. 2B shows a system having eight electrodes and pole pieces. Cores 564 are connected to the housing 566 via insulators 563. The coils for exciting the cores and, thereby, the pole pieces are wound around the cores 564. At the other end of the cores, electrode-pole pieces 567/8 are provided. According to embodiments employing a deflection unit as, for example, shown in Fig. 2A, the fringing fields can be provided to be similar for the magnetic field and the electric field; and highly pure dipole fields can be generated. However, the system including eight coils and eight electrodes require more current- and voltage-sources, thereby, costs are increased. As a result, optimized systems having two poles each (electric and magnetic), might typically be used for the embodiments described herein.
  • the imaging system may include a multi-beam system with a high- performance objective lens array with low spherical and chromatic aberration, a low operation beams separator for separating primary and secondary electron beams, and a multi-channel signal detection.
  • FIG. 2C shows three electron beams entering the achromatic beam separator 130 having an electrostatic deflection element 132 and magnetic deflection elements 134. Thereby, the center beam is shown to meet the above described achromatic condition.
  • the other two electron beams have a tilt angle which is different from the center electron beam and which is indicated with regard to the optical axis 2 of the objective lens assembly 150 and the tilted axis 4 and 4', respectively. Accordingly, for non- parallel electron beams the achromatic beam separator is not perfectly achromatic for all of the electron beams and can thus be denoted as a low aberration beams separator.
  • the individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided in the form of a quadrupole element or the like.
  • the beam tilt indicated by axis 4 and 4' of the left electron beam and the right electron beam, respectively, which is not parallel to the center electron beam, which has been deflected achromatically can be introduced in the individual electron beam optics 140.
  • the beam tilt -octut and ⁇ t t ii tj which is introduced for vertical landing and alignment to the objective lens can thereby be introduced. Accordingly the individual electron beams pass through the common objective lens assembly 150 in parallel after compensating the off-axis electron beams.
  • the achromatic beam separator 130' having an electrostatic deflection element 132' and the magnetic deflection element 134' can be compensated by a superimposed quadrupole field, provided by quadrupole elements, which adjusts the achromatic beam deflection for electron beams that do not pass through the achromatic beam separator 130' on the center axis.
  • the achromatic beam deflector can be realized by an octupole element. This octupole element allows for an adjusted beam deflection for electron beams that travel through the achromatic beam separator off-axis. Thereby, the electron beams exit the achromatic beam separator parallel, as shown in figure 2D and dispersion of beam tilt deflectors such as element 140 can be avoided.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron microscope can have a common beam bender (see, e.g., 160 in Fig. 1) adapted for having several electron beams trespassing therethrough.
  • a common beam bender see, e.g., 160 in Fig. 1
  • the beams of primary charged particles undergoes different interactions with the specimen resulting in secondary particles wherein, the term "secondary particles" is to be understood as including all particles leaving the specimen.
  • Those secondary particle beams (see, e.g., 12', 13' and 14' in Fig. 1) that go through the deflector 130, and which are for example accelerated towards the deflector 130, are deflected towards the beam bender 160.
  • beam benders such as bending sectors that might be combined with the embodiments disclosed herein might be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic. Since the space required for an electrostatic bending sector is smaller than the space needed for a sector including a magnetic part, typically an electrostatic sector is used.
  • An electrostatic bending sector may be two electrodes which are shaped roundly. The sector may have a negatively-charged electrode and a positively-charged electrode serving to bend the electron beam. Thereby, the electron beam is focused in one dimension and, additionally, is kept at a high energy to avoid time of flight effects which may have impact on a high-speed detection. A focusing in the second dimension can take place in a quadrupole element, by an electrostatic side plate or a cylinder lens.
  • a double-focusing bender e.g. in the form of a double-focusing sector unit
  • the beam of secondary charged particles can be deflected by about 90° with respect to the beam of primary charged particles.
  • other values between 30° and 110°, typically between 45° and 95° or between 60° and 85° are also possible.
  • the beam is typically also focused, as described above already.
  • One advantage of applying a bending sector is that the beam of secondary charged particles is guided away from the direct vicinity of the primary charged particle beam.
  • analysis tools can be applied in the charged particle beam device without the need to fit them into the limited space nearby the primary charged particle beam and furthermore, without leading to undesirable interactions with the primary charged particle beam.
  • the bending sector can be a hemispherical sector.
  • the hemispherical sector allows for the two-dimensional focusing of the beam. Thus, no additional focusing unit is required for a double focusing sector unit.
  • an electrostatic beam bending sector can be either cylindrical or hemispherical.
  • the cylindrical type suffers from the fact that as the beam is bent the secondary electrons are focused in one plane and not in the other.
  • a hemispherical bending sector focuses the secondary beam in both planes.
  • the cylindrical sector can be used with side plates biased to achieve focusing in thetransverse plane, yielding similar focusing properties to the hemispherical sector.
  • a model of an achromatic beam separation or beam deflector which may also be used as an embodiment, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, can be described as follows.
  • Saddle coils having an inner diameter of 36 mm and a 2 mm x 2 millimeter X-section, as well as 40 ampere turns, may further have a length of about 30 mm.
  • a 60° angle of the saddle coils can reduce or avoid hexapole components.
  • a combination of coils with a 42° and 78° angle can reduce or avoid hexapole and decapole components.
  • the electrostatic deflector i.e. the electrodes shown in Fig.
  • the column voltage is given as 9,5 keV, that is the, voltage can in general be set on increased potential (e.g., 5 times, 10 times or even 20 times increase) for providing the beam boost within the column, and the landing energy is 500 eV or 1 keV, respectively.
  • Figure 3A presents a simulation result of the beam separator.
  • the deflection causes some astigmatism.
  • the astigmatism is small enough to be corrected.
  • the corrected astigmatism is shown in figure 3B.
  • Figures 3C and 3D further show that the achromatic beam separator or achromatic beam deflector, which has been described above, does not introduce additional chromatic aberrations.
  • figure 3C shows the spots without the beam separator, wherein figure 3D shows the spots with a beam separator. In the figures 3C and 3D no substantial difference can be seen.
  • Figure 3E shows a further simulation of the beam separator showing large beam X-sections with a 60° saddle coil.
  • no significant additional aberrations for example "hexapole" coma, are introduced.
  • a 60° saddle coil with large diameter can be considered sufficient for embodiments of an achromatic or low aberration beam separator as described herein.
  • the achromatic beam deflector is also not very sensitive to energy changes of the landing energy on the specimen.
  • the tolerance with respect to the change of energy can be reduced for smaller deflections.
  • the deflector does not need to be readjusted for small energy variations.
  • the achromatic beam separator might be considered achromatic for the primary electron beams but may introduce dispersion for the secondary signal beams.
  • Fig. 4 shows only one primary and one signal beam. However, the same principle can be used for a plurality of signal beams.
  • the achromatic beam deflector separates the signal beam from the primary beam and introduces a dispersion as indicated by the three different beams.
  • the dispersion After trespassing the beam bender, e.g., in form of a sector, the dispersion can be seen in the plane of a dispersive image indicated by reference numeral 474.
  • the lens 472 images the different virtual images corresponding to different signal beam energies on the sub-detection elements 471. Thereby, energy filtering can be realized.
  • the beam rays of the center beam is indicated in Fig. 4. As can be seen there is a crossover shortly after the bending sector 160.
  • the sub-detection elements may also be positioned directly after the bender 160, typically in the focus of the different signal beams having different signal energies.
  • the lens 472 allows for imaging and magnification of the energy spread. Accordingly, a fast and parallel detection of different ⁇ E channels can be realized. This might for example be used for element mapping or potential mapping, e.g., for dopant profiles.
  • a further sub-detection element array can be provided adjacent to the sub-detection elements 471 shown in Fig. 4.
  • each electron beam has the resolution performance similar to a single beam device, for example a CD-SEM.
  • each beam scans a few square microns and the overall throughput is the multiplication of a single beam throughput with the number of beams.
  • a wafer to be inspected is positioned in the tool on an XY- stage.
  • scanning is done in the step and scan manner. Thereby, during scanning the stage is not moved and waits until the current frame scanning is completed. When the scanning of the frame is finished the stage travels to the next frame location.
  • One major problem for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices is the beam overlap within such high throughput systems because a significant part of the surface may lie within two beams. Thereby an overlap of the scanning area of two adjacent beams is provided. This overlap is generally problematic for electron beam imaging as the overlap region will suffer from a different charging regime, in particular if scanning of overlapping regions is conducted within a short time period.
  • a combined scan can be provided.
  • a virtual die image can include portions of several physical dies.
  • the virtual die image can be built in a way that will not require overlaps between beams on the array, in particular not within a time period that is sufficient in order to have previously charge been degraded.
  • the first option is a rectangular scanning scheme wherein portions of four different dies are scanned in order to generate one virtual die image. As shown in figure 5 A, each of the portions 1, 2, 3 and 4 are portions of two or more (up to four) physical dies.
  • Figure 5B shows a hexagonal scanning scheme, which includes scanning of three different portions 502 of different dies in order to form a virtual die image, which can be used for inspection purposes.
  • the overlap 503 shown in Fig. 5B has no negative effect since the scanning of a physically neighboring region can be conducted after a charge of the respective specimen region has sufficiently disappeared.
  • a trapezoid current profile as shown in figure 6, can be used for the beam current of the individual electron beams. Thereby also a single die can be scanned. It is assumed that the beam overlay effect can be reduced significantly by a scanning scheme that will ensure an overall current density in the overlap region 604 that is equal to the current density in the non-overlap regions 602. If, as an example, the beams are placed in a regular rectangular grid and the scattering amplitude is larger than the periodicity of the grid, an overlap is created.
  • the overlap regions 604 are scanned as follows: Ih the scanning direction, which is denoted as the X-direction, the current profile is a trapezoid, wherein the cap (602) of the trapezoid corresponds to the single beam region 602 and the beam current of the respective electron beams decreases linearly along the overlapping region 604. Thereby, the total current in the overlap region 604 is equal to the current in the cap region of the trapezoid, where only a single beam is used.
  • the lines scanned in the X-direction will have a line current that will be modulated in a similar manner.
  • the overlap image signal can be detected in parallel on those two beam detectors, which correspond to the two electron beams generating the overlap.
  • image processing techniques which can for example be based on interpolations, will be applied to re- combine the two images. Thereby an image quality of the combined image can be similar or close to the image quality in the single beam regions.
  • a multi- beam scanning electron beam device can be provided as follows.
  • the beam generation is not shown.
  • the beams can for example be generated by an array of individual emitters or a single emitter. Alternatively, they can be generated by a grid aperture array, a grid lens array, a combination thereof and/or a grid aperture array and a lens.
  • the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 may have a multi-beam emitter 110 including a single emitter tip 102, one or more elements for extracting, accelerating and/or shaping the electron beams and a grid aperture 106 for generating individual electron beams.
  • a multi-beam emitter 110 including a single emitter tip 102, one or more elements for extracting, accelerating and/or shaping the electron beams and a grid aperture 106 for generating individual electron beams.
  • an emitter array with individual emitters for each electron beam can be used.
  • a spot grid array wherein the emission of one emitter tip is shaped and formed to exit in parallel and as corrected beams can also be used.
  • the grid aperture array or two or more grid aperture arrays can be used at one ore more potentials in order to shape and/or focus the beam.
  • the emission of one emitter can appear in the column as multiple sources.
  • subsequent optical elements or in combination with subsequent optical elements the multiple beams at the specimen appear to be generated by multiple sources.
  • two or more emitters can be used for generation of the multiple beams.
  • one emitter can be used. Thereby, one source or two or more sources can be provided by the one emitter.
  • the individual electron beams have a relatively large distance with respect to each other.
  • the distance of the individual beams with respect to each other can according to some embodiments be reduced by an adapting optics having a first lens 725 and the second lens 727.
  • a demagnifying adapting optics can be provided. Thereby, the distance of the electron beams with respect to each other can be reduced.
  • the distance between adjacent beams can be in a range of 1.5-3.5 mm, typically 2-3 mm.
  • the plurality of electron beams is further influenced by common electron beam optics 120 such as a beam corrector 722 and a common deflection system 724.
  • a common objective lens array focuses the plurality of electron beams on the specimen 20.
  • a magnetic objective lens component 752 and an electrostatic lens component 754 having one or more electrode plates can be used. Accordingly, a common objective lens assembly 150 is provided.
  • a magnifying or demagnifying adapting optics for adapting the distance between the electron beams with respect to each other can be provided.
  • a cross- over for the individual electron beams might be generated which increases the electron-electron interaction.
  • an array of electron or charged particle emitters with a spacing sufficient for integration of elements for individual beam control can be provided.
  • These individual electron beam optics might be deflectors, lenses, stigmators, and the like.
  • the electron emitter can be based on one or more conventional thermal emitters, field emitters, or combined thermal-field (Schottky) emitters. It may also be an array of photo emitters.
  • the multi-beam array may be formed by a separation of one beam from one emitter tip into a plurality of beamlets, for example by use of a grid aperture or a spot grid array.
  • an optical demagnification system can be provided, as shown in figure 7.
  • the spacing of the beam array is demagnified to the final requirements for simultaneous inspection of one die or a small number of adjacent dies, for example two or three dies.
  • an optical system with minimized (compensate) off-axis aberrations like a lens doublet can be provided for the adapting optics.
  • the lens system can be magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic and can contain two or more lenses.
  • the common electron beam optics may include a deflection system for alignment and/or scanning, lens systems for focusing adjustments of the beam array, lens systems for corrections, global stigmators, and the like.
  • an array of common objective lenses that is, a common objective lens assembly
  • the objective lens assembly may have individual openings for each beam.
  • a common objective lens assembly is provided by the common excitation, which focuses the individual electron beams simultaneously.
  • Further examples of common objective lenses can include magnetic lenses having a common excitation coil with common pole pieces and an array of individual bores (openings), or common electrostatic lenses having individual bores (openings) in a common lens plate being on one potential.
  • an electrostatic lens or an electrostatic lens component of the common objective lens assembly can be used in an acceleration mode or as a retarding electrostatic lens.
  • a multi-beam scanning electron beam device as, for example shown in figure 7, includes a detection system wherein an array of detectors is provided. Thereby, a detector corresponding to each electron beam is provided. If the electrostatic lens components 754 is provided as a retarding electrostatic lens, the secondary electron beams are accelerated and transferred through the objective lens and can for example be detected on the detector 772.
  • the detector 772 may be an array of annular electron detectors above the objective lens.
  • the secondary electron beam, i.e., the signal beam may also be transferred to the optical adapting system, which is in figure 7 a demagnification system for the primary beams and, thus, a magnifying system for the secondary beams.
  • the separation between the individual beams is increased and in the case of a magnetic system the secondary electron beams are separated from the primary beams by the Lamor rotation of the secondary electron beams. Accordingly, a further simplification of the design of the detector 774 can be realized.
  • the detection can also be improved by a further separation of the primary and the secondary beam arrays.
  • a beam separator based on a magnetic field or a combined electrostatic- magnetic field can separate the secondary beam array from the path of the primary beam array.
  • an achromatic beam separator as discussed e.g. with respect to figures 2A-2D and can be used.
  • the detection system may contain sector field-based spectrometers, a retarding field spectrometer, lenses for annular control, deflectors for alignment and selection and the like.
  • a common separation, filtering, alignment, annular control is provided.
  • an array of detectors or individual detectors for individual detection of each beam is provided.
  • a single emitter tip 102 is provided. If for example the emission angle of the single emitter tip 102 is comparably small, the separation provided by a grid aperture array or a spot grid array can be relatively small. Thus, instead of an electron emitter array with a spacing sufficient for individual beam control, an emitter array with a small beam separation is provided. Accordingly, for some embodiments, a magnification of the beam spacing can be desired. As shown in figure 8, a magnification system having lenses 727 and 725 is provided. As described with respect to figure 7, several embodiments can be used for the adapting optics. Typically, an optical system with minimized (compensated) off-axis aberrations like a lens doublet can be provided. After this increase of the beam separation, individual electron optical elements 140 can be provided such that each electron beams 12, 13 and 14 can be individually controlled.
  • a common objective lens array focuses the plurality of electron beams on the specimen 20.
  • a magnetic objective lens component 752 and an electrostatic lens component 754 having one or more electrode plates can be used.
  • a common objective lens assembly is provided.
  • the objective lens assembly may have individual openings for each beam.
  • a common objective lens assembly is provided by the common excitation, which focuses the individual electron beams simultaneously.
  • Further examples of common objective lenses can include magnetic lenses having a common excitation coil with common pole pieces and an array of individual bores (openings), or common electrostatic lenses having individual bores (openings) in a common lens plate being on one potential.
  • an electrostatic lens or an electrostatic lens component of the common objective lens assembly can be used in an acceleration mode or as a retarding electrostatic lens.
  • an electron beam array with a beam distance which allows individual optical elements 140 such as lenses, multi-pole elements for aberration compensation, deflection and/or stigmation control as well as common electron beam optics 120.
  • the common electron beam optics 120 may include common scanning deflectors 724 and a common beam control element 722 such as alignment deflectors, stigmators or the like.
  • a common magnetic lens assembly 752 and common electrostatic lens assembly 754 can be used for focusing the primary electron beams on the specimen 20.
  • a detection can be realized with a detection array 772 having a detection unit corresponding to the respective individual beams.
  • Figure 10 shows a combination of embodiments described with respect to figure 7 and embodiments described with respect to figure 1.
  • a multi-beam emitter 110 is provided.
  • an array of individual emitters is provided.
  • the electron beams have a spacing with respect to each other such that individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided. This can for example be individual lenses or individual multi-poles.
  • a beam spacing adapting optics is provided by lenses 725 and 727. Thereafter, the electron beam array passes through a common achromatic beam deflector, which deflects the beam array of primary beams and further separates the primary beam array and the secondary beam array.
  • FIG. 1 IA-11C show different embodiments for electron beam array generation according to embodiments that can be used for the high throughput tools described herein.
  • Figure 1 IA shows a mutli-beam emitter 111OA having a single emitter 1102 and an aperture grid array, a lens and/or a lens array for generation of individual beamlets.
  • the emitter 1102 has a small emission angle that limits the separation of the beamlets.
  • a single emitter 1102 may have a larger emission angle such that a lens can be used to guide the electron beam towards the aperture array.
  • individual emitters 1104 can be provided such that an emitter 111OC can be provided. Thereby, also a spacing sufficient for individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided.
  • a multi-beam high throughput tool such as a multi-beam scanning electron beam device can include a multi-beam emitter formed by a single emitter tip and a separation device like an aperture array and/or a grid lens array, which form individual beamlets from the single beam. Further, individual electron beam optics such as lenses and multi-poles can be arranged in the array.
  • the multi- beam high throughput tool further includes common electron beam optics such as deflectors for global alignment and scanning, common stigmators and other elements described herein.
  • a common magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic grid lens array for focusing the individual beams on the specimen is provided.
  • the multi-beam high throughput tool further includes a beam separation means like a common beam separator or a common lens for introducing a Lamor rotation.
  • a detection element including individual detection for the secondary beams is provided and may for example include and energetic and/or angular discrimination.
  • the above-described embodiment may have been a beam spacing adapting optics (magnification or demagnification) for the emitter array spacing in order to adjust the spacing of the emitted beams to the objective lens array spacing.
  • a beam spacing adapting optics magnification or demagnification
  • the system may also include two adapting systems: one for magnification of a spacing in order to allow easier integration of the individual beam control components, and a further system for demagnification of the beam spacing in order to adapt the objective lens basing requirements.
  • the common objective lens assembly may have a smaller number of openings than the number of individual beams in the array. Thereby, two or more beams may share one opening in the common objective lens array. However, it is preferred that at least two openings in the common objective lens assembly are provided.
  • the double focusing bending element such as a bending sector, typically a spherical electrostatic sector arrangement is provided.
  • the individual beamlet detectors can be positioned close to the focus of the sector in order to avoid cross-talk between the individual beams.
  • a scintillation detector with a photomultiplier (PMT) and, for example, a light guide in between is provided for each beam.
  • PMT-array thereby, sufficient space for a PMT-array can be realized.
  • mechanical and/or electromagnetic alignment for the individual secondary eleetron-beamlets on the individual detector channels can be provided.
  • the systems for providing a high throughput tool may typically be a low-voltage system, i.e. having low beam energy on the specimen. This energy may for example be in the range of 100 eV to 5 keV. Typically it is possible for low-voltage beam energies to have the electrons traveling within the column on a high beam energy, for example 8-10 keV or 7 to 15 keV. This beam boosts principle can reduce the electron-electron interaction within one beamlet within the column in light of the shorter flight.
  • the column components can be at ground potential whereas the emitter and the wafer are at a high potential.
  • the scan module, the beam separator and the bender can be at ground potential. This simplifies in particular the common electron beam optical elements.
  • a further embodiment of a multi-beam scanning electron beam system is described with respect to figure 12.
  • a spot grid array 1210 is provided for the generation of the multi-beam.
  • the multiple beamlets are generated by a spot grid array. This can be considered beneficial in light of the fact that individual beams are emitted parallel to each other. Accordingly, a beam tilt as described with respect to figure 2C and/or a compensation of the achromatic separator as described with respect to figure
  • 2D can be omitted for a vertical objective lens landing. Thereby, corresponding chromatic aberrations might be further reduced.
  • common electron beam optical elements 120 such as one or more common stigmators, one or more common beam alignment elements, or one or more common beam rotating elements for rotating the multi-beam array can be provided. Thereby, these components can typically have one opening for trespassing of two or more electron beams. Further, these common elements have a common control for influencing the individual beams simultaneously.
  • Figure 12 further shows a common achromatic beam separator 130, individual electron beam optical elements 140 and a common objective lens assembly 150. Within figure 12, the beam path and the corresponding elements of the secondary electron beam array are not shown. However, it is understood that these components can be provided according to any of the embodiments described herein, for example with respect to figure 1 and/or figure 4.
  • the multi-beam electron beam inspection device can be used for the design for manufacturing (DFM) applications.
  • the system includes an achromatic primary beam separator for dividing beamlets of the primary beam array from beamlets of the signal beams, i.e. the secondary beam array.
  • the secondary beam array might include secondary particles, backscattered particles and other charged particles which are released on impingement of the primary beams on the specimen.
  • a beam boost can be used for the beamlet configuration. That is, a high beam energy inside the column is provided and the electrons are decelerated to the final beam energy in the objective lens array.
  • electron-electron interaction can be reduced by providing a beam boost, i.e. increased beam energy within the column.
  • the individual beams should travel on different beam paths and the cross-over should be avoided in order to minimize electron- electron interaction between the beams. This is particularly relevant for high total beam currents, which are typically used in light of the parallel imaging.
  • the system also includes an array of objective lenses. According to typical implementations, this might be an electrostatic array, for example in acceleration mode. This configuration allows for small mechanical dimensions. Accordingly, a parallel imaging with a plurality of beams is simplified. However, magnetic lenses or combined electrostatic-magnetic lenses for simultaneously focusing the multi-beam array can also be used.
  • common electron beam optical elements for influencing two or more, typically all beamlets.
  • These common elements can, for example, be a condenser lens such as a condenser lens for setting system magnification, total current and/or the divergence angle of the beamlets entering the objective lens array; common alignment and stigmation components; and/or common scanning components (if required).
  • common electron beam optical elements can optionally be rotation means for rotating the beamlet array, for example in an axial magnetic field.
  • the system further includes individual electron optical elements for influencing each element of the beamlet array individually.
  • the individual electron optical elements might be elements for focusing, stigmation correction, objective lens alignment, and/or beam scanning.
  • the individual electron optical elements generate typically transversal electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic fields. These fields might be generated, for example by magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic multipole elements such as dipoles, quadrupoles, octupoles or higher order elements according to the requirements.
  • the individual influencing elements can be located near the objective lens.
  • single stage or multistage arrangements are possible.
  • a scanning element for individual beam scanning can be provided in the form of a single state scanning element or a two-stage scanning element.
  • an individual single stage scan deflector can be located in front of, or be integrated into the bore of each opening in the objective lens.
  • Individual double stage scan deflectors can be located in front of the objective lens array in order to provide the pivot point inside the lens for improvement of operations and telecentricity. Thereby a vertical landing angle or a landing angle close to vertical can be provided.
  • a high brightness emitter with large angular emission can be used to realize high currents in the beamlets as well as in the overall system.
  • thermal field emission cathodes such as TFE with large emitter curvature radii (e.g. 0.5 ⁇ m or larger or even 1 ⁇ m or larger) can be used.
  • CFE, Schottky emitters, and the like can be used.
  • a control electrode between the sample and the objective lens for controlling the extraction field for the secondary, i.e. released electrons can be provided.
  • control electrode has openings for the primary and secondary beamlets.
  • this electrode can be integrated in the objective lens array.
  • control voltages might be added on the voltage of the lens electrode being closest to the specimen.
  • Multi-electron scanning electron beam systems described herein can further include a signal path with individual detection for each single signal beam, which is created by the primary beam array. Thereby, it is further possible that the signal beamlets penetrate the achromatic beam separator on individual traces. Individual detectors or an array with individual detection areas for each beam are located behind the beam separator. This can for example be a scintillator-photomultiplier arrangement with subsequence signal processing. Typically the signal processing can also be provided individually for each beamlet.
  • an additional beam deflection element can be located behind the beam separator in order to increase the angles of separation between the primary beam array and the secondary beam array.
  • the focusing means can be arranged in front of, after or in the additional deflection means.
  • a double focusing additional element like a spherical sector element can be provided.
  • This element can be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic.
  • the system specifications can include a current of the beamlets in a range of 10 pA to 10 nA, for example 100 pA to InA.
  • spot diameters used for systems described herein may be in the range of 1 nm to 50 nm, typically 1 nm to 20 nm.
  • FIG. 2B Further options for systems described herein may include an achromatic beam separator with a superimposed electro-magnetic quadrupole, which might for example be generated by the octupole element shown in Fig. 2B.
  • This quadrupole may influence the off-axis primary beamlets (in one direction) in such a way that all beamlets will exit the objective lens array with vertical incidents.
  • no individual beam tilt might be required if non-parallel beamlets are used in an achromatic beam separator.
  • chromatic aberrations for the beams can be reduced and, accordingly, the spot size and, thus, the resolution of off-axis beamlets can be improved.
  • a spot grid array for generation of individual sources i.e. individual shaped beamlets which appear as individual sources on the sample
  • individual sources can be provided in a spot grid array an individual beam tilt for having off-axis beamlets passing vertically through the objective lens can also be omitted.
  • individual emitter arrays may be applied as individual sources.
  • micro field emitter arrays, TFE arrays or photo-cathodes can be used. Thereby, as described above, generally for multi-emitters as described herein, one emitter might generate two ore more optical sources for the optical system.
  • Embodiments described herein also include methods for generating a multi-beam array from a common emitter by placing an aperture array in a divergent part of the emission. Further, methods of influencing the beamlets such that each beam has a specific performance with regard to its divergence angle, current, tilt angle with respect to the optical axis of the entire system, virtual tour size, and beam position with respect to the objective lens array are provided. These methods are controlled by the emission parameters, condenser lens excitation, and beam influencing means, i.e. common electron optical elements, individual being influencing means, i.e. individual beam optical elements, and/or the operation condition of the achromatic beam separator, typically a common achromatic beam separator.
  • beam influencing means i.e. common electron optical elements
  • individual being influencing means i.e. individual beam optical elements
  • the operation condition of the achromatic beam separator typically a common achromatic beam separator.
  • Further embodiments relate to aligning each individual beamlet to its corresponding objective lens position (opening) by using the individual electron optical elements, which are provided in front of or within the objective lens. Further, methods can be directed to stigmation controlled by one or more stigmation elements. Methods may also be directed to the determination of the best focus, for example by a spot size or resolution measurements using the signal of each signal channel. Further embodiments are directed to methods for detecting the signal produced by each beam. Thereby, the signal electrons entering the objective lens are collected, the electrons are accelerated to high energies, for example 5-20 keV, the signal electrode beamlets are separated from the primary electron beam in the achromatic beam separator, and the signal electron beamlets are guided to individual detectors with subsequent signal channels. Typical embodiments of such implementations include focusing the individual beamlets on the individual detectors. Thereby, signal losses and cross-over between the beams can be reduced or avoided.
  • methods to superimpose an electrostatic-magnetic quadrupole to an achromatic beam separator is provided.
  • the quadrupole can be aligned to the overall system optical axis, whereby off-axis beamlets will be tilted (in one direction) for vertical entrance into an objective lens array.
  • inventions can be directed to a multi-beam scanning electron beam device having a column.
  • the device includes a multi- beam emitter for emitting a plurality of electron beams, at least one common electron beam optical element having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, at least one individual electron beam optical element for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams, a common objective lens assembly for focusing the plurality of electrons beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen for generation of a plurality of signal beams, wherein the common objective lens has at least two openings for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams, and a detection assembly for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element.
  • the at least one common electron beam optical element can be a common beam separator with a common control for separating at least two of the plurality of signal beams from the plurality of electron beams
  • the common electron beam optical element can have one opening for trespassing of at least two of the plurality of electron beams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams
  • the common beam separator can have one opening for trespassing of the plurality of at least two of electronbeams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams
  • the common beam separator can be an achromatic beam separator
  • the achromatic beam separator can be adapted for separating the plurality of electron beams and the plurality of signal beams without generation of a cross-over of the plurality of electron beams and/or the plurality of signal beams for separation.
  • the device can include a quadrupole generation element superimposing the achromatic beam separator and adapted for generation of a quadrupole field for correcting the deflection angle of off-axis electron beams, a double focusing beam bender, in particular a hemispherical sector, wherein, for example, the double focusing beam bender can have one opening for trespassing of the plurality of beams, and/or a demagnifying or magnifying beam spacing adapting optics.
  • the common electron beam optical element can be selected from the group consisting of: an alignment element, an stigmation corrector, a scanning element, and rotating element for rotating the plurality of electron beams, and/or the individual electron beam optical element can be selected from the group consisting of: a focusing element, a stigmation corrector, an alignment element, a beam tilt introducing element and a scanning element.
  • the beam spacing on the specimen between adjacent beams can be in a range of 0.5 to 5 mm, in particular 1.5 mm to 3.5 mm, more particularly 2 mm to 3 mm
  • the individual electron beam optical element can be position adjacent to or within the common objective lens assembly, and or means for accelerating the plurality of electron beams to high energies between the multi-beam emitter and the objective lens, in particular to energies of 2 keV to 20 keV, and means for decelerating the plurality of electron beams before impingement on the specimen can be provided.
  • the device may include focusing means for focusing each of the plurality of signal beams on the corresponding detection element, multi-beam emitter can be a spot grid array having individual emitters for each of the plurality of electron beams, the device can be adapted for avoiding a cross-over in the column, and/or the common objective lens assembly can be an electrostatic lens assembly, in particular in acceleration mode.
  • a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device for generation of an image of a wafer including two or more dies includes scanning a first region of a first die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the first region, scanning a second region of a second die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the second region, combining the image of the first region and the image of the second region to an image of a virtual die.
  • the virtual die can be combined by images of regions of three or four dies of the two or more dies.
  • a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device having at least a first and a second electron beam for generation of an image of a wafer including at least one die includes scanning a non-overlap first region of the die with a first electron beam current of the first electron beam for generating an image of the first region, scanning a non-overlap second region of the die with a second electron beam current of the second electron beam for generating an image of the first region, and scanning an overlap region between a scanning area of the first and the second electron beam with the first beam having an first overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the first electron beam current and with the second beam having an second overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the second electron beam current.
  • the first current and the second current can be similar and the first overlap depending beam current function and the second overlap depending beam current function are similar and/or the first and the second overlap depending beam current functions can be a linear function.
  • a method of operating an achromatic beam deflector for charged particle beams can be provided.
  • the achromatic beam deflector having an optical axis.
  • the method includes providing a deflecting electrostatic dipole field, providing a deflecting magnetic dipole field, superimposing a quadrupole field to the magnetic dipole field and the electrostatic dipole field, wherein the electrostatic dipole field and the magnetic dipole field are adjusted with respect to each other to provide an achromatic beam deflection, and wherein the quadrupole field is adjusted to correct for a beam tilt of off-axis charged particle beams.
  • the charged particle beam can be deflected for an angle of between 0.3° and 7°, the quadrupole field can be aligned to the optical axis of the achromatic beam deflector, an off-axis beam of a multi-beam array can be corrected and/or a correction can be done along one direction.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Analytical Chemistry (AREA)
  • Analysing Materials By The Use Of Radiation (AREA)
  • Electron Sources, Ion Sources (AREA)
  • Electron Beam Exposure (AREA)

Abstract

A multi-beam scanning electron beam device (100) is described. The multi-bea scanning electron beam device having a column, includes a multi-beam emitter (110) for emitting a plurality of electron beams (12,13,14), at least one common electron beam optical element (130) having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, at least one individual electron beam optical element (140) for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams, a common objective lens assembly (150) for focusing the plurality of electrons beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen (20) for generation of a plurality of signal beams (121, 131,141), and a detection assembly (170) for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element.

Description

HIGH THROUGHPUT SEM TOOL
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a multi-beam electron microscope, in particular a high throughput tool for the semiconductor industry. Specifically it relates to a multi-beam scanning electron beam device, a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device, and uses of a multi-beam scanning electron beam device.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] A modern semiconductor device is component of approximately 20-30 pattern layers that collectively implement the intended functionality of the designer. In general, the designer describes the chip functionality with high level, behavior design languages like VHDL, and then a series of EDA tools translate the high-level description into a GDSII file. The GDSII file contains a geometrical description of polygons and other shapes that describe the patterns of the different layers. The GDSII file accompanied with process design rules for the fabrication process to be used to make the device describes the intended geometry on the layout with the relevant tolerances.
[0003] Modern photolithography presents several challenges, including those associated with moving from 90 nm to 45 nm and 32 nm while keeping the stepper wavelengths at 193 nm. This requires further transformation of the intended layout geometry to a post resolution enhancement technique (RET) version of the GDSII file. The new GDSII file includes pattern modifications for optical proximity corrections (OPC) and mask technology. The complex set of OPC corrections, mask-making and stepper conditions is required to print the intended geometry on the wafer.
[0004] In light of the above, semiconductor technologies have created a high demand for structuring and probing specimens within the nanometer scale. Micrometer and nanometer scale process control, inspection or structuring, is often done with charged particle beams. Probing or structuring is often performed with charged particle beams which are generated and focused in charged particle beam devices. Examples of charged particle beam devices are electron microscopes, electron beam pattern generators, ion microscopes as S well as ion beam pattern generators. Charged particle beams, in particular electron beams, offer superior spatial resolution compared to photon beams, due to their short wavelengths at comparable particle energy.
[0005] For semiconductor manufacturing, throughput can be a significant limitation in tools for scanning a geometry in its entirety. Assuming a CD-0 SEM resolution of 1 nm, a 10 mm2 die contains 10E14 pixels. Accordingly, for covering the entire layout, a parallel architecture is desired.
[0006] Electron beam systems for multiple electron beams, which may be used for a fast wafer inspection, are generally realized by either an array of
.conventional single beam columns having a spacing in the range of a fewS centimeters or by a single column with an array of beams. In the latter case, the beam array has relatively small electron beam spacing in a range of 10 μm -
100 μm. Thereby, a high number such as hundreds or even thousands of beams can be used. However, individual corrections of the beams are difficult.
[0007] In order to provide a tool that utilizes electron beam optics to scan the0 entire geometry of the chip layer within resolution and desired signal to noise ratio (SNR), which enables extraction and verification of the wafer pattern geometry against the design-intended GDSII file, Le. the original GDSII file, improved and different system designs have to be considered.
5 SUMMARY
[0008] In light of the above, a multi-beam scanning electron microscope according to independent claim 1, a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to independent claims 12 and 13 are0 provided. According to one embodiment, a multi-beam scanning electron beam device is provided. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device having a column, includes a multi-beam emitter for emitting a plurality of electron beams, at least one common electron beam optical element having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, at least one individual electron beam optical element for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams, a common objective lens assembly for focusing the plurality of electron beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and being adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen for generation of a plurality of signal beams, and a detection assembly for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element.
[0009] Further advantages, features, aspects and details that can be combined with embodiments described herein are evident from the depending claims, the description and the drawings.
[0010] According to another embodiment, a method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device for generation of an image of a wafer including two or more dies is provided. The method includes scanning a first region of a first die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the first region, scanning a second region of a second die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the second region, and combining the image of the first region and the image of the second region to an image of a virtual die.
[0011] According to yet another embodiment, a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device having at least a first and a second electron beam for generation of an image of a wafer including at least one die is provided. The method includes scanning a non-overlap first region of the die with a first electron beam current of the first electron beam for generating an image of the first region, scanning a non-overlap second region of the die with a second electron beam current of the second electron beam for generating an image of the first region, and scanning an overlap region between a scanning area of the first and the second electron beam with the first beam having a first overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the first electron beam current and with the second beam having an second overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the second electron beam current.
[0012] Embodiments are also directed to apparatuses for carrying out the disclosed methods and including apparatus parts for performing each described method step. These method steps may be performed by way of hardware components, a computer programmed by appropriate software, by any combination of the two or in any other manner. Furthermore, embodiments according to the invention are also directed to methods by which the described apparatus operates. It includes method steps for carrying out every function of the apparatus.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0013] So that the manner in which the above recited features of the present invention can be understood in detail, a more particular description of the invention, briefly summarized above, may be had by reference to embodiments. The accompanying drawings relate to embodiments of the invention and are described in the following:
Fig. 1 shows a schematic view of a multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 2A shows a schematic view of an achromatic beam separator for multi- beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 2B shows another schematic view of an achromatic beam separator for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein; Fig. 2C shows a schematic enlarged view of an achromatic beam separator and an off-axis correction thereof according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 2D shows a schematic enlarged view of an achromatic beam separator and a further off-axis correction thereof according to embodiments described herein;
Figs. 3A to 3E show results of model simulations for an achromatic beam separator according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 4 shows a schematic view of a detection scheme for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein; Figs. 5 A and 5B illustrate scanning schemes that can be used for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 6 illustrates a further scanning scheme that can be used for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 7 shows a schematic view of a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 8 shows a schematic view of a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
Fig. 9 shows a schematic view of yet a further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein; Fig. 10 shows a schematic view of an even further multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein;
Figs. HA to HC show schematic views of multi-beam emitters usable for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices according to embodiments described herein; and Fig. 12 shows a schematic view of a primary beam path of a further multi- beam scanning electron beam device according to embodiments described herein.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION [0014] Reference will now be made in detail to the various embodiments of the invention, one or more examples of which are illustrated in the figures. Each example is provided by way of explanation of the invention and is not meant as a limitation of the invention. For example, features illustrated or described as S part of one embodiment can be used on or in conjunction with other embodiments to yield yet a further embodiment. It is intended that the present invention includes such modifications and variations.
[0015] Without limiting the scope of protection of the present application, in the following the charged particle beam device or components thereof will0 exemplarily be referred to as a charged particle beam device including the detection of secondary electrons. The present invention can still be applied for apparatuses and components detecting corpuscles such as secondary and/or backscattered charged particles in the form of electrons or ions, photons, X- rays or other signals in order to obtain a specimen image. 5 [0016] Generally, when referring to corpuscles it is to be understood as a light signal, in which the corpuscles are photons, as well as particles, in which the corpuscles are ions, atoms, electrons or other particles.
[0017] Within the following description of the drawings, the same reference numbers refer to the same components. Generally, only the differences with0 .respect to the individual embodiments are described.
[0018] A "specimen" as referred to herein, includes, but is not limited to, semiconductor wafers, semiconductor workpieces, and other workpieces such as memory disks and the like. Embodiments of the invention may be applied to any workpiece on which material is deposited, which is inspected or which5 is structured. A specimen includes a surface to be structured or on which layers are deposited, an edge, and typically a bevel.
[0019] For ease of reference, the term "common" as used herein is generally understood as referring to elements acting commonly on two or more beams, e.g., all beams, in the multi-beam system. The term "individual" as used herein0 is generally understood as referring to elements acting on individual beams only such that the individual beams can be independently controlled, modified, influenced or the like.
[0020] According to embodiments described herein, a multi-beam system with beam spacing that allows to separate between secondary beams (signal beams) without further restrictions, that allows for individual as well as common beam corrections, deflections, adjustment and/or focusing, and/or that allows the size of beam array not to be bigger than a few dies, e.g., one, two or three dies, in order to allow simultaneous inspection of the same die or neighboring dies is provided. Thereby, according to typical embodiments, in particular a high throughput multi-beam CD-SEM tool can be provided.
[0021] The multi-beam scanning electron microscope includes a multi-beam emitter 110. As sown in Fig. 1, the emitter tip 102 of the multi-beam emitter 110 emits an electron beam as indicated by the dashed lines. The aperture plate 106 of the multi-electron-emitter 106 generates electron beams 12, 13 and 14 respectively. Embodiments described herein are not limited to a line of three electron beams. According to further embodiments, lines of 2 to 10 or even 20 electron beams or more as well as arrays having from 2 to 10 or even 20 electron beams or more in one dimension of the array can be realized.
[0022] The multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 includes common electron beam optics 120. A common electron beam optical element acts simultaneously on more than one, e.g., all of the electron beams (e.g. electron beams 12, 13 and 14 in Fig. 1.) The common electron beam optics can be selected from the group consisting of: condenser lenses (see, e.g. 120 in Fig. 1), alignment deflectors, field stigmators, and scanning deflectors. As a further example, it might be a rotation lens for rotating the line or array of electron beams. Thereby, as a typical implementation, two or more electron beams can pass through the same opening of the common electron beam optical element, e.g. the same opening for trespassing of the beam in the condenser lens 120 shown in the multi-beam emitter 110. [0023] Further, the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 includes individual beam optics 140, which can be selected from the group consisting of: scanning deflectors, stigmators, individual focus adjustment units or individual focusing units for adjusting the individual focus of the electron beams.
[0024] According to additional or alternative implementations, the individual electron beam optics may be a pre-lens octupole system for individual beam alignment, beam scanning, lens alignment, stigmation correction and adjustment of individual focusing.
[0025] According to embodiments described herein, the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 further includes a common lens assembly 150 being an objective lens and focusing the line or array of electron beams simultaneously. The common objective lens assembly 150 can be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic.
[0026] According to further additional or alternative implementations of the objective lens assembly, the array lens can be an electrostatic lens array, typically in an acceleration mode, a magnetic lens array or a combined electrostatic-magnetic lens array. If according to yet further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, at least a scanning element is close to the front focal plane of the objective lens assembly, telecentricity can be improved.
[0027] Yet further, the multi-beam scanning electron beam device includes a detection assembly 170 with a detection element corresponding to each individual beam. Accordingly, as shown in figure 1, there is one detection element for detecting secondary and/or backscattered particles for each of the electron beams 12, 13, and 14, respectively.
[0028] Figure 1 shows an example of a multi-beam high throughput tool. Features of the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 can include a high current, high-resolution SEM, no electron-electron interaction in light of separated beams, individual scan, fine focus and stigmation correction for the individual beams, a high telecentricity in light of the position of the scanner in front of the focal plane, for example, an electronics and the detector at ground potential, separate detection elements for each beam, e.g. scintillator fiber detection with subsequence multipliers, and a scalability starting from a 4x4 array to a 10x10 array and beyond. [0029] In the past, systems having the beam spacing that allows to separate between secondary beams without significant restrictions and at the same time having a beam spacing such that the array is not bigger than 1, 2 or 3 dies for a simultaneous inspection of the same die or neighboring dies have not been highlighted. According to embodiments described herein, multi-beam scanning electron beam devices can be provided and have a typical distance between two adjacent beams of a line of beams or an array of beams in the range of 0.5 to 5 mm, typically 1.5 to 3.5 mm, for example, 2 to 3 mm. Accordingly, embodiments described herein may include common electron beam optics, individual electron beam optics, common objective lens systems and individual detection, wherein for example also a separation between the beams to be detected can be conducted in an improved manner.
[0030] According to some embodiments described herein, as for example shown in figure 1, the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 may have a multi-beam emitter 110 including a single emitter tip 102, one or more elements for extracting, accelerating and/or shaping the electron beams and a grid aperture 106 for generating individual electron beams. Thereby, the emitter tip 102 of the multi-beam emitter emits one beam which is serparated into the multiple beams by the aperture 106 of the multi-beam emitter 110. According to other embodiments, an emitter array with individual emitters for each electron beam can be used. According to yet other embodiments, a spot grid array, wherein the emission of one emitter tip is shaped and formed to exit in parallel and as corrected beams can also be used. Thereby, the grid aperture array or two or more grid aperture arrays can be used at one ore more potentials in order to shape and/or focus the beam. Accordingly, the emission of one emitter can appear in the column as multiple sources. Thus, subsequent optical elements or in combination with subsequent optical elements the multiple beams at the specimen appear to be generated by multiple sources. In light of the above, on the one hand, two or more emitters can be used for generation of the multiple beams. On the other hand, one emitter can be used. Thereby, one source or two or more sources can be provided by the one emitter.
[0031] According to yet further embodiments, the multi-beam emitter, Le. the gun condenser area, can be provided as follows. According to one embodiment, a single emitter electron gun, typically the TFE source can be used. The aperture array for multi-beam generation can be included in an upper part of the column for generating the individual electron beams as early as possible. Thereby, the total beam current can be reduced as early as possible for avoiding electron-electron interaction. Thus, the overall current is reduced as early as possible in the column by generating the beamlets out of the common beam. According to yet further embodiments, the condenser for adjusting the virtual source z-location (z denoting the optical axis) and/or for matching the aperture array with the objective lens array can be included. According to yet further alternative or additional modifications, an X-Y stage for the aperture array can be provided in order to align the apertures for individual beam generation to the objective lens array. Typically, it is for example possible to have an electro-magnetic alignment. According to even further additional or alternative modifications the mechanical aperture stage can be rotated or an axial magnetic field for rotation adjustment of the apertures to the objective lens array can be provided.
[0032] According to yet other embodiments, which can be combined with any of the embodiments described herein, a common achromatic deflector 130 or common achromatic beam separator 130 having an electrostatic deflection element 132 and the magnetic deflection element 134 can be provided. Within Fig. 1, only the magnetic field is indicated for illustrating the magnetic deflection element. The achromatic deflector 130 will be described in more detail with respect to the figures 2A and 2B below. The achromatic deflector 130 deflects the primary electron beams 12, 13 and 14, respectively (in figure 1) and separates the primary electron beams 12, 13 and 14 from the secondary electron beams, i.e., the signal beams 12', 13', and 14'. A double focusing bender 160 provides further beam separation. Details of further embodiments relating to the double focusing bender will be described with respect to figure 4 below. [0033] Figure 2A shows an enlarged view of the achromatic separator. State of the art electron beam devices mostly use magnetic deflectors or Wien filters for beam separation of primary and secondary beams.. Thereby, substantially perpendicular static electric and magnetic fields normal to the z-axis (optical axis) are used. The force acting on the electrons is given by the coulomb force Fe = q-E (1)
[0034] and the Lorentz force
Fm = q - (v x B) (2)
[0035] The angle of deflection of the electrons in the electric and magnetic fields, both of length 1, can be described with the following equation: θ = ql(yB-E)/(mv2) (3)
[0036] Fig. 2A illustrates one embodiment of an achromatic bender or achromatic beam splitter 130. Therein, coil windings 163 and plate-shaped electrodes 165 are shown. The coils 163 generate a magnetic field 31. The magnetic field generates a magnetic force 32 for an electron beam 170. The magnetic force is generated according to equation 2. Substantially perpendicular to the magnetic field 31 an electric field is generated between the electrodes 165. Thereby, an electric force 33, which is substantially opposite to the magnetic force, is generated.
[0037] The embodiment shown in Fig. 2A generates perpendicular, uniform magnetic and electric fields. Within Fig. 2A, the electron beam path 170 is slightly inclined with respect to the axis 142 when the electrons enter the achromatic deflector. The electrons are deflected within the achromatic deflector to travel essentially along axis 144 after trespassing the achromatic deflector. This can be understood in light of the derivative of equation 3, that is dθ/dv = -(qlB/mv2)(l-2E/vB) (4)
[0038] The deflection angle is independent of the velocity of the electrons if the condition that the magnetic force equals twice the electric force is fulfilled. In Fig. 2A this is illustrated by the lengths of the force indicating arrows 32 and 33.
[0039] In embodiments described herein, the achromatic deflector 162 can be described at least by one of the following features. According to one embodiment, 20 to 80 ampere turns (Aturns), e.g., 40 Aturnes may be provided. According to an even further embodiment, about 10 to 400 coil windings can be provided. Yet according to another embodiment, 50 to 500 coil windings can be provided. Nevertheless, it might be possible to provide even more coil windings, for example, up to a few thousand.
[0040] According to an even further embodiment, the achromatic deflection angle can be between 0.3° and 7°. According to another further embodiment, the deflection angle is between 1° and 3°.
[0041] The achromatic beam deflector or beam splitter shown in figure 2 A can be used in accordance with the present invention. Thereby, as described above, electrostatic deflection is given by:
a. « fi-.UA →UΛ +AUA τ>δά« -WΛ
[0042] Further, magnetic deflection is given by:
Figure imgf000014_0001
[0043] As described above, if the magnetic deflection equals minus two times the electrostatic deflection a deflection without chromatic aberration (dispersion) can be realized.
[0044] According to some embodiments described herein, which are illustrated with respect to Fig. 2B, systems including substantially pure dipole fields can be used. Fig. 2B shows a system having eight electrodes and pole pieces. Cores 564 are connected to the housing 566 via insulators 563. The coils for exciting the cores and, thereby, the pole pieces are wound around the cores 564. At the other end of the cores, electrode-pole pieces 567/8 are provided. According to embodiments employing a deflection unit as, for example, shown in Fig. 2A, the fringing fields can be provided to be similar for the magnetic field and the electric field; and highly pure dipole fields can be generated. However, the system including eight coils and eight electrodes require more current- and voltage-sources, thereby, costs are increased. As a result, optimized systems having two poles each (electric and magnetic), might typically be used for the embodiments described herein.
[0045] Generally, embodiments described herein relate to a high throughput, high-resolution imaging system. The imaging system (multi-beam scanningelectron beam device) may include a multi-beam system with a high- performance objective lens array with low spherical and chromatic aberration, a low operation beams separator for separating primary and secondary electron beams, and a multi-channel signal detection.
[0046] As shown in figure 2C, if according to some embodiments the electron beams do not enter the common achromatic beam separator parallel to each other the above described achromatic condition might not be fulfilled for all electron beams. Figure 2C shows three electron beams entering the achromatic beam separator 130 having an electrostatic deflection element 132 and magnetic deflection elements 134. Thereby, the center beam is shown to meet the above described achromatic condition. However, the other two electron beams have a tilt angle which is different from the center electron beam and which is indicated with regard to the optical axis 2 of the objective lens assembly 150 and the tilted axis 4 and 4', respectively. Accordingly, for non- parallel electron beams the achromatic beam separator is not perfectly achromatic for all of the electron beams and can thus be denoted as a low aberration beams separator.
[0047] According to some embodiments, as shown in figure 2C, the individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided in the form of a quadrupole element or the like. Thereby, the beam tilt indicated by axis 4 and 4' of the left electron beam and the right electron beam, respectively, which is not parallel to the center electron beam, which has been deflected achromatically, can be introduced in the individual electron beam optics 140. The beam tilt -octut and όttiitj which is introduced for vertical landing and alignment to the objective lens can thereby be introduced. Accordingly the individual electron beams pass through the common objective lens assembly 150 in parallel after compensating the off-axis electron beams.
[0048] According to further embodiments, as shown in figure 2D, the achromatic beam separator 130' having an electrostatic deflection element 132' and the magnetic deflection element 134' can be compensated by a superimposed quadrupole field, provided by quadrupole elements, which adjusts the achromatic beam deflection for electron beams that do not pass through the achromatic beam separator 130' on the center axis. As shown with respect to figure 2B, the achromatic beam deflector can be realized by an octupole element. This octupole element allows for an adjusted beam deflection for electron beams that travel through the achromatic beam separator off-axis. Thereby, the electron beams exit the achromatic beam separator parallel, as shown in figure 2D and dispersion of beam tilt deflectors such as element 140 can be avoided.
[0049] According to some embodiments, the multi-beam scanning electron microscope can have a common beam bender (see, e.g., 160 in Fig. 1) adapted for having several electron beams trespassing therethrough. After the primary beams are focused on the specimen, the beams of primary charged particles undergoes different interactions with the specimen resulting in secondary particles wherein, the term "secondary particles" is to be understood as including all particles leaving the specimen. Those secondary particle beams (see, e.g., 12', 13' and 14' in Fig. 1) that go through the deflector 130, and which are for example accelerated towards the deflector 130, are deflected towards the beam bender 160.
[0050] Generally, beam benders such as bending sectors that might be combined with the embodiments disclosed herein might be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic. Since the space required for an electrostatic bending sector is smaller than the space needed for a sector including a magnetic part, typically an electrostatic sector is used. An electrostatic bending sector may be two electrodes which are shaped roundly. The sector may have a negatively-charged electrode and a positively-charged electrode serving to bend the electron beam. Thereby, the electron beam is focused in one dimension and, additionally, is kept at a high energy to avoid time of flight effects which may have impact on a high-speed detection. A focusing in the second dimension can take place in a quadrupole element, by an electrostatic side plate or a cylinder lens. Thereby, a double-focusing bender, e.g. in the form of a double-focusing sector unit can be provided. [0051] Thereby, the beam of secondary charged particles can be deflected by about 90° with respect to the beam of primary charged particles. However, other values between 30° and 110°, typically between 45° and 95° or between 60° and 85°, are also possible. Additional to the deflection, the beam is typically also focused, as described above already. One advantage of applying a bending sector is that the beam of secondary charged particles is guided away from the direct vicinity of the primary charged particle beam. Thus, analysis tools can be applied in the charged particle beam device without the need to fit them into the limited space nearby the primary charged particle beam and furthermore, without leading to undesirable interactions with the primary charged particle beam.
[0052] Instead of the electrodes, which may optionally be provided with additional side plates, the bending sector can be a hemispherical sector. The hemispherical sector allows for the two-dimensional focusing of the beam. Thus, no additional focusing unit is required for a double focusing sector unit. Generally, an electrostatic beam bending sector can be either cylindrical or hemispherical. The cylindrical type suffers from the fact that as the beam is bent the secondary electrons are focused in one plane and not in the other. A hemispherical bending sector focuses the secondary beam in both planes. The cylindrical sector can be used with side plates biased to achieve focusing in thetransverse plane, yielding similar focusing properties to the hemispherical sector.
[0053] A model of an achromatic beam separation or beam deflector, which may also be used as an embodiment, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, can be described as follows. Saddle coils having an inner diameter of 36 mm and a 2 mm x 2 millimeter X-section, as well as 40 ampere turns, may further have a length of about 30 mm. A 60° angle of the saddle coils can reduce or avoid hexapole components. Further, alternatively, a combination of coils with a 42° and 78° angle can reduce or avoid hexapole and decapole components. The electrostatic deflector, i.e. the electrodes shown in Fig. 2B, may have an optical geometry of an inner diameter of 16 mm and a length of 30 mm. Further, a +-500 V deflection voltage (static) floating on column voltage can be provided. If, as described with respect to figure 2B, x,y, = 0.7071-X,Y, hexapole and decapole components may be reduced or avoided. For the model, the column voltage is given as 9,5 keV, that is the, voltage can in general be set on increased potential (e.g., 5 times, 10 times or even 20 times increase) for providing the beam boost within the column, and the landing energy is 500 eV or 1 keV, respectively.
[0054] Figure 3A presents a simulation result of the beam separator. The deflection causes some astigmatism. However, the astigmatism is small enough to be corrected. The corrected astigmatism is shown in figure 3B. Thereby, the spot diameter can be reduced from 24 nm in figure 3 A to about 1 nm in figure 3B. Figures 3C and 3D further show that the achromatic beam separator or achromatic beam deflector, which has been described above, does not introduce additional chromatic aberrations. Thereby, figure 3C shows the spots without the beam separator, wherein figure 3D shows the spots with a beam separator. In the figures 3C and 3D no substantial difference can be seen. Figure 3E shows a further simulation of the beam separator showing large beam X-sections with a 60° saddle coil. As can be seen in figure 3E, no significant additional aberrations, for example "hexapole" coma, are introduced. Accordingly, a 60° saddle coil with large diameter can be considered sufficient for embodiments of an achromatic or low aberration beam separator as described herein.
[0055] As can be shown by simulations, the achromatic beam deflector is also not very sensitive to energy changes of the landing energy on the specimen. Thus, the tolerance with respect to the change of energy can be reduced for smaller deflections. The deflector does not need to be readjusted for small energy variations.
[0056] Further alternative or additional implementations with regard to the detection that might for example include a spectrometer, will now be described. Thereby, reference will partly be made to figure 4. Generally, the achromatic beam separator might be considered achromatic for the primary electron beams but may introduce dispersion for the secondary signal beams. For easier understanding, Fig. 4 shows only one primary and one signal beam. However, the same principle can be used for a plurality of signal beams. [0057] The achromatic beam deflector separates the signal beam from the primary beam and introduces a dispersion as indicated by the three different beams. After trespassing the beam bender, e.g., in form of a sector, the dispersion can be seen in the plane of a dispersive image indicated by reference numeral 474. The lens 472 images the different virtual images corresponding to different signal beam energies on the sub-detection elements 471. Thereby, energy filtering can be realized.
[0058] The beam rays of the center beam is indicated in Fig. 4. As can be seen there is a crossover shortly after the bending sector 160. Generally, according to other embodiments, the sub-detection elements may also be positioned directly after the bender 160, typically in the focus of the different signal beams having different signal energies. However, the lens 472 allows for imaging and magnification of the energy spread. Accordingly, a fast and parallel detection of different ΔE channels can be realized. This might for example be used for element mapping or potential mapping, e.g., for dopant profiles.
[0059] If a multi-beam system is used, a further sub-detection element array can be provided adjacent to the sub-detection elements 471 shown in Fig. 4.
.[0060] According to other embodiments, the use of a multi-beam scanning electron system and method of operating multi-beam scanning electron systems according to embodiments described herein are provided. Generally a 2-D array of scanning electron beams is provided, thereby, typically each electron beam has the resolution performance similar to a single beam device, for example a CD-SEM. In the array, each beam scans a few square microns and the overall throughput is the multiplication of a single beam throughput with the number of beams.
[0061] Generally, a wafer to be inspected is positioned in the tool on an XY- stage. According to some embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, scanning is done in the step and scan manner. Thereby, during scanning the stage is not moved and waits until the current frame scanning is completed. When the scanning of the frame is finished the stage travels to the next frame location. [0062] One major problem for multi-beam scanning electron beam devices is the beam overlap within such high throughput systems because a significant part of the surface may lie within two beams. Thereby an overlap of the scanning area of two adjacent beams is provided. This overlap is generally problematic for electron beam imaging as the overlap region will suffer from a different charging regime, in particular if scanning of overlapping regions is conducted within a short time period.
[0063] According to different embodiments, which might be combined with each other, an improved scanning is provided. According to one alternative, a combined scan can be provided. Generally for a design for manufacturing (DFM) die to database scanning, systematic defects should be detected. Accordingly, according to some embodiments described herein, it is possible to deduce the inspection result from a virtual die image. Thereby, a virtual die image can include portions of several physical dies. The virtual die image can be built in a way that will not require overlaps between beams on the array, in particular not within a time period that is sufficient in order to have previously charge been degraded. The first option is a rectangular scanning scheme wherein portions of four different dies are scanned in order to generate one virtual die image. As shown in figure 5 A, each of the portions 1, 2, 3 and 4 are portions of two or more (up to four) physical dies. These images are combined to form a virtual die 504 image which is used for inspection purposes.
[0064] Figure 5B shows a hexagonal scanning scheme, which includes scanning of three different portions 502 of different dies in order to form a virtual die image, which can be used for inspection purposes. The overlap 503 shown in Fig. 5B has no negative effect since the scanning of a physically neighboring region can be conducted after a charge of the respective specimen region has sufficiently disappeared.
[0065] According to another embodiment, a trapezoid current profile, as shown in figure 6, can be used for the beam current of the individual electron beams. Thereby also a single die can be scanned. It is assumed that the beam overlay effect can be reduced significantly by a scanning scheme that will ensure an overall current density in the overlap region 604 that is equal to the current density in the non-overlap regions 602. If, as an example, the beams are placed in a regular rectangular grid and the scattering amplitude is larger than the periodicity of the grid, an overlap is created.
[0066] According to some embodiments, which can be combined with otherembodiments described herein, the overlap regions 604 are scanned as follows: Ih the scanning direction, which is denoted as the X-direction, the current profile is a trapezoid, wherein the cap (602) of the trapezoid corresponds to the single beam region 602 and the beam current of the respective electron beams decreases linearly along the overlapping region 604. Thereby, the total current in the overlap region 604 is equal to the current in the cap region of the trapezoid, where only a single beam is used.
[0067] Further, for the Y-axis the lines scanned in the X-direction will have a line current that will be modulated in a similar manner. The overlap image signal can be detected in parallel on those two beam detectors, which correspond to the two electron beams generating the overlap.
[0068] According to optional implementations, image processing techniques which can for example be based on interpolations, will be applied to re- combine the two images. Thereby an image quality of the combined image can be similar or close to the image quality in the single beam regions.
[0069] As for example shown in figure 7, according to further embodiments, which might be combined with other embodiments described herein, a multi- beam scanning electron beam device can be provided as follows. In figure 7, the beam generation is not shown. The beams can for example be generated by an array of individual emitters or a single emitter. Alternatively, they can be generated by a grid aperture array, a grid lens array, a combination thereof and/or a grid aperture array and a lens. Thus, according to some embodiments described herein, as for example shown in figure 1, the multi-beam scanning electron beam device 100 may have a multi-beam emitter 110 including a single emitter tip 102, one or more elements for extracting, accelerating and/or shaping the electron beams and a grid aperture 106 for generating individual electron beams. According to other embodiments, an emitter array with individual emitters for each electron beam can be used. According to yet other embodiments, or a spot grid array, wherein the emission of one emitter tip is shaped and formed to exit in parallel and as corrected beams can also be used. Thereby, the grid aperture array or two or more grid aperture arrays can be used at one ore more potentials in order to shape and/or focus the beam. Accordingly, the emission of one emitter can appear in the column as multiple sources. Thus, subsequent optical elements or in combination with subsequent optical elements the multiple beams at the specimen appear to be generated by multiple sources. In light of the above, on the one hand, two or more emitters can be used for generation of the multiple beams. On the other hand, one emitter can be used. Thereby, one source or two or more sources can be provided by the one emitter.
[0070] The beams 12, 13 and 14, respectively pass first through individual electron beam optics 140 which can for example include lenses, multi-poles and the like. At this position in the electron beam column, the individual electron beams have a relatively large distance with respect to each other. The distance of the individual beams with respect to each other can according to some embodiments be reduced by an adapting optics having a first lens 725 and the second lens 727. As shown in figure 7, a demagnifying adapting optics can be provided. Thereby, the distance of the electron beams with respect to each other can be reduced. Thereafter, according to some embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, the distance between adjacent beams can be in a range of 1.5-3.5 mm, typically 2-3 mm. The plurality of electron beams is further influenced by common electron beam optics 120 such as a beam corrector 722 and a common deflection system 724. A common objective lens array focuses the plurality of electron beams on the specimen 20. , Thereby, a magnetic objective lens component 752 and an electrostatic lens component 754 having one or more electrode plates can be used. Accordingly, a common objective lens assembly 150 is provided.
[0071] Accordingly, for some embodiments described herein, a magnifying or demagnifying adapting optics for adapting the distance between the electron beams with respect to each other can be provided. However, thereby a cross- over for the individual electron beams might be generated which increases the electron-electron interaction.
[0072] Generally, it might be desirable to combine advantages of individual columns with large beam spacing and a beam array with small beam spacing in one system by providing an adapting optics. Thereby, according to some embodiments described herein, an array of electron or charged particle emitters with a spacing sufficient for integration of elements for individual beam control can be provided. These individual electron beam optics might be deflectors, lenses, stigmators, and the like. Thereby, according to different embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, the electron emitter can be based on one or more conventional thermal emitters, field emitters, or combined thermal-field (Schottky) emitters. It may also be an array of photo emitters.
[0073] Further, the multi-beam array may be formed by a separation of one beam from one emitter tip into a plurality of beamlets, for example by use of a grid aperture or a spot grid array. Thereby, the space of the electron beams with respect to each other can allow for individual electron beam optics for controlling the electron beams individually. Further, according to some embodiments described herein, an optical demagnification system can be provided, as shown in figure 7. Thereby, the spacing of the beam array is demagnified to the final requirements for simultaneous inspection of one die or a small number of adjacent dies, for example two or three dies. As a typical example, an optical system with minimized (compensate) off-axis aberrations like a lens doublet can be provided for the adapting optics. Thereby, according to further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, the lens system can be magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic and can contain two or more lenses.
[0074] Further, as exemplarily shown in figure 7, common electron beam optics for global beam array manipulation are provided. According to different embodiments, the common electron beam optics may include a deflection system for alignment and/or scanning, lens systems for focusing adjustments of the beam array, lens systems for corrections, global stigmators, and the like.
[0075] Further, an array of common objective lenses, that is, a common objective lens assembly can be provided. Thereby, the objective lens assembly may have individual openings for each beam. However, a common objective lens assembly is provided by the common excitation, which focuses the individual electron beams simultaneously. [0076] Further examples of common objective lenses can include magnetic lenses having a common excitation coil with common pole pieces and an array of individual bores (openings), or common electrostatic lenses having individual bores (openings) in a common lens plate being on one potential. Thereby, according to different embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, an electrostatic lens or an electrostatic lens component of the common objective lens assembly can be used in an acceleration mode or as a retarding electrostatic lens.
[0077] According to further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, a multi-beam scanning electron beam device as, for example shown in figure 7, includes a detection system wherein an array of detectors is provided. Thereby, a detector corresponding to each electron beam is provided. If the electrostatic lens components 754 is provided as a retarding electrostatic lens, the secondary electron beams are accelerated and transferred through the objective lens and can for example be detected on the detector 772. The detector 772 may be an array of annular electron detectors above the objective lens. The secondary electron beam, i.e., the signal beam may also be transferred to the optical adapting system, which is in figure 7 a demagnification system for the primary beams and, thus, a magnifying system for the secondary beams. Thereby, the separation between the individual beams is increased and in the case of a magnetic system the secondary electron beams are separated from the primary beams by the Lamor rotation of the secondary electron beams. Accordingly, a further simplification of the design of the detector 774 can be realized. [0078] According to further embodiments, the detection can also be improved by a further separation of the primary and the secondary beam arrays. In this case, a beam separator based on a magnetic field or a combined electrostatic- magnetic field can separate the secondary beam array from the path of the primary beam array. According to some embodiments described herein, an achromatic beam separator as discussed e.g. with respect to figures 2A-2D and can be used. The "complete" separation simplifies design of the detector and allows easier integration of elements for an energetic and/or annular discrimination such as, for example energy filters and spectrometers, and/or elements for annular multi-perspective detection. According to further additional or alternative implementations, the detection system may contain sector field-based spectrometers, a retarding field spectrometer, lenses for annular control, deflectors for alignment and selection and the like. Thereby, according to typical embodiments described herein, a common separation, filtering, alignment, annular control is provided. Further, an array of detectors or individual detectors for individual detection of each beam is provided.
[0079] Further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, are described with respect to figure 8. Thereby, a single emitter tip 102 is provided. If for example the emission angle of the single emitter tip 102 is comparably small, the separation provided by a grid aperture array or a spot grid array can be relatively small. Thus, instead of an electron emitter array with a spacing sufficient for individual beam control, an emitter array with a small beam separation is provided. Accordingly, for some embodiments, a magnification of the beam spacing can be desired. As shown in figure 8, a magnification system having lenses 727 and 725 is provided. As described with respect to figure 7, several embodiments can be used for the adapting optics. Typically, an optical system with minimized (compensated) off-axis aberrations like a lens doublet can be provided. After this increase of the beam separation, individual electron optical elements 140 can be provided such that each electron beams 12, 13 and 14 can be individually controlled.
[0080] A common objective lens array focuses the plurality of electron beams on the specimen 20. Thereby, a magnetic objective lens component 752 and an electrostatic lens component 754 having one or more electrode plates can be used. Accordingly, a common objective lens assembly is provided. Thereby, the objective lens assembly may have individual openings for each beam. However, a common objective lens assembly is provided by the common excitation, which focuses the individual electron beams simultaneously. Further examples of common objective lenses can include magnetic lenses having a common excitation coil with common pole pieces and an array of individual bores (openings), or common electrostatic lenses having individual bores (openings) in a common lens plate being on one potential. Thereby, according to different embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, an electrostatic lens or an electrostatic lens component of the common objective lens assembly can be used in an acceleration mode or as a retarding electrostatic lens.
[0081] According to yet further embodiments, it might be possible to provide an electron beam array with a beam distance which allows individual optical elements 140 such as lenses, multi-pole elements for aberration compensation, deflection and/or stigmation control as well as common electron beam optics 120. The common electron beam optics 120 may include common scanning deflectors 724 and a common beam control element 722 such as alignment deflectors, stigmators or the like. As shown in figure 9, a common magnetic lens assembly 752 and common electrostatic lens assembly 754 can be used for focusing the primary electron beams on the specimen 20. A detection can be realized with a detection array 772 having a detection unit corresponding to the respective individual beams. Thereby, the elements shown in figure 9 can be modified according to the embodiments described herein, in particular with respect to figure 7.
[0082] Figure 10 shows a combination of embodiments described with respect to figure 7 and embodiments described with respect to figure 1. A multi-beam emitter 110 is provided. As an example, as shown in figure 10, an array of individual emitters is provided. The electron beams have a spacing with respect to each other such that individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided. This can for example be individual lenses or individual multi-poles. A beam spacing adapting optics is provided by lenses 725 and 727. Thereafter, the electron beam array passes through a common achromatic beam deflector, which deflects the beam array of primary beams and further separates the primary beam array and the secondary beam array. Further, common electron beam optics 120 are provided and the electron beam array is focused on the specimen 20 by the common magnetic lens assembly 752 and common electrostatic lens assembly 754. The secondary beam array, that is the plurality of signal beams, is separated from a primary beam array by a common achromatic beam separator and the individual secondary beams are detected by an array of detection units or individual detectors, which are denoted by reference numeral 170. [0083] Figure 1 IA-11C show different embodiments for electron beam array generation according to embodiments that can be used for the high throughput tools described herein. Figure 1 IA shows a mutli-beam emitter 111OA having a single emitter 1102 and an aperture grid array, a lens and/or a lens array for generation of individual beamlets. Thereby, the emitter 1102 has a small emission angle that limits the separation of the beamlets. According to a further embodiment, which is illustrated in figure HB, a single emitter 1102 may have a larger emission angle such that a lens can be used to guide the electron beam towards the aperture array. According to yet other embodiments, individual emitters 1104 can be provided such that an emitter 111OC can be provided. Thereby, also a spacing sufficient for individual electron beam optics 140 can be provided.
[0084] As described above, different options of generating the multi-beam array can result in different distances between the individual electron beams. Thus, the configuration of the optical elements in the multi-beam system may depend on the type of multi-beam emitter. In particular, the emitter spacing in the array can influence the configuration of the further optics. Accordingly, different embodiments may be provided. According to one embodiment, a multi-beam high throughput tool such as a multi-beam scanning electron beam device can include a multi-beam emitter formed by a single emitter tip and a separation device like an aperture array and/or a grid lens array, which form individual beamlets from the single beam. Further, individual electron beam optics such as lenses and multi-poles can be arranged in the array. The multi- beam high throughput tool further includes common electron beam optics such as deflectors for global alignment and scanning, common stigmators and other elements described herein. A common magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic grid lens array for focusing the individual beams on the specimen is provided. The multi-beam high throughput tool further includes a beam separation means like a common beam separator or a common lens for introducing a Lamor rotation. Further, a detection element including individual detection for the secondary beams is provided and may for example include and energetic and/or angular discrimination.
[0085] According to another embodiment, the above-described embodiment may have been a beam spacing adapting optics (magnification or demagnification) for the emitter array spacing in order to adjust the spacing of the emitted beams to the objective lens array spacing. Thereby, typically an optical system with minimized off-axis aberration can be used. According to alternative embodiments, the system may also include two adapting systems: one for magnification of a spacing in order to allow easier integration of the individual beam control components, and a further system for demagnification of the beam spacing in order to adapt the objective lens basing requirements.
[0086] According to alternative embodiments, which can be combined with the above described embodiments, different kinds of multi-beam emitters can be used according to the different embodiments described herein. According to yet other modifications, a plurality of individual emitters which can be further separated by grid one or more aperture arrays can be used for generation of the multi-beam array.
[0087] According to yet further alternative implementations, the common objective lens assembly may have a smaller number of openings than the number of individual beams in the array. Thereby, two or more beams may share one opening in the common objective lens array. However, it is preferred that at least two openings in the common objective lens assembly are provided.
[0088] According to further alternative or additional implementations, the double focusing bending element, such as a bending sector, typically a spherical electrostatic sector arrangement is provided. Typically, the individual beamlet detectors can be positioned close to the focus of the sector in order to avoid cross-talk between the individual beams. In order to improve the space requirements, a scintillation detector with a photomultiplier (PMT) and, for example, a light guide in between is provided for each beam. Thereby, sufficient space for a PMT-array can be realized. According to yet further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, mechanical and/or electromagnetic alignment for the individual secondary eleetron-beamlets on the individual detector channels can be provided. In light of the parallel detection of a plurality of beamlets, it is further possible to have individual detection electronics for each channel. [0089] According to some embodiments which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, the systems for providing a high throughput tool may typically be a low-voltage system, i.e. having low beam energy on the specimen. This energy may for example be in the range of 100 eV to 5 keV. Typically it is possible for low-voltage beam energies to have the electrons traveling within the column on a high beam energy, for example 8-10 keV or 7 to 15 keV. This beam boosts principle can reduce the electron-electron interaction within one beamlet within the column in light of the shorter flight. According to even further alternative or additional implementations, the column components can be at ground potential whereas the emitter and the wafer are at a high potential. Thereby, the scan module, the beam separator and the bender can be at ground potential. This simplifies in particular the common electron beam optical elements.
[0090] A further embodiment of a multi-beam scanning electron beam system is described with respect to figure 12. Thereby a spot grid array 1210 is provided for the generation of the multi-beam. In the gun condenser area the multiple beamlets are generated by a spot grid array. This can be considered beneficial in light of the fact that individual beams are emitted parallel to each other. Accordingly, a beam tilt as described with respect to figure 2C and/or a compensation of the achromatic separator as described with respect to figure
2D can be omitted for a vertical objective lens landing. Thereby, corresponding chromatic aberrations might be further reduced.
[0091] In figure 12 common electron beam optical elements 120 such as one or more common stigmators, one or more common beam alignment elements, or one or more common beam rotating elements for rotating the multi-beam array can be provided. Thereby, these components can typically have one opening for trespassing of two or more electron beams. Further, these common elements have a common control for influencing the individual beams simultaneously. [0092] Figure 12 further shows a common achromatic beam separator 130, individual electron beam optical elements 140 and a common objective lens assembly 150. Within figure 12, the beam path and the corresponding elements of the secondary electron beam array are not shown. However, it is understood that these components can be provided according to any of the embodiments described herein, for example with respect to figure 1 and/or figure 4.
[0093] According to embodiments described herein, the multi-beam electron beam inspection device can be used for the design for manufacturing (DFM) applications. According to a further embodiment, the system includes an achromatic primary beam separator for dividing beamlets of the primary beam array from beamlets of the signal beams, i.e. the secondary beam array. As described above, the secondary beam array might include secondary particles, backscattered particles and other charged particles which are released on impingement of the primary beams on the specimen. Typically, for some embodiments, a beam boost can be used for the beamlet configuration. That is, a high beam energy inside the column is provided and the electrons are decelerated to the final beam energy in the objective lens array. As described above, electron-electron interaction can be reduced by providing a beam boost, i.e. increased beam energy within the column.
[0094] Typically, if possible, the individual beams should travel on different beam paths and the cross-over should be avoided in order to minimize electron- electron interaction between the beams. This is particularly relevant for high total beam currents, which are typically used in light of the parallel imaging. The system also includes an array of objective lenses. According to typical implementations, this might be an electrostatic array, for example in acceleration mode. This configuration allows for small mechanical dimensions. Accordingly, a parallel imaging with a plurality of beams is simplified. However, magnetic lenses or combined electrostatic-magnetic lenses for simultaneously focusing the multi-beam array can also be used.
[0095] According to embodiments described herein, there are common electron beam optical elements for influencing two or more, typically all beamlets. These common elements can, for example, be a condenser lens such as a condenser lens for setting system magnification, total current and/or the divergence angle of the beamlets entering the objective lens array; common alignment and stigmation components; and/or common scanning components (if required). Further, common electron beam optical elements can optionally be rotation means for rotating the beamlet array, for example in an axial magnetic field.
[0096] The system further includes individual electron optical elements for influencing each element of the beamlet array individually. For example, the individual electron optical elements might be elements for focusing, stigmation correction, objective lens alignment, and/or beam scanning. The individual electron optical elements generate typically transversal electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic fields. These fields might be generated, for example by magnetic, electrostatic or combined electrostatic-magnetic multipole elements such as dipoles, quadrupoles, octupoles or higher order elements according to the requirements. Typically, for some embodiments the individual influencing elements can be located near the objective lens. Thereby, as further alternative or additional implementations, single stage or multistage arrangements are possible. For example a scanning element for individual beam scanning can be provided in the form of a single state scanning element or a two-stage scanning element.
[0097] As an example, an individual single stage scan deflector can be located in front of, or be integrated into the bore of each opening in the objective lens. Individual double stage scan deflectors can be located in front of the objective lens array in order to provide the pivot point inside the lens for improvement of operations and telecentricity. Thereby a vertical landing angle or a landing angle close to vertical can be provided.
[0098] According to some embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, a high brightness emitter with large angular emission can be used to realize high currents in the beamlets as well as in the overall system. For example, thermal field emission cathodes such as TFE with large emitter curvature radii (e.g. 0.5 μm or larger or even 1 μm or larger) can be used. According to other embodiments, CFE, Schottky emitters, and the like can be used. [0099] According to yet further implementations, additionally or alternatively a control electrode between the sample and the objective lens for controlling the extraction field for the secondary, i.e. released electrons can be provided. Thereby, as an example, the control electrode has openings for the primary and secondary beamlets. As a typical example, this electrode can be integrated in the objective lens array. As a further typical example, for electrostatic lenses, the control voltages might be added on the voltage of the lens electrode being closest to the specimen.
[00100] Multi-electron scanning electron beam systems described herein can further include a signal path with individual detection for each single signal beam, which is created by the primary beam array. Thereby, it is further possible that the signal beamlets penetrate the achromatic beam separator on individual traces. Individual detectors or an array with individual detection areas for each beam are located behind the beam separator. This can for example be a scintillator-photomultiplier arrangement with subsequence signal processing. Typically the signal processing can also be provided individually for each beamlet.
[00101] According to yet further implementations, which can be combined with embodiments described herein, an additional beam deflection element can be located behind the beam separator in order to increase the angles of separation between the primary beam array and the secondary beam array.
.Thereby, a mechanical arrangement of the detectors can be further simplified.
Further, it is easier to provide a focusing means for each of the signal beamlets onto its corresponding detector if an additional beam separation is provided.
As an example, which can be implemented for the embodiments described herein, the focusing means can be arranged in front of, after or in the additional deflection means. Typically, as described above, a double focusing additional element like a spherical sector element can be provided. This element can be electrostatic, magnetic or combined electrostatic-magnetic.
[00102] According to yet further embodiments, which can be combined with other embodiments described herein, the system specifications can include a current of the beamlets in a range of 10 pA to 10 nA, for example 100 pA to InA. Further, spot diameters used for systems described herein may be in the range of 1 nm to 50 nm, typically 1 nm to 20 nm.
[00103] Further options for systems described herein may include an achromatic beam separator with a superimposed electro-magnetic quadrupole, which might for example be generated by the octupole element shown in Fig. 2B. This quadrupole may influence the off-axis primary beamlets (in one direction) in such a way that all beamlets will exit the objective lens array with vertical incidents. Thereby, as described with respect to figure 2D, no individual beam tilt might be required if non-parallel beamlets are used in an achromatic beam separator. Thereby, chromatic aberrations for the beams can be reduced and, accordingly, the spot size and, thus, the resolution of off-axis beamlets can be improved.
[00104] As a further option for systems described herein, a spot grid array for generation of individual sources, i.e. individual shaped beamlets which appear as individual sources on the sample, may be used in the system. In light of the fact that individual sources can be provided in a spot grid array an individual beam tilt for having off-axis beamlets passing vertically through the objective lens can also be omitted. As a further alternative, individual emitter arrays may be applied as individual sources. For example, micro field emitter arrays, TFE arrays or photo-cathodes can be used. Thereby, as described above, generally for multi-emitters as described herein, one emitter might generate two ore more optical sources for the optical system.
[00105] Embodiments described herein also include methods for generating a multi-beam array from a common emitter by placing an aperture array in a divergent part of the emission. Further, methods of influencing the beamlets such that each beam has a specific performance with regard to its divergence angle, current, tilt angle with respect to the optical axis of the entire system, virtual tour size, and beam position with respect to the objective lens array are provided. These methods are controlled by the emission parameters, condenser lens excitation, and beam influencing means, i.e. common electron optical elements, individual being influencing means, i.e. individual beam optical elements, and/or the operation condition of the achromatic beam separator, typically a common achromatic beam separator.
[00106] Further embodiments relate to aligning each individual beamlet to its corresponding objective lens position (opening) by using the individual electron optical elements, which are provided in front of or within the objective lens. Further, methods can be directed to stigmation controlled by one or more stigmation elements. Methods may also be directed to the determination of the best focus, for example by a spot size or resolution measurements using the signal of each signal channel. Further embodiments are directed to methods for detecting the signal produced by each beam. Thereby, the signal electrons entering the objective lens are collected, the electrons are accelerated to high energies, for example 5-20 keV, the signal electrode beamlets are separated from the primary electron beam in the achromatic beam separator, and the signal electron beamlets are guided to individual detectors with subsequent signal channels. Typical embodiments of such implementations include focusing the individual beamlets on the individual detectors. Thereby, signal losses and cross-over between the beams can be reduced or avoided.
[00107] According to yet a further embodiment, methods to superimpose an electrostatic-magnetic quadrupole to an achromatic beam separator (electrostatic-magnetic dipole) is provided. The quadrupole can be aligned to the overall system optical axis, whereby off-axis beamlets will be tilted (in one direction) for vertical entrance into an objective lens array.
[00108] As describe above, embodiments can be directed to a multi-beam scanning electron beam device having a column. The device includes a multi- beam emitter for emitting a plurality of electron beams, at least one common electron beam optical element having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, at least one individual electron beam optical element for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams, a common objective lens assembly for focusing the plurality of electrons beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen for generation of a plurality of signal beams, wherein the common objective lens has at least two openings for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams, and a detection assembly for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element. As further alternative or additional implementations, the at least one common electron beam optical element can be a common beam separator with a common control for separating at least two of the plurality of signal beams from the plurality of electron beams, the common electron beam optical element can have one opening for trespassing of at least two of the plurality of electron beams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams, the common beam separator can have one opening for trespassing of the plurality of at least two of electronbeams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams, the common beam separator can be an achromatic beam separator, and/or the achromatic beam separator can be adapted for separating the plurality of electron beams and the plurality of signal beams without generation of a cross-over of the plurality of electron beams and/or the plurality of signal beams for separation.
[00109] According to yet other additional or alternative implementations, the device can include a quadrupole generation element superimposing the achromatic beam separator and adapted for generation of a quadrupole field for correcting the deflection angle of off-axis electron beams, a double focusing beam bender, in particular a hemispherical sector, wherein, for example, the double focusing beam bender can have one opening for trespassing of the plurality of beams, and/or a demagnifying or magnifying beam spacing adapting optics.
[00110] According to yet even further additional or alternative implementations, the common electron beam optical element can be selected from the group consisting of: an alignment element, an stigmation corrector, a scanning element, and rotating element for rotating the plurality of electron beams, and/or the individual electron beam optical element can be selected from the group consisting of: a focusing element, a stigmation corrector, an alignment element, a beam tilt introducing element and a scanning element. Further, according to other embodiments, which can be combined with any of the embodiments described herein, the beam spacing on the specimen between adjacent beams can be in a range of 0.5 to 5 mm, in particular 1.5 mm to 3.5 mm, more particularly 2 mm to 3 mm, the individual electron beam optical element can be position adjacent to or within the common objective lens assembly, and or means for accelerating the plurality of electron beams to high energies between the multi-beam emitter and the objective lens, in particular to energies of 2 keV to 20 keV, and means for decelerating the plurality of electron beams before impingement on the specimen can be provided.
[00111] According to yet other alternative or additional implementations, the device may include focusing means for focusing each of the plurality of signal beams on the corresponding detection element, multi-beam emitter can be a spot grid array having individual emitters for each of the plurality of electron beams, the device can be adapted for avoiding a cross-over in the column, and/or the common objective lens assembly can be an electrostatic lens assembly, in particular in acceleration mode.
[00112] According to other embodiments, a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device for generation of an image of a wafer including two or more dies is provided. The method includes scanning a first region of a first die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the first region, scanning a second region of a second die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the second region, combining the image of the first region and the image of the second region to an image of a virtual die. Thereby, as one optional implementation the virtual die can be combined by images of regions of three or four dies of the two or more dies.
[00113] According to yet other embodiments, a method of operating a multi- beam scanning electron beam device having at least a first and a second electron beam for generation of an image of a wafer including at least one die, is provided. The method includes scanning a non-overlap first region of the die with a first electron beam current of the first electron beam for generating an image of the first region, scanning a non-overlap second region of the die with a second electron beam current of the second electron beam for generating an image of the first region, and scanning an overlap region between a scanning area of the first and the second electron beam with the first beam having an first overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the first electron beam current and with the second beam having an second overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the second electron beam current. According to additional implementations, the first current and the second current can be similar and the first overlap depending beam current function and the second overlap depending beam current function are similar and/or the first and the second overlap depending beam current functions can be a linear function.
[00114] According to yet other embodiments, a method of operating an achromatic beam deflector for charged particle beams can be provided. The achromatic beam deflector having an optical axis. The method includes providing a deflecting electrostatic dipole field, providing a deflecting magnetic dipole field, superimposing a quadrupole field to the magnetic dipole field and the electrostatic dipole field, wherein the electrostatic dipole field and the magnetic dipole field are adjusted with respect to each other to provide an achromatic beam deflection, and wherein the quadrupole field is adjusted to correct for a beam tilt of off-axis charged particle beams. According to typical implementations, the charged particle beam can be deflected for an angle of between 0.3° and 7°, the quadrupole field can be aligned to the optical axis of the achromatic beam deflector, an off-axis beam of a multi-beam array can be corrected and/or a correction can be done along one direction.
[00115] While the foregoing is directed to embodiments of the invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof, and the scope thereof is determined by the claims that follow.

Claims

1. A multi-beam scanning electron beam device having a column, comprising:
a multi-beam emitter for emitting a plurality of electron beams;
. at least one common electron beam optical element having a common opening for at least two of the plurality of electron beams and being adapted for commonly influencing at least two of the plurality of electron beams;
at least one individual electron beam optical element for individually influencing the plurality of electron beams;
a common objective lens assembly for focusing the plurality of electron beams having a common excitation for focusing at least two of the plurality of electron beams, and being adapted for focusing the plurality of electron beams onto a specimen for generation of a plurality of signal beams, wherein the common objective lens has at least two openings for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams; and
a detection assembly for individually detecting each signal beam on a corresponding detection element.
2. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to claim 1, wherein the at least one common electron beam optical element is a common beam separator with a common control for separating at least two of the plurality of signal beams from the plurality of electron beams.
3. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 2, wherein the common electron beam optical element has one opening for trespassing of at least two of the plurality of electron beams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams.
4. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 2 to 3, wherein the common beam separator has one opening for trespassing of the plurality of at least two of electron beams or for trespassing of the plurality of electron beams.
5. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 2 to 4, wherein the common beam separator is an achromatic beam separator.
6. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 2 to 5, wherein the achromatic beam separator is adapted for separating the plurality of electron beams and the plurality of signal beams without having a cross-over of the plurality of electron beams and/or the plurality of signal beams for separation, in particular inside the achromatic beam separator.
7. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 2 to 6, further comprising a quadrupole generation element superimposing the achromatic beam separator and adapted for generation of a quadrupole field for correcting the deflection angle of off-axis electron beams.
8. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 7, further comprising: a double focusing beam bender, in particular a hemispherical sector.
9. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to claim 8, wherein the double focusing beam bender has one opening for trespassing of the plurality of beams.
10. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 9, further comprising:
a demagnifying or magnifying beam spacing adapting optics.
5 .
11. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 10, wherein the common electron beam optical element is selected from the group consisting of: an alignment element, an stigmation corrector, a scanning element, and rotating element for rotating the plurality0 of electron beams.
Ϊ2. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims
1 to 11, wherein the individual electron beam optical element is selected from the group consisting of: a focusing element, a stigmation corrector, an S alignment element, a beam tilt introducing element and a scanning element.
13. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 12, wherein the beam spacing on the specimen between adjacent beams is in a range of 0.S to 5 mm, in particular l.S mm to 3.5 mm, more0 particularly 2 mm to 3 mm.
14. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 13, wherein the individual electron beam optical element is position adjacent to or within the common objective lens assembly. 5
15. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 14, wherein means for accelerating the plurality of electron beams to high energies between the multi-beam emitter and the objective lens, in particular to energies of 2 keV to 20 keV, and means for decelerating the plurality of electron beams before impingement on the specimen are provided.
16. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 15, further comprising:
focusing means for focusing each of the plurality of signal beams on the corresponding detection element.
17. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims ■ 1 to 16, wherein multi-beam emitter is a spot grid array having individual emitters for each of the plurality of electron beams.
18. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 17, wherein the device is adapted for avoiding a cross-over in the column.
19. The multi-beam scanning electron beam device according to any of claims 1 to 18, wherein common objective lens assembly is an electrostatic lens assembly, in particular in acceleration mode.
20. Method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device for • generation of an image of a wafer including two or more dies, comprising:
scanning a first region of a first die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the first region; scanning a second region of a second die of the two or more dies for generating an image of the second region;
combining the image of the first region and the image of the second region to an image of a virtual die.
21. The method according to claim 20 wherein the virtual die is combined by images of regions of three or four dies of the two or more dies.
22. Method of operating a multi-beam scanning electron beam device having at least a first and a second electron beam for generation of an image of a wafer including at least one die, comprising:
scanning a non-overlap first region of the die with a first electron beam current of the first electron beam for generating an image of the first region;
scanning a non-overlap second region of the die with a second electron beam current of the second electron beam for generating an image of the first region;
scanning an overlap region between a scanning area of the first and the second electron beam with the first beam having a first overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the first electron beam current and with the second beam having a second overlap depending beam current function having electron beam currents being smaller than the second electron beam current.
23. The method according to claim 22 wherein the first current and the second current are similar and the first overlap depending beam current function and the second overlap depending beam current function are similar.
4. The method according to any of claims 22 to 23, wherein the first and the second overlap depending beam current functions are a linear function.
PCT/EP2008/001413 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High throughput sem tool WO2008101713A2 (en)

Priority Applications (4)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/528,307 US9153413B2 (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 Multi-beam scanning electron beam device and methods of using the same
PCT/EP2008/001413 WO2008101713A2 (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High throughput sem tool
JP2009550679A JP2010519697A (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High-throughput SEM tool
EP08715964.6A EP2132763B1 (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High throughput sem tool

Applications Claiming Priority (5)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US89118507P 2007-02-22 2007-02-22
US60/891,185 2007-02-22
US1470207P 2007-12-18 2007-12-18
US61/014,702 2007-12-18
PCT/EP2008/001413 WO2008101713A2 (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High throughput sem tool

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2008101713A2 true WO2008101713A2 (en) 2008-08-28
WO2008101713A3 WO2008101713A3 (en) 2008-11-27

Family

ID=46545551

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/EP2008/001413 WO2008101713A2 (en) 2007-02-22 2008-02-22 High throughput sem tool

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (1) US9153413B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2132763B1 (en)
JP (1) JP2010519697A (en)
WO (1) WO2008101713A2 (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP2312610A1 (en) * 2009-10-15 2011-04-20 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Achromatic beam deflector, achromatic beam separator, charged particle device, method of operating an achromatic beam deflector, and method of operating an achromatic beam separator
EP2333808A1 (en) * 2009-12-11 2011-06-15 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Charged particle beam device, method of operating a charged particle beam device
US8373136B2 (en) 2009-10-15 2013-02-12 Ict Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft Fur Halbleiterpruftechnik Mbh Achromatic beam deflector, achromatic beam separator, charged particle device, method of operating an achromatic beam deflector, and method of operating an achromatic beam separator
EP2779201A1 (en) * 2013-03-15 2014-09-17 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH High brightness electron gun, system using the same, and method of operating the same
EP4009348A1 (en) * 2020-12-01 2022-06-08 ASML Netherlands B.V. Charged particle inspection tool and method

Families Citing this family (82)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7947951B2 (en) * 2006-07-21 2011-05-24 National University Of Singapore Multi-beam ion/electron spectra-microscope
EP2385542B1 (en) * 2010-05-07 2013-01-02 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Electron beam device with dispersion compensation, and method of operating same
EP2405460B1 (en) * 2010-07-09 2013-02-20 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Electron beam device with tilting and dispersion compensation, and method of operating same
JP5890652B2 (en) * 2011-10-28 2016-03-22 株式会社荏原製作所 Sample observation apparatus and sample observation method
EP2629317B1 (en) * 2012-02-20 2015-01-28 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Charged particle beam device with dynamic focus and method of operating thereof
EP2654069B1 (en) * 2012-04-16 2016-02-24 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Multi channel detector, optics therefore and method of operating thereof
EP2654068B1 (en) * 2012-04-16 2017-05-17 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Switchable multi perspective detector, optics therefore and method of operating thereof
NL2009053C2 (en) * 2012-06-22 2013-12-24 Univ Delft Tech Apparatus and method for inspecting a surface of a sample.
NL2009696C2 (en) * 2012-10-25 2014-04-29 Univ Delft Tech Apparatus and method for inspecting a surface of a sample.
US9761409B2 (en) * 2013-01-31 2017-09-12 Hitachi High-Technologies Corporation Composite charged particle detector, charged particle beam device, and charged particle detector
US8933414B2 (en) * 2013-02-27 2015-01-13 Fei Company Focused ion beam low kV enhancement
DE102013014976A1 (en) 2013-09-09 2015-03-12 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Particle-optical system
DE102013016113B4 (en) 2013-09-26 2018-11-29 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Method for detecting electrons, electron detector and inspection system
US9263233B2 (en) 2013-09-29 2016-02-16 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Charged particle multi-beam inspection system and method of operating the same
WO2015043769A1 (en) 2013-09-30 2015-04-02 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Charged particle beam system and method of operating the same
EP2879155B1 (en) * 2013-12-02 2018-04-25 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Multi-beam system for high throughput EBI
JP6254445B2 (en) 2014-01-09 2017-12-27 株式会社日立ハイテクノロジーズ Charged particle beam equipment
US9778186B2 (en) * 2014-04-15 2017-10-03 Kla-Tencor Corporation System for electron beam detection
JP6215124B2 (en) 2014-04-21 2017-10-18 株式会社日立ハイテクノロジーズ Scanning electron microscope and control method thereof
NL2012780B1 (en) 2014-05-08 2016-02-23 Univ Delft Tech Apparatus and method for inspecting a sample using a plurality of charged particle beams.
US10903042B2 (en) 2014-05-08 2021-01-26 Technische Universiteit Delft Apparatus and method for inspecting a sample using a plurality of charged particle beams
DE102014008083B9 (en) * 2014-05-30 2018-03-22 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh particle beam
DE102014008105B4 (en) * 2014-05-30 2021-11-11 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Multi-beam particle microscope
DE102014008383B9 (en) * 2014-06-06 2018-03-22 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Particle beam system and method of operating a particle optic
US10056228B2 (en) * 2014-07-29 2018-08-21 Applied Materials Israel Ltd. Charged particle beam specimen inspection system and method for operation thereof
JP6747687B2 (en) * 2014-08-25 2020-08-26 ナショナル ユニヴァーシティー オブ シンガポール Aberration corrector, device having the same, and method for correcting aberrations of charged particles
EP2993682A1 (en) * 2014-09-04 2016-03-09 Fei Company Method of performing spectroscopy in a transmission charged-particle microscope
NL2013411B1 (en) 2014-09-04 2016-09-27 Univ Delft Tech Multi electron beam inspection apparatus.
DE102015202172B4 (en) * 2015-02-06 2017-01-19 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Particle beam system and method for particle-optical examination of an object
US9666407B2 (en) * 2015-02-25 2017-05-30 Industry-University Cooperation Foundation Sunmoon University Electrostatic quadrupole deflector for microcolumn
US10236156B2 (en) * 2015-03-25 2019-03-19 Hermes Microvision Inc. Apparatus of plural charged-particle beams
US9607805B2 (en) 2015-05-12 2017-03-28 Hermes Microvision Inc. Apparatus of plural charged-particle beams
KR102441581B1 (en) 2015-06-03 2022-09-07 삼성전자주식회사 Method for inspecting surface and method for inspecting photomask using the same
KR20240042242A (en) * 2015-07-22 2024-04-01 에이에스엠엘 네델란즈 비.브이. Apparatus of plural charged-particle beams
US10192716B2 (en) * 2015-09-21 2019-01-29 Kla-Tencor Corporation Multi-beam dark field imaging
US10366862B2 (en) * 2015-09-21 2019-07-30 KLA-Tencor Corporaton Method and system for noise mitigation in a multi-beam scanning electron microscopy system
US10408676B2 (en) 2015-10-01 2019-09-10 Mission Support and Test Services, LLC Long-pulse-width variable-wavelength chirped pulse generator and method
CN108885187B (en) * 2016-01-27 2021-05-25 Asml 荷兰有限公司 Arrangement of a plurality of charged particle beams
US10276346B1 (en) * 2016-03-09 2019-04-30 Kla-Tencor Corporation Particle beam inspector with independently-controllable beams
JP6514409B2 (en) * 2016-03-31 2019-05-15 株式会社日立製作所 Charged particle beam application device
JP6781582B2 (en) * 2016-07-25 2020-11-04 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Electron beam inspection device and electron beam inspection method
JP6684179B2 (en) * 2016-07-27 2020-04-22 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Charged particle beam inspection apparatus and charged particle beam inspection method
WO2018041696A1 (en) * 2016-08-29 2018-03-08 Asml Netherlands B.V. System for parallel data processing with multi-layer workload management
US10497536B2 (en) * 2016-09-08 2019-12-03 Rockwell Collins, Inc. Apparatus and method for correcting arrayed astigmatism in a multi-column scanning electron microscopy system
US10141156B2 (en) * 2016-09-27 2018-11-27 Kla-Tencor Corporation Measurement of overlay and edge placement errors with an electron beam column array
DE102016120902B4 (en) 2016-11-02 2018-08-23 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Multibeam Teilchenmikroskop
US10777377B2 (en) * 2017-02-05 2020-09-15 Kla-Tencor Corporation Multi-column spacing for photomask and reticle inspection and wafer print check verification
US10388489B2 (en) * 2017-02-07 2019-08-20 Kla-Tencor Corporation Electron source architecture for a scanning electron microscopy system
AU2018273352B2 (en) 2017-05-22 2023-07-27 Howmedica Osteonics Corp. Device for in-situ fabrication process monitoring and feedback control of an electron beam additive manufacturing process
WO2019020396A1 (en) 2017-07-28 2019-01-31 Asml Netherlands B.V. Systems and methods for compensating dispersion of a beam separator in a multi-beam apparatus
JP6966319B2 (en) * 2017-12-22 2021-11-17 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Multi-beam image acquisition device and multi-beam image acquisition method
US10338013B1 (en) * 2018-01-25 2019-07-02 Kla-Tencor Corporation Position feedback for multi-beam particle detector
US10741354B1 (en) 2018-02-14 2020-08-11 Kla-Tencor Corporation Photocathode emitter system that generates multiple electron beams
DE102018202421B3 (en) 2018-02-16 2019-07-11 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Multibeam particle beam
DE102018202428B3 (en) 2018-02-16 2019-05-09 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Multibeam Teilchenmikroskop
US10395887B1 (en) * 2018-02-20 2019-08-27 Technische Universiteit Delft Apparatus and method for inspecting a surface of a sample, using a multi-beam charged particle column
US10504687B2 (en) * 2018-02-20 2019-12-10 Technische Universiteit Delft Signal separator for a multi-beam charged particle inspection apparatus
WO2019166331A2 (en) 2018-02-27 2019-09-06 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Charged particle beam system and method
JP7198092B2 (en) * 2018-05-18 2022-12-28 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Multi-electron beam irradiation device, multi-electron beam inspection device and multi-electron beam irradiation method
US10811215B2 (en) 2018-05-21 2020-10-20 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Charged particle beam system
KR20210008044A (en) 2018-06-08 2021-01-20 에이에스엠엘 네델란즈 비.브이. Semiconductor charged particle detector for microscopes
JP2019215957A (en) 2018-06-11 2019-12-19 株式会社荏原製作所 Beam bender
AU2019206103A1 (en) 2018-07-19 2020-02-06 Howmedica Osteonics Corp. System and process for in-process electron beam profile and location analyses
CN112567493A (en) 2018-08-09 2021-03-26 Asml荷兰有限公司 Device for a plurality of charged particle beams
DE102018007455B4 (en) 2018-09-21 2020-07-09 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Process for detector alignment when imaging objects using a multi-beam particle microscope, system and computer program product
DE102018007652B4 (en) 2018-09-27 2021-03-25 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Particle beam system and method for current regulation of single particle beams
DE102018124044B3 (en) 2018-09-28 2020-02-06 Carl Zeiss Microscopy Gmbh Method for operating a multi-beam particle beam microscope and multi-beam particle beam system
US11373838B2 (en) * 2018-10-17 2022-06-28 Kla Corporation Multi-beam electron characterization tool with telecentric illumination
TWI743626B (en) 2019-01-24 2021-10-21 德商卡爾蔡司多重掃描電子顯微鏡有限公司 System comprising a multi-beam particle microscope, method for imaging a 3d sample layer by layer and computer program product
CN111477530B (en) 2019-01-24 2023-05-05 卡尔蔡司MultiSEM有限责任公司 Method for imaging 3D samples using a multi-beam particle microscope
DE102019005362A1 (en) 2019-07-31 2021-02-04 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Method for operating a multitude particle beam system with changing the numerical aperture, associated computer program product and multitude particle beam system
EP4088301A1 (en) 2020-01-06 2022-11-16 ASML Netherlands B.V. Charged particle assessment tool, inspection method
EP3882951A1 (en) * 2020-03-19 2021-09-22 FEI Company Charged particle beam device for inspection of a specimen with a plurality of charged particle beamlets
JP7442375B2 (en) * 2020-04-06 2024-03-04 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Multi-electron beam inspection device and multi-electron beam inspection method
US11366072B2 (en) 2020-05-04 2022-06-21 Applied Materials Israel Ltd. Detecting backscattered electrons in a multibeam charged particle column
US20240055219A1 (en) * 2020-12-22 2024-02-15 Asml Netherlands B.V. Electron optical column and method for directing a beam of primary electrons onto a sample
EP4020516A1 (en) * 2020-12-23 2022-06-29 ASML Netherlands B.V. Charged particle optical device, objective lens assembly, detector, detector array, and methods
JP2024501654A (en) 2020-12-23 2024-01-15 エーエスエムエル ネザーランズ ビー.ブイ. charged particle optical device
JP7547227B2 (en) * 2021-01-21 2024-09-09 株式会社ニューフレアテクノロジー Multi-beam image acquisition device and multi-beam image acquisition method
DE102021116969B3 (en) 2021-07-01 2022-09-22 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Method for region-wise sample inspection using a multi-beam particle microscope, computer program product and multi-beam particle microscope for semiconductor sample inspection
US20240096586A1 (en) * 2022-05-31 2024-03-21 Kla Corporation Method and system of image-forming multi-electron beams
DE102022120496A1 (en) 2022-08-12 2024-02-15 Carl Zeiss Multisem Gmbh Particle-optical arrangement, in particular a multi-beam particle microscope, with a magnet arrangement for separating a primary and a secondary particle-optical beam path

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1100111A1 (en) 1999-11-12 2001-05-16 Advantest Corporation Deflection arrangement for separating two particle beams
US20010028046A1 (en) 2000-04-04 2001-10-11 Shinichi Hamaguchi Multi-beam exposure apparatus using a multi-axis electron lens, fabrication method of a semiconductor device
US20020015143A1 (en) 2000-02-19 2002-02-07 Yin Edward M. Multi-beam multi-column electron beam inspection system
US20060060790A1 (en) 2003-11-28 2006-03-23 Mamoru Nakasuji System and method for evaluation using electron beam and manufacture of devices

Family Cites Families (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP3139920B2 (en) * 1994-07-25 2001-03-05 株式会社日立製作所 Energy filter and transmission electron microscope having the same
US5759094A (en) * 1995-02-09 1998-06-02 Porter-Cable Corporation In-line detail sander
US6498349B1 (en) * 1997-02-05 2002-12-24 Ut-Battelle Electrostatically focused addressable field emission array chips (AFEA's) for high-speed massively parallel maskless digital E-beam direct write lithography and scanning electron microscopy
US6252412B1 (en) * 1999-01-08 2001-06-26 Schlumberger Technologies, Inc. Method of detecting defects in patterned substrates
JP4451042B2 (en) * 2000-04-04 2010-04-14 株式会社アドバンテスト Multi-beam exposure apparatus using multi-axis electron lens and semiconductor element manufacturing method
US6855929B2 (en) * 2000-12-01 2005-02-15 Ebara Corporation Apparatus for inspection with electron beam, method for operating same, and method for manufacturing semiconductor device using former
WO2002049065A1 (en) * 2000-12-12 2002-06-20 Ebara Corporation Electron beam device and semiconductor device production method using the device
EP1271604A4 (en) * 2001-01-10 2005-05-25 Ebara Corp Inspection apparatus and inspection method with electron beam, and device manufacturing method comprising the inspection apparatus
US6727507B2 (en) * 2001-01-22 2004-04-27 Leepl Corporation Electron beam proximity exposure apparatus and method
JP2003187730A (en) * 2001-12-13 2003-07-04 Jeol Ltd Beam separator and reflection electron microscope
US20030132382A1 (en) * 2001-12-18 2003-07-17 Sogard Michael R. System and method for inspecting a mask
US7227141B2 (en) * 2002-07-15 2007-06-05 Ebara Corporation Electron beam apparatus
JP2004055767A (en) * 2002-07-18 2004-02-19 Canon Inc Electron beam exposure system and method for manufacturing semiconductor device
US7015467B2 (en) * 2002-10-10 2006-03-21 Applied Materials, Inc. Generating electrons with an activated photocathode
US7129502B2 (en) * 2003-03-10 2006-10-31 Mapper Lithography Ip B.V. Apparatus for generating a plurality of beamlets
US6897444B1 (en) * 2003-03-10 2005-05-24 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corporation Multi-pixel electron emission die-to-die inspection
US7138629B2 (en) * 2003-04-22 2006-11-21 Ebara Corporation Testing apparatus using charged particles and device manufacturing method using the testing apparatus
JP4642362B2 (en) 2003-06-06 2011-03-02 株式会社荏原製作所 Substrate alignment method, substrate surface inspection method, substrate positioning method, semiconductor device manufacturing method, substrate alignment apparatus, and substrate surface inspection apparatus
JP2005091342A (en) 2003-08-08 2005-04-07 Ebara Corp Sample defect inspecting apparatus and method, and device-manufacturing method using the sample defect inspecting apparatus and the method
JP2005174568A (en) 2003-12-08 2005-06-30 Ebara Corp Object lens, electron beam device, and manufacturing method of device using them
US7212017B2 (en) * 2003-12-25 2007-05-01 Ebara Corporation Electron beam apparatus with detailed observation function and sample inspecting and observing method using electron beam apparatus
JP2005249745A (en) * 2004-03-08 2005-09-15 Ebara Corp Sample surface inspecting method and inspecting apparatus
JP4773058B2 (en) 2004-03-16 2011-09-14 株式会社日立ハイテクノロジーズ Image data transfer method, image processing apparatus, and wafer appearance inspection apparatus
US7304302B1 (en) * 2004-08-27 2007-12-04 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corp. Systems configured to reduce distortion of a resist during a metrology process and systems and methods for reducing alteration of a specimen during analysis
JP2006079911A (en) * 2004-09-09 2006-03-23 Hitachi High-Technologies Corp Electron beam current measuring method, electron beam drawing apparatus, and electron beam detector
JP2006278029A (en) 2005-03-28 2006-10-12 Ebara Corp Electron beam device and method for manufacturing device using it
TW200703409A (en) * 2005-03-03 2007-01-16 Ebara Corp Mapping projection type electron beam apparatus and defects inspection system using such apparatus
DE602005006967D1 (en) * 2005-03-17 2008-07-03 Integrated Circuit Testing Analysis system and particle beam device
JP4980574B2 (en) 2005-03-28 2012-07-18 株式会社荏原製作所 Electron beam equipment
JP2007110087A (en) * 2005-09-13 2007-04-26 Hitachi High-Technologies Corp Electron beam device and method for creating electron beam irradiation pattern
US7893397B2 (en) * 2005-11-07 2011-02-22 Fibics Incorporated Apparatus and method for surface modification using charged particle beams
US7504622B2 (en) * 2006-04-03 2009-03-17 Applied Materials, Israel, Ltd. High throughput multi beam detection system and method

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP1100111A1 (en) 1999-11-12 2001-05-16 Advantest Corporation Deflection arrangement for separating two particle beams
US20020015143A1 (en) 2000-02-19 2002-02-07 Yin Edward M. Multi-beam multi-column electron beam inspection system
US20010028046A1 (en) 2000-04-04 2001-10-11 Shinichi Hamaguchi Multi-beam exposure apparatus using a multi-axis electron lens, fabrication method of a semiconductor device
US20060060790A1 (en) 2003-11-28 2006-03-23 Mamoru Nakasuji System and method for evaluation using electron beam and manufacture of devices

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP2312610A1 (en) * 2009-10-15 2011-04-20 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Achromatic beam deflector, achromatic beam separator, charged particle device, method of operating an achromatic beam deflector, and method of operating an achromatic beam separator
US8373136B2 (en) 2009-10-15 2013-02-12 Ict Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft Fur Halbleiterpruftechnik Mbh Achromatic beam deflector, achromatic beam separator, charged particle device, method of operating an achromatic beam deflector, and method of operating an achromatic beam separator
EP2333808A1 (en) * 2009-12-11 2011-06-15 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH Charged particle beam device, method of operating a charged particle beam device
EP2779201A1 (en) * 2013-03-15 2014-09-17 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH High brightness electron gun, system using the same, and method of operating the same
US8987692B2 (en) 2013-03-15 2015-03-24 ICT Integrated Circuit Testing Gesellschaft für Halbleiterprüftechnik mbH High brightness electron gun, system using the same, and method of operating thereof
EP4009348A1 (en) * 2020-12-01 2022-06-08 ASML Netherlands B.V. Charged particle inspection tool and method
WO2022117285A1 (en) * 2020-12-01 2022-06-09 Asml Netherlands B.V. Charged particle assessment tool, inspection method and image

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2008101713A3 (en) 2008-11-27
EP2132763A2 (en) 2009-12-16
EP2132763B1 (en) 2014-05-07
US9153413B2 (en) 2015-10-06
US20100320382A1 (en) 2010-12-23
JP2010519697A (en) 2010-06-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US9153413B2 (en) Multi-beam scanning electron beam device and methods of using the same
JP5710061B2 (en) High-throughput SEM tool
KR102109963B1 (en) Charged particle beam device for inspection of a specimen with an array of primary charged particle beamlets and method of imaging or illuminating a specimen with an array of primary charged particle beamlets
JP4378290B2 (en) Multi-axis compound lens, beam system using the compound lens, and method of using the compound lens
EP2879155B1 (en) Multi-beam system for high throughput EBI
JP6728498B2 (en) Method for inspecting a test piece and charged particle multi-beam apparatus
EP3549152B1 (en) Method for inspecting a specimen and charged particle multi-beam device
US8378299B2 (en) Twin beam charged particle column and method of operating thereof
EP1045425B1 (en) Charged particle beam column with chromatic aberration compensation
EP3457426A1 (en) Charged particle beam device, aperture arrangement for a charged particle beam device, and method for operating a charged particle beam device
US8785879B1 (en) Electron beam wafer inspection system and method of operation thereof
JP2007505452A (en) Single stage charged particle beam energy width reduction system for charged particle beam system
EP2312610B1 (en) Charged particle device with an achromatic beam deflector, or an achromatic beam separator, and method of operating

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 08715964

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2009550679

Country of ref document: JP

NENP Non-entry into the national phase in:

Ref country code: DE

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 2008715964

Country of ref document: EP

WWE Wipo information: entry into national phase

Ref document number: 12528307

Country of ref document: US