US20090219537A1 - Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20090219537A1
US20090219537A1 US12/072,878 US7287808A US2009219537A1 US 20090219537 A1 US20090219537 A1 US 20090219537A1 US 7287808 A US7287808 A US 7287808A US 2009219537 A1 US2009219537 A1 US 2009219537A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sample
data
reference sample
unknown
reflectometer
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/072,878
Inventor
Phillip Walsh
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Bruker Technologies Ltd
Metrosol Inc
Original Assignee
Individual
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 Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US12/072,878 priority Critical patent/US20090219537A1/en
Assigned to METROSOL, INC. reassignment METROSOL, INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: WALSH, PHILLIP
Publication of US20090219537A1 publication Critical patent/US20090219537A1/en
Assigned to SILICON VALLEY BANK reassignment SILICON VALLEY BANK SECURITY AGREEMENT Assignors: METROSOL, INC.
Priority to US12/592,641 priority patent/US7948631B2/en
Assigned to METROSOL, INC. reassignment METROSOL, INC. RELEASE AND REASSIGNMENT OF PATENTS AND PATENT APPLICATIONS Assignors: SILICON VALLEY BANK
Assigned to JORDAN VALLEY SEMICONDUCTORS LTD. reassignment JORDAN VALLEY SEMICONDUCTORS LTD. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: METROSOL INC.
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G01MEASURING; TESTING
    • G01NINVESTIGATING OR ANALYSING MATERIALS BY DETERMINING THEIR CHEMICAL OR PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
    • G01N21/00Investigating or analysing materials by the use of optical means, i.e. using sub-millimetre waves, infrared, visible or ultraviolet light
    • G01N21/17Systems in which incident light is modified in accordance with the properties of the material investigated
    • G01N21/25Colour; Spectral properties, i.e. comparison of effect of material on the light at two or more different wavelengths or wavelength bands
    • G01N21/31Investigating relative effect of material at wavelengths characteristic of specific elements or molecules, e.g. atomic absorption spectrometry
    • G01N21/33Investigating relative effect of material at wavelengths characteristic of specific elements or molecules, e.g. atomic absorption spectrometry using ultraviolet light

Definitions

  • a method and apparatus for using reflectometry for measuring properties of thin films or scattering structures on semiconductor work-pieces is disclosed.
  • the techniques described herein include a method for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to overcome effects of contamination buildup. While the methods are particularly advantageous for vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelengths, the methods are generally applicable to any wavelength range, and are advantageous in situations where stable reference samples are not available.
  • VUV vacuum ultraviolet
  • optical metrology relate to the field of optical metrology.
  • Optical methods for control of thin film properties in semiconductor (and other) device manufacturing environments have become widely accepted.
  • Particular advantages of using optical metrology include a high measurement throughput and the fact that optical measurements are typically nondestructive.
  • the most common optical metrology techniques are reflectometry and ellipsometry. Ellipsometry is generally regarded as consisting of a “richer” dataset, including a measurement of two quantities per wavelength/incident angle.
  • reflectometers are more robust due to less complex hardware configuration, have faster measurements, and typically have a smaller footprint.
  • the reflectometer is a more cost effective choice for a high-volume production environment.
  • Semiconductor device manufacturing is characterized by continually decreasing feature sizes.
  • IC integrated circuit
  • the shrinking of the gate length has caused a corresponding decrease in the gate dielectric thickness to the order of 1 nm. Consequently, an important manufacturing issue is control of properties of ultra-thin films such as for example silicon oxynitrides or hafnium silicate films.
  • control of film thickness is of primary importance, but control of film composition can be equally important, since both properties influence the final IC device performance.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B compare simulated reflectances of 10 ⁇ SiO 2 /Si film (plot 101 ), 11 ⁇ SiO 2 /Si film (plot 102 ), and 12 ⁇ SiO 2 /Si film (plot 103 ). Changes in film thickness are only detectable in the deep-ultra violet (DUV) and VUV regions, are more resolved the shorter the wavelength, and are undetectable in the visible wavelength regions.
  • DUV deep-ultra violet
  • FIG. 1A shows a reflectance range of 30% to 80% and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm
  • FIG. 1B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 1A , with a reflectance range of 45% to 70% and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • the differences between the reflectances of plots 101 , 102 and 103 are more apparent in FIG. 1B .
  • FIGS. 2A , 2 B, and 2 C compare reflectances for three SiON film cases: 30 ⁇ thick, 15% nitride component (plot 201 ), 31 ⁇ thick 15% nitride component (plot 202 ), and 30 ⁇ thick, 17% nitride component (plot 203 ).
  • FIG. 2A shows a reflectance range of 10% to 80%, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 2B shows an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 2A , with a reflectance range of 15% to 55%, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 160 nm.
  • FIG. 2C shows a second expanded version of a portion of FIG. 2A , with a reflectance range of 60% to 70%, and a wavelength of 180 nm to 300 nm.
  • FIG. 2B shows that VUV reflectance can be used to distinguish all three films.
  • FIG. 2C illustrates how DUV reflectance can distinguish the first film from the other two, but cannot distinguish the change of 1 ⁇ thickness from a change of 2% nitride component.
  • the variety and richness of absorption structure in the VUV for many dielectric materials means that reflectance data often contains as much as or even more information than ellipsometric data, even when the data is taken from the same wavelength region.
  • 2D shows the optical parameters, n and k, for the oxide and nitride components of the oxynitride film.
  • n SiO2 plot 206 n SiO2 plot 206
  • k SiO2 plot 207 n Si3N4 plot 208
  • k Si3N4 plot 209 are shown.
  • the large difference in absorption properties (as indicated in the k spectra) in the VUV regions is a key enabler for VUV reflectometry.
  • the techniques disclosed herein provide an alternate method (distinct from the above mentioned U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686) of measurement using reflectometry that bypasses system calibration and utilizes multiple reflectance ratios, independent of system intensity, to simultaneously measure the properties of an unknown sample and the contaminant buildup on reference surfaces.
  • the method can provide better long-term measurement stability for some ultra-thin film measurements.
  • the reflectometer utilizes vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelength reflectometry.
  • a method of measuring properties of an unknown sample may comprise providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated, collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample, and utilizing a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • a system for measuring properties of an unknown sample may comprise at least one reference sample and a reflectometer, configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated.
  • the system may also comprise a computer operating a software routine configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • a system for measuring properties of an unknown sample may comprise at least one reference sample and a reflectometer configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated.
  • the system may further comprise a computer operating a software routine that selectably operates in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode.
  • the first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • the second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
  • a method of measuring properties of an unknown sample may comprising providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated and collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample.
  • the method further comprises selectably operating the system in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode.
  • the first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • the second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate the effect of changing oxide thickness on reflectance for an ultra thin SiO 2 film on silicon substrate
  • FIGS. 2A-2D illustrate the effect of changing SiON thickness and percent nitride component on reflectance, as well as optical spectra for the oxide and nitride components of an ultra thin SiON film on silicon substrate;
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a practical embodiment of the current invention, including a movable stage with sample holder and two reference pieces;
  • FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing native oxide thickness
  • FIGS. 5A and 5B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 thickness
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on both a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon sample and native oxide on silicon sample;
  • FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on the native oxide sample
  • FIGS. 8A and 8B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on the ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 sample
  • FIGS. 9A and 9B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiO 2 thickness;
  • FIGS. 10A and 10B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing contaminant thickness on the ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2
  • FIGS. 11A and 11B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiON thickness;
  • FIGS. 12A and 12B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiON percent nitrogen content;
  • FIGS. 13A and 13B illustrate a measured and fit reflectance ratio of a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and a native oxide on silicon sample
  • FIGS. 13C and 13D illustrate a measured and fit reflectance ratio of a ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON sample
  • FIG. 14 illustrates a practical embodiment of the current invention including a moving stage with sample holder and several mounted reference pieces, each having distinct film structure.
  • VUV vacuum ultraviolet
  • EMA effective medium approximation
  • the accurate determination of optical properties by ellipsometry (D. Aspnes, Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids Volume I , ed. D. Palik, Academic Press, San Diego, published 1998) that combines two or more constituent components using a single volumetric fraction parameter.
  • Such an approximation is strictly valid when the film dimensions are much smaller than the incident wavelength.
  • most EMA approximations make further assumptions about the geometric arrangements of the component materials. For example, the Bruggeman EMA model assumes that the material is a composite mixture of distinct regions, with each region having its own well-defined set of optical properties.
  • any suitable model could be used in place of the EMA model, and that many film systems could be similarly treated, not limited to silicon oxynitrides and hafnium silicates. Additionally, the methods discussed herein are not limited to just thin film structures, but can also include scattering structures. In particular, the unknown sample could include 1-D or 2-D grating structures, which could be modeled using rigorous diffraction algorithms such as the rigorous coupled wave method.
  • a model of a silicon oxynitride film consists of the film thickness and EMA mixing fraction of oxide (SiO x ) and nitride (Si x N y ) components.
  • the oxide and nitride components themselves are described by their optical properties, index of refraction n and extinction coefficient k, as functions of wavelength.
  • the reflectance can be calculated at any wavelength using standard thin film Fresnel equations, as described in “Spectroscopic Ellipsometry and Reflectometry-A User's Guide”, (H. Tompkins and W. McGahan, John Wiley & Sons Press, New York, published 1999).
  • a metrology measurement is usually performed on an unknown sample by measuring the reflectance of the sample and performing, for example, a Levenberg-Marquardt optimization, as shown in “Numerical Recipes in C (2 nd Edition)”, (W. H. Press, S. A. Teukolsky, W. T. Vetterling, and B. P. Flanery, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1992), with the film thickness and EMA fraction treated as optimization parameters.
  • a production reflectometer typically does not directly measure the incident intensity (as provided from the source or the actual incident intensity on the measured sample), which is required to measure reflectance of an unknown sample, but instead will determine the incident intensity from the reflected intensity of a known calibration sample.
  • the incident intensity can change over time due to variations in source intensity, environment (temperature and humidity), drift in optical alignment, and the like.
  • a known calibration sample often a silicon wafer with its native oxide, is first measured, and its reflectance assumed to be known. The incident intensity is determined by dividing the intensity reflected from the calibration sample by its assumed reflectance. The reflectance for an unknown sample is then determined by measuring the intensity reflected from the sample and dividing by the incident intensity.
  • a measurement of reflectance for a thick ( ⁇ 1000 ⁇ ) silicon dioxide on silicon substrate sample relative to a thin oxide sample is independent of incident intensity, and can be used along with a regression technique to determine both the native oxide thickness as well as contaminant thickness on the thin oxide sample.
  • the term “calibration” refers to the determination of incident intensity, I 0 .
  • the method disclosed herein can lead to better long-term performance for some thin film systems, one example being thickness and concentration in ultra-thin silicon oxynitride.
  • Sample 3 the unknown sample (for example an oxynitride sample).
  • the unknown sample will normally consist of a standard silicon substrate of 150 mm, 200 mm, 300 mm, or 450 mm diameter with a deposited film stack.
  • the VUV reflectometer discussed in the prior art (U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,026,626, 7,067,818, 7,126,131, and 7,271,394, which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety) is equipped with a stage and loading port for accepting and measuring reflected intensity at various locations on such a sample which may be placed in sample area 302 .
  • the two reference pieces may be small pads, such as pad 1 303 and pad 2 304 , mounted on the stage, or at some other location convenient for the wafer/chuck system 301 .
  • FIG. 3 shows an illustration of this arrangement 300 .
  • the reference pieces are provided integrally with the stage or wafer/chuck system 301 or other sample holder or the like. It will be recognized that the concepts described herein may be utilized with any reference samples and such reference samples do not have to be integrally provided with the stage or wafer/chuck system 301 . Thus, as described herein reference pieces such as pads 303 and 304 may be referred to, however, it will be recognized that any reference sample may be provided having the characteristics of the reference pieces.
  • the unknown sample is loaded into the system 301 , and reflected intensities, 11 , 12 , and 13 , are measured for Sample 1 , Sample 2 , and Sample 3 (for example Sample 1 being pad 1 303 and Sample 2 being Pad 2 304 ), respectively. Two ratios are formed:
  • I 0 is usually stable for at least several minutes, meaning that several locations on Sample 3 could be measured and use the same I 1 and I 2 in the ratios. I 1 and I 2 need only be measured with whatever frequency a standard system calibration would normally be performed.
  • An additional embodiment might incorporate the current method and the calibration methods disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686 simultaneously, which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
  • the same pads 303 , 304 can be used for calibration of I 0 or used as described in the current disclosure, depending on the particular measurement being done.
  • the techniques provided herein are particularly advantageous in that the reference pieces need not be stable under the conditions that the reflectometer operates. Thus, reference pieces that, for example, are not stable in the VUV regime may still be utilized. For example, even though the contaminate build-up which may affect a VUV measurement may occur on the reference piece, rendering the reference piece unstable in VUV conditions, the reference piece is still suitable for the techniques described herein.
  • instability of the reference sample may relate to the surface of the reference sample changing over time, such as for example, but not limited to contaminant buildup, airborne molecular contaminant removal, growth of films, other time dependent changes, etc.
  • instability of the reference sample may also relate to inherent non-uniformities of the reference sample (across a given sample or from sample to sample), that may result, for example, from the sample production techniques. For example, bare thicknesses, native oxides, interface properties, surface roughness conditions, etc. may all initially vary across a sample and from sample to sample. Thus these may not change over time, however, from sample to sample or across a sample these conditions may be considered unstable.
  • instability may refer to both time dependent and non-time dependent variations.
  • reflectance ratios instead of intensity ratios
  • reflectance can be calculated in a straight-forward manner using standard thin film algorithms, as described in “Spectroscopic Ellipsometry and Reflectometry-A User's Guide”, (H. Tompkins and W. McGahan, John Wiley & Sons Press, New York, published 1999), along with values for the optical properties and thicknesses of the various films. For instance, if the SiO 2 and Si optical properties are known and SiO 2 thicknesses provided, the reflectances R 1 and R 2 can be calculated.
  • the techniques disclosed herein may be utilized in combination with the techniques disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686.
  • a measurement software routine may be selectable between differing modes, a first mode being the techniques described herein and a second mode being the techniques described in the above mentioned U.S. patent applications.
  • the system may selectably operate (automatically or based on user input) in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode.
  • the first measurement mode may be configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity as described herein in more detail.
  • the second measurement mode may be configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined such as described in the above referenced U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686.
  • the current method disclosed herein involves a regression analysis of both ratios in Equation 1 simultaneously. Basically, the parameters in the modeled ratios are optimized until both calculated ratios R 2 /R 1 and R 2 /R 3 agree with their corresponding measured ratios.
  • One way to do the optimization is to use a version of the Levenberg-Marquardt routine generalized to multiple sample analysis. In such cases, the nonlinear chi-square merit function could be written as:
  • the results of the optimization procedure are the measured parameters for all three samples.
  • the reference pads 303 , 304 will ordinarily undergo contaminant buildup due to extended use in the system, and so a contaminant layer will be included in the reflectance models for the reference pieces.
  • the result of the analysis include the thicknesses of both oxide (native and ⁇ 1000 ⁇ ) thicknesses, thickness of contaminant in both reference pieces, and all of the same regression parameters for the unknown sample that would have been varied during a standard optical measurement, such as film thicknesses and optical properties (via the EMA fraction in the ultra-thin SiON case).
  • the redundancy provided by having sample 2 involved in both datasets helps constrain the problem and yield better results for the unknown sample.
  • the SiON films are treated as Bruggeman EMA films composed of SiO 2 and Si 3 N 4 .
  • EMA Bruggeman EMA films
  • the volume fraction can be correlated to nitrogen content in the films, which is an important process control parameter along with the film thickness.
  • treatment of explicit interface layers and surface and interface roughness are ignored, but such effects could also be included in the models, if desired.
  • FIGS. 4A and 4B show simulations of the variation of the ratio R 2 /R 1 , where R 2 is the simulated reflectance of a 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on Si substrate and R 1 is the simulated reflectance of 10 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 401 ), 20 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 402 ), and 30 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 403 ) on Si substrate samples.
  • FIG. 4A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 4B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 4A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIG. 5A and 5B show similar ratios with R 1 fixed at 20 ⁇ SiO 2 on Si substrate and R 2 varied from 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 501 ), 1010 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 502 ), and 1020 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 503 ) on Si substrate.
  • FIG. 5A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 5B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 5A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • the measured ratio is simply the ratio of the reflected intensities of the two samples, which is independent of I 0 if only a short time has passed between the intensity measurements.
  • FIGS. 6A , 6 B, 7 A, 7 B, 8 A, and 8 B show the effects of contaminant buildup on both calibration samples.
  • a reflectance ratio of 10 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on Si and 10 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 601
  • 20 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on Si and 20 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 602
  • 30 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on Si and 30 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 603 .
  • FIG. 6A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 6B is an expanded view of FIG. 6A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • the optical properties for the contaminant layer were determined from a prior reflectance ratio analysis study.
  • FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrate that the effect of increasing contaminant buildup on the native oxide sample is to primarily increase the ratio in the VUV, as the reflectance of the native oxide sample decreases. In FIGS.
  • FIG. 7A and 7B a reflectance ratio of 10 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on S and 10 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 701 , 10 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on Si and 20 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ on SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 702 , and 10 ⁇ contaminant on 1000 ⁇ SiO2 on Si and 30 ⁇ contaminant on 10 ⁇ SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 703 .
  • FIG. 7A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 7B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG.
  • FIGS. 8A and 8B shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • the effect of growing contaminant on the 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 /Si sample, as seen in FIGS. 8A and 8B is to increase the interference amplitude minima and simultaneously shift the locations of the interference minima to longer wavelengths.
  • FIG. 8A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 8B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 8A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIGS. 6A , 6 B, 7 A, 7 B, 8 A, and 8 B show that the contaminant buildup is decoupled from changes in the 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 /Si thickness.
  • the contaminant is also decoupled from the thin oxide thickness, although the effects on the ratio are more subtle.
  • the regression procedure is able to extract the correct changes, and this method is effective at accounting for changes in reflectance of the 1000 ⁇ and native oxide calibration samples without knowing the changes a priori.
  • FIGS. 9A-12B show simulations of several R 2 /R 3 ratios.
  • FIGS. 9A and 9B show 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 901 ), 1010 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 902 ) and 1020 ⁇ SiO 2 (plot 903 ) on silicon (R 2 ) relative to a 30 ⁇ , 15% EMA volume fraction SiON on silicon film as R 3 , illustrating the effects of changing SiO 2 thickness on the R 2 /R 3 ratio.
  • FIG. 9A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 9B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 9A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIGS. 10A and 10B show ratios with 0 ⁇ contaminant buildup (plot 1001 ), 10 ⁇ contaminant buildup (plot 1002 ), and 20 ⁇ of a contaminant buildup (plot 1003 ) on the 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 on silicon sample, with R 3 the same 30 ⁇ , 15% fraction SiON film as in FIGS. 9A and 9B .
  • FIG. 10A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 10B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 10A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIGS. 11A and 11B show the effects of changing SiON thickness (29 ⁇ (plot 1101 ), 30 ⁇ (plot 1102 ), 31 ⁇ (plot 1103 ), 15% EMA fraction) on the R 2 /R 3 ratio
  • FIGS. 12A and 12B show the effects of changing EMA % (30 ⁇ , 13% (plot 1201 ), 15%, (plot 1202 ), 17% (plot 1203 ) EMA fractions) on the ratio.
  • FIG. 11A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 11B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG.
  • FIG. 11A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • FIG. 12A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm.
  • FIG. 12B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 12A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • R 2 /R 3 An analysis of R 2 /R 3 alone might reasonably be expected to exhibit some coupling, especially between contaminant thickness on the Sample 2 piece and EMA % of the SiON film. Analyzing the R 2 /R 1 ratio simultaneously with the R 2 /R 3 ratio helps to constrain the possible values of R 2 contaminant thickness, since the properties of R 2 are the same for both ratios. This in turn enhances the determination of the R 3 properties.
  • FIGS. 13A-13D An example of a simultaneous multiple ratio fit of a SiON film is shown in FIGS. 13A-13D .
  • the raw data consists of reflected intensities from two reference pieces consisting of native oxide and ⁇ 1000 ⁇ SiO 2 films on silicon, and a central location on a SiON sample.
  • the ratios R 2 /R 1 measured (plot 1301 ) and modeled (plot 1302 ) shown in FIGS. 13A and 13B , and R 2 /R 3 measured (plot 1304 ) and modeled (plot 1305 ) shown in FIGS. 13C and 13D were simultaneously analyzed, resulting in optimized parameters for all three samples. The results of the optimization shown in FIGS.
  • FIG. 13A-13D are 12.041 ⁇ contaminant and 19.242 ⁇ SiO 2 for Sample 1 , 7.275 ⁇ contaminant and 1045.8 ⁇ SiO 2 for Sample 2 , and 31.709 ⁇ thickness and 16.036% nitrogen for Sample 3 .
  • the fit parameters for R 2 were constrained to be the same for both ratios.
  • FIG. 13A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.5, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 600 nm.
  • FIG. 13B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 13A , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.5, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • FIG. 13A-13D are 12.041 ⁇ contaminant and 19.242 ⁇ SiO 2 for Sample 1 , 7.275 ⁇ contaminant and 1045.8 ⁇ SiO 2 for Sample 2 , and 31.709 ⁇ thickness and 16.036% nitrogen for Sample 3 .
  • the fit parameters for R 2 were
  • FIG. 13C shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 2, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 600 nm.
  • FIG. 13D is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 13C , and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 2, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • the underlying oxide and possibly even interface regions of the reference pieces can be pre-characterized using a ratio measurement or other means, and those parameters fixed to the pre-characterized values during normal measurements. After such pre-characterization, only the contaminant layer on the reference pieces and properties of the unknown sample would be treated as unknowns in multiple ratio measurements.
  • a further generalization might treat multiple contaminant layers, due to different types of photodeposited contaminants, or to distinguish the effects of photocontaminants from airborne molecular contaminants, which are known to absorb on wafer surfaces in normal fab environments.
  • Each of the 250 measurements consists of 3 reflected intensities—one each from the two reference pads and one from the SiON measurement site.
  • the data was first analyzed by calibrating I 0 using a dual pad calibration procedure with the two reference pads (similar to methods discussed in patent application Ser. Nos. 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686), and the thickness and percent nitrogen (via the EMA fraction) were analyzed using an EMA model and standard reflectance analysis.
  • the 10-day standard deviation was computed for thickness and percent nitrogen for each site of each sample.
  • the data was then recomputed using the multiple ratio analysis method described in this disclosure.
  • the same optical models were used for reference and SiON materials for the recomputed data.
  • the current method resulted in an average improvement in the 10-day standard deviation of approximately 37% for thickness and 26% for nitrogen percent.
  • the SiON description used for the analysis was generated using standard reflectance measurements by calibrating I 0 .
  • the good fit in FIGS. 13C and 13D are an indication that the previous analysis was largely successful.
  • multiple SiON samples, each using a multiple ratio analysis could be used to further refine the optical description of the SiON film, and consequently improve the fits in FIGS. 13C and 13D .
  • the oxide and nitride component optical properties of the SiON film would be included as fit parameters, along with thickness and EMA fraction.
  • the use of multiple SiON samples with different thicknesses helps to constrain the determination of the oxide and nitride component optical properties. This would likely result in even further improvement of stability results for both multiple ratio and calibrated reflectance measurements.
  • FIG. 14 shows a generalized version of FIG. 3 , where multiple reference pads, such as pad 1 1403 , pad 2 1404 , pad 3 1405 , pad 4 1406 , and pad 5 1407 , each with different film characteristics are available for use depending on the sample being measured.
  • the wafer/chuck system 1401 comprises a sample area 1402 similar to as described above. The intensities from any number of the reference pads could be used along with the sample intensity in any combination that does not depend on I 0 (not only limited to intensity ratios) and allows for accurate extraction of the desired sample parameters.

Abstract

A method and apparatus is disclosed for measuring properties of an unknown sample. A reflectometer and one or more reference pieces is provided. A set of data is collected from the unknown sample and a combination of the reference pieces. A combination of the sample and reference piece data independent of incident intensity is used to determine a property of the unknown sample without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity. The method and apparatus disclosed can measure properties of thin films or scattering structures on semiconductor work pieces. In one embodiment the reflectometer utilizes vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelength reflectometry. Multiple relative reflectance measurements are used to overcome effects of the inevitable contamination buildup that occurs when using optical systems in the VUV region. While advantageous for VUV wavelengths, the method described herein is generally applicable to any wavelength range, and is advantageous in situations where stable reference samples are not available.

Description

    TECHNICAL FIELD
  • A method and apparatus for using reflectometry for measuring properties of thin films or scattering structures on semiconductor work-pieces is disclosed. The techniques described herein include a method for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to overcome effects of contamination buildup. While the methods are particularly advantageous for vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelengths, the methods are generally applicable to any wavelength range, and are advantageous in situations where stable reference samples are not available.
  • BACKGROUND
  • The techniques described herein relate to the field of optical metrology. Optical methods for control of thin film properties in semiconductor (and other) device manufacturing environments have become widely accepted. Particular advantages of using optical metrology include a high measurement throughput and the fact that optical measurements are typically nondestructive.
  • The most common optical metrology techniques are reflectometry and ellipsometry. Ellipsometry is generally regarded as consisting of a “richer” dataset, including a measurement of two quantities per wavelength/incident angle. On the other hand, reflectometers are more robust due to less complex hardware configuration, have faster measurements, and typically have a smaller footprint. Generally speaking, if both technologies are capable of solving a given metrology problem, the reflectometer is a more cost effective choice for a high-volume production environment.
  • Semiconductor device manufacturing is characterized by continually decreasing feature sizes. For example, in integrated circuit (IC) devices, the shrinking of the gate length has caused a corresponding decrease in the gate dielectric thickness to the order of 1 nm. Consequently, an important manufacturing issue is control of properties of ultra-thin films such as for example silicon oxynitrides or hafnium silicate films. Usually, control of film thickness is of primary importance, but control of film composition can be equally important, since both properties influence the final IC device performance.
  • This shrinking of device dimensions is where vacuum ultra-violet wavelength metrology comes in. It is well-known that a decrease in incident wavelength enhances sensitivity of the detected signal to minute changes in samples properties. An example is reflectance of ˜1-2 nm silicon dioxide films on silicon substrates. FIGS. 1A and 1B compare simulated reflectances of 10 Å SiO2/Si film (plot 101), 11 Å SiO2/Si film (plot 102), and 12 Å SiO2/Si film (plot 103). Changes in film thickness are only detectable in the deep-ultra violet (DUV) and VUV regions, are more resolved the shorter the wavelength, and are undetectable in the visible wavelength regions. FIG. 1A shows a reflectance range of 30% to 80% and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm, while FIG. 1B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 1A, with a reflectance range of 45% to 70% and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm. The differences between the reflectances of plots 101, 102 and 103 are more apparent in FIG. 1B.
  • Somewhat less known in the art is the ability to distinguish the effects of multiple parameters on the detected spectrum as the incident wavelength decreases below DUV regions. The ability to determine changes in film thickness and composition independently is enhanced in the VUV region, where many films exhibit very rich absorption spectra. Thus, using only DUV wavelengths, it may be possible to distinguish thickness or composition changes in an ultra-thin film, but not simultaneously. To do this with a reflectometer, one must move to VUV wavelengths, as illustrated in “Optical characterization of hafnium-based high-k dielectric films using vacuum ultraviolet reflectometry” (C. Rivas, XV International Conference on Vacuum Ultraviolet Radiation Physics, published 2007) for the case of HfxSi1-xO2, or in FIGS. 2A-C for silicon oxynitride (SiON). FIGS. 2A, 2B, and 2C compare reflectances for three SiON film cases: 30 Å thick, 15% nitride component (plot 201), 31 Å thick 15% nitride component (plot 202), and 30 Å thick, 17% nitride component (plot 203). FIG. 2A shows a reflectance range of 10% to 80%, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 2B shows an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 2A, with a reflectance range of 15% to 55%, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 160 nm. FIG. 2C shows a second expanded version of a portion of FIG. 2A, with a reflectance range of 60% to 70%, and a wavelength of 180 nm to 300 nm. FIG. 2B shows that VUV reflectance can be used to distinguish all three films. FIG. 2C illustrates how DUV reflectance can distinguish the first film from the other two, but cannot distinguish the change of 1 Å thickness from a change of 2% nitride component. In addition, the variety and richness of absorption structure in the VUV for many dielectric materials means that reflectance data often contains as much as or even more information than ellipsometric data, even when the data is taken from the same wavelength region. FIG. 2D shows the optical parameters, n and k, for the oxide and nitride components of the oxynitride film. In FIG. 2D, n SiO2 plot 206, k SiO2 plot 207, n Si3N4 plot 208, and k Si3N4 plot 209 are shown. The large difference in absorption properties (as indicated in the k spectra) in the VUV regions is a key enabler for VUV reflectometry.
  • Consequently, a VUV reflectometer has been disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,026,626, 7,067,818, 7,126,131, and 7,271,394, the disclosures of which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. This reflectometer has overcome the difficulties involved with VUV operation, and in particular incorporates an inert gas environment, as well as a real-time reference procedure to enhance stability.
  • A formidable obstacle to stable, reliable metrology at VUV wavelengths is a buildup of contaminants on optical surfaces during operation. This contaminant buildup is generally characteristic of all optical systems operating in the VUV region, and has also been observed in initial 157 nm lithographic systems, as seen in “Contamination rates of optical surface at 157 nm in the presence of hydrocarbon impurities”, (T. M. Bloomstein, V. Liverman, M. Rothschild, S. T. Palmacci, D. E. Hardy, and J. H. C. Sedlacek, Optical Microlithography XV, Proceedings of the SPIE, Vol. 4691, p. 709, published 2002) and “Contamination monitoring and control on ASML MS-VII 157 nm exposure tool”, (U. Okoroanyanwu, R. Gronheid, J. Coenen, J. Hermans, K. Ronse, Optical Microlithography XVII, Proceedings of the SPIE, Vol. 5377, p. 1695, published 2004), as well as space-based VUV experiments, such as “Optical Characterization of Molecular Contaminant Films”, (Photonics Tech Briefs, January 2007). For fab production environments, the contaminant is thought to involve a photodeposition process as VUV light interacts with siloxanes, hydrocarbons, and other compounds common in fab environments.
  • One method for calibrating a VUV reflectometer system that takes into account contaminant buildup has been disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339 filed on Aug. 31, 2004, 11/418,827 filed May 5, 2006 (now U.S. Pat. No. 7,282,703), 11/418,846 filed May 5, 2006, and 11/789,686, filed on Apr. 25, 2007, which are all expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. This method involves using a reflectance ratio, which is independent of incident system intensity, to measure properties of contaminant layers on the calibration samples. The measured contaminant layer properties are used to calculate the reflectance spectra of the calibration samples, which enables the determination of the incident intensity from the intensity reflected from the calibration sample. Once the incident intensity is known, an absolute reflectance can be measured for any subsequent sample.
  • SUMMARY
  • The techniques disclosed herein provide an alternate method (distinct from the above mentioned U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686) of measurement using reflectometry that bypasses system calibration and utilizes multiple reflectance ratios, independent of system intensity, to simultaneously measure the properties of an unknown sample and the contaminant buildup on reference surfaces. The method can provide better long-term measurement stability for some ultra-thin film measurements. In one embodiment the reflectometer utilizes vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelength reflectometry.
  • In one embodiment a method of measuring properties of an unknown sample is provided. The method may comprise providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated, collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample, and utilizing a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • In another embodiment a system for measuring properties of an unknown sample is provided. The system may comprise at least one reference sample and a reflectometer, configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated. The system may also comprise a computer operating a software routine configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
  • In another embodiment a system for measuring properties of an unknown sample, may comprise at least one reference sample and a reflectometer configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated. The system may further comprise a computer operating a software routine that selectably operates in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode. The first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity. The second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
  • In yet another embodiment, a method of measuring properties of an unknown sample, may comprising providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated and collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample. The method further comprises selectably operating the system in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode. The first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity. The second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
  • As described below, other features and variations can be implemented, if desired, and a related method can be utilized, as well.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • It is noted that the appended drawings illustrate only exemplary embodiments of the techniques disclosed herein and are, therefore, not to be considered limiting of its scope, for the techniques disclosed herein may admit to other equally effective embodiments.
  • FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate the effect of changing oxide thickness on reflectance for an ultra thin SiO2 film on silicon substrate;
  • FIGS. 2A-2D illustrate the effect of changing SiON thickness and percent nitride component on reflectance, as well as optical spectra for the oxide and nitride components of an ultra thin SiON film on silicon substrate;
  • FIG. 3 illustrates a practical embodiment of the current invention, including a movable stage with sample holder and two reference pieces;
  • FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing native oxide thickness;
  • FIGS. 5A and 5B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing ˜1000 Å SiO2 thickness;
  • FIGS. 6A and 6B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on both a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon sample and native oxide on silicon sample;
  • FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on the native oxide sample;
  • FIGS. 8A and 8B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio due to changing contaminant thickness on the ˜1000 Å SiO2 sample;
  • FIGS. 9A and 9B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiO2 thickness;
  • FIGS. 10A and 10B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing contaminant thickness on the ˜1000 Å SiO2
  • FIGS. 11A and 11B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiON thickness;
  • FIGS. 12A and 12B illustrate variation in a reflectance ratio of a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON on silicon sample due to changing SiON percent nitrogen content;
  • FIGS. 13A and 13B illustrate a measured and fit reflectance ratio of a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and a native oxide on silicon sample;
  • FIGS. 13C and 13D illustrate a measured and fit reflectance ratio of a ˜1000 Å SiO2 on silicon and an ultra thin SiON sample; and
  • FIG. 14 illustrates a practical embodiment of the current invention including a moving stage with sample holder and several mounted reference pieces, each having distinct film structure.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION
  • The techniques described herein provide a method and apparatus for reflectometry for measuring properties of thin films or scattering structures on semiconductor work-pieces. In one embodiment vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelength (or lower) reflectometry may be utilized.
  • Reflectance or ellipsometric data from ultra-thin gate dielectrics are often modeled using an effective medium approximation (EMA), as shown in “The accurate determination of optical properties by ellipsometry”, (D. Aspnes, Handbook of Optical Constants of Solids Volume I, ed. D. Palik, Academic Press, San Diego, published 1998) that combines two or more constituent components using a single volumetric fraction parameter. Such an approximation is strictly valid when the film dimensions are much smaller than the incident wavelength. Additionally, most EMA approximations make further assumptions about the geometric arrangements of the component materials. For example, the Bruggeman EMA model assumes that the material is a composite mixture of distinct regions, with each region having its own well-defined set of optical properties.
  • Even if this assumption is not strictly met, for ultra-thin silicon oxynitrides or hafnium silicates, treatment with the Bruggeman EMA model adequately describes the reflectance or ellipsometric data. Additionally, the volume fraction correlates well with the dominant changes in composition, such as percent nitrogen in a silicon oxynitride film. Consequently, for the purposes of this disclosure silicon oxynitride films will be treated as a Bruggeman EMA mixture of SiOx and SixNy components, while hafnium silicate films are modeled as Bruggeman EMA mixtures of HfOx and SiOx components. It is understood that any suitable model could be used in place of the EMA model, and that many film systems could be similarly treated, not limited to silicon oxynitrides and hafnium silicates. Additionally, the methods discussed herein are not limited to just thin film structures, but can also include scattering structures. In particular, the unknown sample could include 1-D or 2-D grating structures, which could be modeled using rigorous diffraction algorithms such as the rigorous coupled wave method.
  • So described, a model of a silicon oxynitride film consists of the film thickness and EMA mixing fraction of oxide (SiOx) and nitride (SixNy) components. The oxide and nitride components themselves are described by their optical properties, index of refraction n and extinction coefficient k, as functions of wavelength. Given the film's thickness and EMA fraction, the reflectance can be calculated at any wavelength using standard thin film Fresnel equations, as described in “Spectroscopic Ellipsometry and Reflectometry-A User's Guide”, (H. Tompkins and W. McGahan, John Wiley & Sons Press, New York, published 1999). A metrology measurement is usually performed on an unknown sample by measuring the reflectance of the sample and performing, for example, a Levenberg-Marquardt optimization, as shown in “Numerical Recipes in C (2nd Edition)”, (W. H. Press, S. A. Teukolsky, W. T. Vetterling, and B. P. Flanery, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1992), with the film thickness and EMA fraction treated as optimization parameters.
  • A production reflectometer typically does not directly measure the incident intensity (as provided from the source or the actual incident intensity on the measured sample), which is required to measure reflectance of an unknown sample, but instead will determine the incident intensity from the reflected intensity of a known calibration sample. The incident intensity can change over time due to variations in source intensity, environment (temperature and humidity), drift in optical alignment, and the like. A known calibration sample, often a silicon wafer with its native oxide, is first measured, and its reflectance assumed to be known. The incident intensity is determined by dividing the intensity reflected from the calibration sample by its assumed reflectance. The reflectance for an unknown sample is then determined by measuring the intensity reflected from the sample and dividing by the incident intensity.
  • Obviously, such a calibration method depends on the stability of the calibration sample. In VUV regions, stability is not guaranteed, since small differences in native oxide thicknesses are magnified in that region. In addition, the previously mentioned contamination that occurs confounds the stability of the calibration sample, since the photodeposition occurs every time the calibration sample is measured.
  • One way to deal with this problem has already been discussed with reference to the calibration techniques disclosed in the U.S. patent applications disclosed above. A measurement of reflectance for a thick (˜1000 Å) silicon dioxide on silicon substrate sample relative to a thin oxide sample (typically native silicon dioxide on silicon substrate) is independent of incident intensity, and can be used along with a regression technique to determine both the native oxide thickness as well as contaminant thickness on the thin oxide sample. The result of this analysis is used to calculate the reflectance of the native oxide calibration sample, Rc, which is used in combination with the intensity reflected from the calibration sample, Ic, to determine the incident intensity via I0=Ic/Rc. The reflectance of an unknown sample, Rs, can then be determined from its reflected intensity, Is, by Rs=Is/I0.
  • Disclosed herein is an alternate method for measuring thin film properties that uses reflectance ratios to bypass the system calibration completely. As used herein, the term “calibration” refers to the determination of incident intensity, I0. The method disclosed herein can lead to better long-term performance for some thin film systems, one example being thickness and concentration in ultra-thin silicon oxynitride.
  • One embodiment of the technique involves measuring the reflected intensity of three samples:
  • Sample 1—native oxide/Si reference piece,
  • Sample 2—˜1000 Å SiO2/Si reference piece,
  • Sample 3—the unknown sample (for example an oxynitride sample).
  • The unknown sample will normally consist of a standard silicon substrate of 150 mm, 200 mm, 300 mm, or 450 mm diameter with a deposited film stack. As shown in FIG. 3, the VUV reflectometer discussed in the prior art (U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,026,626, 7,067,818, 7,126,131, and 7,271,394, which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety) is equipped with a stage and loading port for accepting and measuring reflected intensity at various locations on such a sample which may be placed in sample area 302. The two reference pieces may be small pads, such as pad 1 303 and pad 2 304, mounted on the stage, or at some other location convenient for the wafer/chuck system 301. This reduces the measurement of the reference pieces to basically moving to their locations and collecting intensity data, with no additional wafer handling. FIG. 3 shows an illustration of this arrangement 300. As shown in FIG. 3, the reference pieces are provided integrally with the stage or wafer/chuck system 301 or other sample holder or the like. It will be recognized that the concepts described herein may be utilized with any reference samples and such reference samples do not have to be integrally provided with the stage or wafer/chuck system 301. Thus, as described herein reference pieces such as pads 303 and 304 may be referred to, however, it will be recognized that any reference sample may be provided having the characteristics of the reference pieces.
  • The unknown sample is loaded into the system 301, and reflected intensities, 11, 12, and 13, are measured for Sample 1, Sample 2, and Sample 3 (for example Sample 1 being pad 1 303 and Sample 2 being Pad 2 304), respectively. Two ratios are formed:

  • I2/I1=R2/R1, and  Eq. 1

  • I2/I3=R2/R3.
  • The equalities are true as long as I0 has not changed significantly during the measurement of the reflected intensities. I0 is usually stable for at least several minutes, meaning that several locations on Sample 3 could be measured and use the same I1 and I2 in the ratios. I1 and I2 need only be measured with whatever frequency a standard system calibration would normally be performed. An additional embodiment might incorporate the current method and the calibration methods disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686 simultaneously, which are expressly incorporated herein by reference in their entirety. The same pads 303, 304 can be used for calibration of I0 or used as described in the current disclosure, depending on the particular measurement being done. Other ratio combinations can obviously be used as well. As described in more detail herein, the techniques provided herein are particularly advantageous in that the reference pieces need not be stable under the conditions that the reflectometer operates. Thus, reference pieces that, for example, are not stable in the VUV regime may still be utilized. For example, even though the contaminate build-up which may affect a VUV measurement may occur on the reference piece, rendering the reference piece unstable in VUV conditions, the reference piece is still suitable for the techniques described herein.
  • Thus, during operation instability of the reference sample may relate to the surface of the reference sample changing over time, such as for example, but not limited to contaminant buildup, airborne molecular contaminant removal, growth of films, other time dependent changes, etc. In addition, instability of the reference sample may also relate to inherent non-uniformities of the reference sample (across a given sample or from sample to sample), that may result, for example, from the sample production techniques. For example, bare thicknesses, native oxides, interface properties, surface roughness conditions, etc. may all initially vary across a sample and from sample to sample. Thus these may not change over time, however, from sample to sample or across a sample these conditions may be considered unstable. Thus, as used herein, instability may refer to both time dependent and non-time dependent variations.
  • The reason for framing the problem in terms of reflectance ratios instead of intensity ratios is that reflectance can be calculated in a straight-forward manner using standard thin film algorithms, as described in “Spectroscopic Ellipsometry and Reflectometry-A User's Guide”, (H. Tompkins and W. McGahan, John Wiley & Sons Press, New York, published 1999), along with values for the optical properties and thicknesses of the various films. For instance, if the SiO2 and Si optical properties are known and SiO2 thicknesses provided, the reflectances R1 and R2 can be calculated. Going further, if a measured R2/R1 is available, standard regression techniques can be used to optimize the thicknesses for the SiO2 layers, giving a measurement for both thicknesses, as long as the parameters are sufficiently decoupled. In principle, the optical properties of the SiO2 and Si layers could be determined as well, normally using parameterized dispersion models such as the Tauc-Lorentz model, as shown in “Parameterization of the optical functions of amorphous materials in the interband region”, (G. E. Jellison and F. A. Modine, Appl. Phys. Lett., Vol. 69 (1996), p. 371).
  • In one embodiment, the techniques disclosed herein may be utilized in combination with the techniques disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686. For example, a measurement software routine may be selectable between differing modes, a first mode being the techniques described herein and a second mode being the techniques described in the above mentioned U.S. patent applications. Thus, the system may selectably operate (automatically or based on user input) in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode. The first measurement mode may be configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity as described herein in more detail. The second measurement mode may be configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined such as described in the above referenced U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/930,339, 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686.
  • The current method disclosed herein involves a regression analysis of both ratios in Equation 1 simultaneously. Basically, the parameters in the modeled ratios are optimized until both calculated ratios R2/R1 and R2/R3 agree with their corresponding measured ratios. One way to do the optimization is to use a version of the Levenberg-Marquardt routine generalized to multiple sample analysis. In such cases, the nonlinear chi-square merit function could be written as:
  • χ 2 = i = 1 N 21 ( 1 σ i ) 2 ( ( R 2 R 1 ) i , measured - ( R 2 R 1 ) i , calculated ) 2 + j = 1 N 23 ( 1 σ j ) 2 ( ( R 2 R 3 ) j , measured - ( R 2 R 3 ) j , calculated ) 2 Eq . 2
  • where the σi and σj are estimates of the standard error for each measured data point. The notation on the summation limits, N21 and N23, illustrates that the data range for the two datasets does not have to be the same.
  • The results of the optimization procedure are the measured parameters for all three samples. The reference pads 303, 304 will ordinarily undergo contaminant buildup due to extended use in the system, and so a contaminant layer will be included in the reflectance models for the reference pieces. Thus the result of the analysis include the thicknesses of both oxide (native and ˜1000 Å) thicknesses, thickness of contaminant in both reference pieces, and all of the same regression parameters for the unknown sample that would have been varied during a standard optical measurement, such as film thicknesses and optical properties (via the EMA fraction in the ultra-thin SiON case). The redundancy provided by having sample 2 involved in both datasets helps constrain the problem and yield better results for the unknown sample.
  • A series of simulations will follow to illustrate the usefulness of the method in the case of ultra-thin silicon oxynitride (SiON) gate films, which serve the role of Sample 3. For the purposes of this description, the optical properties n and k of the silicon native oxide, silicon dioxide (SiO2), silicon (Si), Silicon Nitride (Si3N4), and contaminant are regarded as known. The optical values were taken from a variety of literature sources or determined through other measurements. In particular, the contaminant optical properties could be determined using a controlled experiment similar to the methods disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/789,686, which is expressly incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. The SiON films are treated as Bruggeman EMA films composed of SiO2 and Si3N4. Aside from the optical properties, a full description of the ultra-thin oxynitride film is considered to be a specification of its thickness and EMA volume fraction. The volume fraction can be correlated to nitrogen content in the films, which is an important process control parameter along with the film thickness. In the present example, treatment of explicit interface layers and surface and interface roughness are ignored, but such effects could also be included in the models, if desired.
  • FIGS. 4A and 4B show simulations of the variation of the ratio R2/R1, where R2 is the simulated reflectance of a 1000 Å SiO2 on Si substrate and R1 is the simulated reflectance of 10 Å SiO2 (plot 401), 20 Å SiO2 (plot 402), and 30 Å SiO2 (plot 403) on Si substrate samples. FIG. 4A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 4B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 4A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm. FIGS. 5A and 5B show similar ratios with R1 fixed at 20 Å SiO2 on Si substrate and R2 varied from 1000 Å SiO2 (plot 501), 1010 Å SiO2 (plot 502), and 1020 Å SiO2 (plot 503) on Si substrate. FIG. 5A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 5B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 5A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm. Clearly, the effects of changing thickness of the thin and thick oxides in these ratios are decoupled, and may be readily extracted from measured ratios through regression procedures. The measured ratio is simply the ratio of the reflected intensities of the two samples, which is independent of I0 if only a short time has passed between the intensity measurements.
  • FIGS. 6A, 6B, 7A, 7B, 8A, and 8B show the effects of contaminant buildup on both calibration samples. In FIGS. 6A and 6B, a reflectance ratio of 10 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 10 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 601, 20 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 20 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 602, and 30 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 30 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 603. FIG. 6A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 6B is an expanded view of FIG. 6A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm. The optical properties for the contaminant layer were determined from a prior reflectance ratio analysis study. FIGS. 7A and 7B illustrate that the effect of increasing contaminant buildup on the native oxide sample is to primarily increase the ratio in the VUV, as the reflectance of the native oxide sample decreases. In FIGS. 7A and 7B, a reflectance ratio of 10 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on S and 10 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 701, 10 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 20 Å contaminant on 10 Å on SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 702, and 10 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 30 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 703. FIG. 7A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 7B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 7A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm. In contrast, the effect of growing contaminant on the 1000 Å SiO2/Si sample, as seen in FIGS. 8A and 8B, is to increase the interference amplitude minima and simultaneously shift the locations of the interference minima to longer wavelengths. In FIGS. 8A and 8B, a reflectance ratio of 10 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 10 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 801, 20 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 10 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 802, and 30 Å contaminant on 1000 Å SiO2 on Si and 10 Å contaminant on 10 Å SiO2 on Si is shown as plot 803. FIG. 8A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 8B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 8A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • Comparisons of FIGS. 6A, 6B, 7A, 7B, 8A, and 8B with FIGS. 4A, 4B, 5A, and 5B also show that the contaminant buildup is decoupled from changes in the 1000 Å SiO2/Si thickness. The contaminant is also decoupled from the thin oxide thickness, although the effects on the ratio are more subtle. In practice, the regression procedure is able to extract the correct changes, and this method is effective at accounting for changes in reflectance of the 1000 Å and native oxide calibration samples without knowing the changes a priori.
  • FIGS. 9A-12B show simulations of several R2/R3 ratios. FIGS. 9A and 9B show 1000 Å SiO2 (plot 901), 1010 Å SiO2 (plot 902) and 1020 Å SiO2 (plot 903) on silicon (R2) relative to a 30 Å, 15% EMA volume fraction SiON on silicon film as R3, illustrating the effects of changing SiO2 thickness on the R2/R3 ratio. FIG. 9A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 9B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 9A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIGS. 10A and 10B show ratios with 0 Å contaminant buildup (plot 1001), 10 Å contaminant buildup (plot 1002), and 20 Å of a contaminant buildup (plot 1003) on the 1000 Å SiO2 on silicon sample, with R3 the same 30 Å, 15% fraction SiON film as in FIGS. 9A and 9B. FIG. 10A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 10B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 10A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 400 nm.
  • FIGS. 11A and 11B show the effects of changing SiON thickness (29 Å (plot 1101), 30 Å (plot 1102), 31 Å (plot 1103), 15% EMA fraction) on the R2/R3 ratio, and FIGS. 12A and 12B show the effects of changing EMA % (30 Å, 13% (plot 1201), 15%, (plot 1202), 17% (plot 1203) EMA fractions) on the ratio. FIG. 11A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 11B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 11A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm. FIG. 12A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 1000 nm. FIG. 12B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 12A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.4, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • If Sample 2 did not change, the reflectance of Sample 3 could be extracted directly from the ratios in FIGS. 11A, 11B, 12A, and 12B. If one inspects the figures closely, it is apparent that the effect of changing SiON thickness is to decrease the VUV portion of the R3 spectrum (with corresponding increase in R2/R3), and the effect of changing the EMA % is to bend the shape of the R3 spectrum, with anchor points near 120 nm and 220 nm. However, Sample 2 is not stable, but builds up contaminant over time, the effect of which was shown in FIGS. 10A and 10B. An analysis of R2/R3 alone might reasonably be expected to exhibit some coupling, especially between contaminant thickness on the Sample 2 piece and EMA % of the SiON film. Analyzing the R2/R1 ratio simultaneously with the R2/R3 ratio helps to constrain the possible values of R2 contaminant thickness, since the properties of R2 are the same for both ratios. This in turn enhances the determination of the R3 properties.
  • An example of a simultaneous multiple ratio fit of a SiON film is shown in FIGS. 13A-13D. The raw data consists of reflected intensities from two reference pieces consisting of native oxide and ˜1000 Å SiO2 films on silicon, and a central location on a SiON sample. As described above, the ratios R2/R1 measured (plot 1301) and modeled (plot 1302) shown in FIGS. 13A and 13B, and R2/R3 measured (plot 1304) and modeled (plot 1305) shown in FIGS. 13C and 13D were simultaneously analyzed, resulting in optimized parameters for all three samples. The results of the optimization shown in FIGS. 13A-13D are 12.041 Å contaminant and 19.242 Å SiO2 for Sample 1, 7.275 Å contaminant and 1045.8 Å SiO2 for Sample 2, and 31.709 Å thickness and 16.036% nitrogen for Sample 3. The fit parameters for R2 were constrained to be the same for both ratios. FIG. 13A shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.5, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 600 nm. FIG. 13B is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 13A, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 1.5, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm. FIG. 13C shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 2, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 600 nm. FIG. 13D is an expanded version of a portion of FIG. 13C, and shows a relative reflectance range of 0 to 2, and a wavelength range of 120 nm to 220 nm.
  • In some embodiments, the underlying oxide and possibly even interface regions of the reference pieces can be pre-characterized using a ratio measurement or other means, and those parameters fixed to the pre-characterized values during normal measurements. After such pre-characterization, only the contaminant layer on the reference pieces and properties of the unknown sample would be treated as unknowns in multiple ratio measurements. A further generalization might treat multiple contaminant layers, due to different types of photodeposited contaminants, or to distinguish the effects of photocontaminants from airborne molecular contaminants, which are known to absorb on wafer surfaces in normal fab environments.
  • An experiment demonstrating the effectiveness of the disclosed method consisted of 5 SiON samples, each measured at 5 measurement sites/wafer per day for 10 days. The measurement sites were slightly changed locally on the SiON samples each day to prevent photocontaminant buildup on the SiON samples themselves from affecting the results. The results for standard deviation of the 10 day measurements for each site are a metric of the stability for the SiON measurement. Photocontamination was allowed to occur on the two reference pieces. These conditions simulate the way the SiON process would be monitored in a fab production environment—i.e. each SiON sample would only be measured once, while the reference pieces would likely be used for many measurements, and consequently undergo the photocontamination process.
  • Each of the 250 measurements consists of 3 reflected intensities—one each from the two reference pads and one from the SiON measurement site. The data was first analyzed by calibrating I0 using a dual pad calibration procedure with the two reference pads (similar to methods discussed in patent application Ser. Nos. 11/418,827, 11/418,846, and 11/789,686), and the thickness and percent nitrogen (via the EMA fraction) were analyzed using an EMA model and standard reflectance analysis. The 10-day standard deviation was computed for thickness and percent nitrogen for each site of each sample. The data was then recomputed using the multiple ratio analysis method described in this disclosure. The same optical models were used for reference and SiON materials for the recomputed data. The current method resulted in an average improvement in the 10-day standard deviation of approximately 37% for thickness and 26% for nitrogen percent.
  • In practice, similar stability enhancements can also be achieved through further optimization of the contaminant properties, or even alternate choices in calibration materials. The significance of this study lies in the fact that a stability enhancement was achieved using the disclosed method with the same reference pads, without further optimization of the reference or SiON material descriptions.
  • It is noted that the SiON description used for the analysis, in particular the oxide and nitride component optical properties, was generated using standard reflectance measurements by calibrating I0. The good fit in FIGS. 13C and 13D are an indication that the previous analysis was largely successful. However, multiple SiON samples, each using a multiple ratio analysis, could be used to further refine the optical description of the SiON film, and consequently improve the fits in FIGS. 13C and 13D. In this case, the oxide and nitride component optical properties of the SiON film would be included as fit parameters, along with thickness and EMA fraction. The use of multiple SiON samples with different thicknesses helps to constrain the determination of the oxide and nitride component optical properties. This would likely result in even further improvement of stability results for both multiple ratio and calibrated reflectance measurements.
  • As previously mentioned, one particularly attractive feature of the current method is that it may be combined with a multiple pad calibration procedure using the same or even additional reference pads on a single measurement platform. The multiple ratio method used may depend on the particular film measurement being done. In other words, whether or not to calibrate I0 and generate reflectance or to use a multiple ratio calculation instead, or even which multiple ratio method to use, could be recipe dependent. FIG. 14 shows a generalized version of FIG. 3, where multiple reference pads, such as pad 1 1403, pad 2 1404, pad 3 1405, pad 4 1406, and pad 5 1407, each with different film characteristics are available for use depending on the sample being measured. The wafer/chuck system 1401 comprises a sample area 1402 similar to as described above. The intensities from any number of the reference pads could be used along with the sample intensity in any combination that does not depend on I0 (not only limited to intensity ratios) and allows for accurate extraction of the desired sample parameters.
  • It is noted that the current method has been illustrated using a specific example, and one will recognize that many variations on the current procedure are possible, while still remaining within the scope of this disclosure. Additionally, the method described herein has been described for use with VUV reflectometer measurements, for which it is particularly advantageous, but the concept is valid for reflectance measurements carried out at any wavelength. The method described herein has also described a moving stage and sample holder, and can obviously be conceived to include automation via robotic wafer handling, fab interface software, and any number of other common modifications of optical metrology equipment for manufacturing environments.
  • Further modifications and alternative embodiments of the techniques disclosed herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art in view of this description. It will be recognized, therefore, that the techniques disclosed herein are not limited by these example arrangements. Accordingly, this description is to be construed as illustrative only and is for the purpose of teaching those skilled in the art the manner of carrying out the techniques disclosed herein. It is to be understood that the forms of the techniques disclosed herein shown and described are to be taken as the presently preferred embodiments. Various changes may be made in the implementations and architectures. For example, equivalent elements may be substituted for those illustrated and described herein, and certain features of the techniques disclosed herein may be utilized independently of the use of other features, all as would be apparent to one skilled in the art after having the benefit of this description of the techniques disclosed herein.

Claims (39)

1. A method of measuring properties of an unknown sample, comprising:
providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated;
collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample; and
utilizing a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein reflectance ratios are obtained from the intensity data.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein one or more properties of the unknown sample are obtained by analyzing reflectance ratios using thin film models and a regression analysis to determine one or more properties of one or more of the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample.
5. The method of claim 2, wherein the collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample comprises collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and a plurality of reference samples.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein plurality of reference samples comprises at least a first and second reference sample wherein the first reference sample comprises a relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure and the second reference sample comprises a native SiO2/Si film structure.
7. The method of claim 5, wherein the reflectance ratios comprise at least one ratio with data from the relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure in the numerator and data from the unknown sample in the denominator and another ratio with data from the relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure in the numerator and data from the native SiO2/Si film structure in the denominator.
8. The method of claim 5, wherein a contaminant layer is included in a model for the reference samples.
9. The method of claim 5, wherein the unknown sample is an ultra-thin silicon oxynitride or hafnium-silicide film.
10. The method of claim 1, wherein the reflectometer is operated in at least vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelengths and the at least one reference sample is unstable under VUV conditions.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein reflectance ratios are obtained from the intensity data.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein one or more properties of the unknown sample are obtained by analyzing reflectance ratios using thin film models and a regression analysis to determine one or more properties of one or more of the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample.
14. The method of claim 11, wherein the collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample comprises collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and a plurality of reference samples.
15. A system for measuring properties of an unknown sample, comprising:
at least one reference sample;
a reflectometer configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated; and
a computer operating a software routine configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the at least one reference sample is a reference piece integrated with a sample holding system.
17. The system of claim 16, further comprising of a plurality of the reference pieces.
18. The system of claim 15, wherein the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data and wherein the software routine is configured to obtain reflectance ratios from the intensity data.
19. The system of claim 15, wherein the at least one reference sample comprises a plurality of reference samples.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the plurality of reference samples comprises at least a first and second reference sample wherein the first reference sample comprises a relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure and the second reference sample comprises a native SiO2/Si film structure.
21. The system of claim 15, wherein the reflectometer is configured to operate in at least vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) wavelengths and the at least one reference sample is unstable under VUV conditions.
22. The system of claim 21, wherein the at least one reference sample is a reference piece integrated with a sample holding system.
23. The system of claim 22, further comprising of a plurality of the reference pieces.
24. The system of claim 21, wherein the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data and wherein the software routine is configured to obtain reflectance ratios from the intensity data.
25. The system of claim 21, wherein the at least one reference sample comprises a plurality of reference samples.
26. A system for measuring properties of an unknown sample, comprising:
at least one reference sample;
a reflectometer, configured for collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated; and
a computer operating a software routine that selectably operates in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode, wherein,
the first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity, and
the second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
27. The system of claim 26, wherein the at least one reference sample is a reference piece integrated with a sample holding system.
28. The system of claim 27, further comprising of a plurality of the reference pieces.
29. The system of claim 26, wherein in the first measurement mode the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data and wherein the software routine is configured to obtain reflectance ratios from the intensity data.
30. The system of claim 26, wherein in at least the first measurement mode the at least one reference sample comprises a plurality of reference samples.
31. The system of claim 30, wherein in the first measurement mode the plurality of reference samples comprises at least a first and second reference sample wherein the first reference sample comprises a relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure and the second reference sample comprises a native SiO2/Si film structure.
32. A method of measuring properties of an unknown sample, comprising:
providing a reflectometer and at least one reference sample, wherein the at least one reference sample is unstable under conditions in which the reflectometer is operated;
collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample; and
selectably operating the system in at least one of a plurality of measurement modes, the plurality of measurement modes including at least a first measurement mode and a second measurement mode, wherein,
the first measurement mode is configured to utilize a combination of the unknown sample and reference sample data that is independent of incident intensity to determine a property of the unknown sample, without calibrating incident reflectometer intensity, and
the second measurement mode is configured to utilize the reference sample data in a manner that is independent of incident intensity to determine one or more properties of one or more reference pieces, thereby determining the incident intensity of the reflectometer, after which reflectance of unknown samples may be determined.
33. The method of claim 32, wherein in the first measurement mode the data obtained from the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample includes intensity data.
34. The method of claim 33, wherein in the first measurement mode reflectance ratios are obtained from the intensity data.
35. The method of claim 34, where the reflectance ratios comprise at least one ratio with data from the relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure in the numerator and data from the unknown sample in the denominator and another ratio with data from the relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure in the numerator and data from the native SiO2/Si film structure in the denominator.
36. The method of claim 32, wherein in the first measurement mode one or more properties of the unknown sample are obtained by analyzing reflectance ratios using thin film models and a regression analysis to determine one or more properties of one or more of the unknown sample and the at least one reference sample.
37. The method of claim 32, wherein the collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and at least one reference sample comprises collecting a set of data from the unknown sample and a plurality of reference samples.
38. The method of claim 32, wherein the at least one reference sample comprises at least a first and second reference sample wherein the first reference sample comprises a relatively thick SiO2/Si film structure and the second reference sample comprises a native SiO2/Si film structure.
39. The method of claim 32, where a contaminant layer is included in a model for the reference samples.
US12/072,878 2008-02-28 2008-02-28 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths Abandoned US20090219537A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/072,878 US20090219537A1 (en) 2008-02-28 2008-02-28 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths
US12/592,641 US7948631B2 (en) 2008-02-28 2009-11-30 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US12/072,878 US20090219537A1 (en) 2008-02-28 2008-02-28 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/592,641 Continuation US7948631B2 (en) 2008-02-28 2009-11-30 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20090219537A1 true US20090219537A1 (en) 2009-09-03

Family

ID=41012952

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/072,878 Abandoned US20090219537A1 (en) 2008-02-28 2008-02-28 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths
US12/592,641 Active US7948631B2 (en) 2008-02-28 2009-11-30 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/592,641 Active US7948631B2 (en) 2008-02-28 2009-11-30 Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (2) US20090219537A1 (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8248607B1 (en) * 2009-08-04 2012-08-21 J.A. Woollam Co., Inc. Empirical correction for spectroscopic ellipsometric measurements of rough or textured surfaces
US20160245743A1 (en) * 2015-02-19 2016-08-25 SCREEN Holdings Co., Ltd. Testing apparatus and testing method
EP3438645A4 (en) * 2016-03-30 2019-12-04 Osang Healthcare Co., Ltd. Check cassette, measurement device, system for compensating for light intensity of light source for measurement device, method for compensating for light intensity of light source for measurement device, and recording medium
US11555689B2 (en) * 2017-08-22 2023-01-17 Kla-Tencor Corporation Measuring thin films on grating and bandgap on grating

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2012012795A1 (en) 2010-07-23 2012-01-26 First Solar, Inc In-line metrology system and method
US8867041B2 (en) 2011-01-18 2014-10-21 Jordan Valley Semiconductor Ltd Optical vacuum ultra-violet wavelength nanoimprint metrology
US8565379B2 (en) 2011-03-14 2013-10-22 Jordan Valley Semiconductors Ltd. Combining X-ray and VUV analysis of thin film layers
WO2013028196A1 (en) 2011-08-25 2013-02-28 Alliance For Sustainable Energy, Llc On-line, continuous monitoring in solar cell and fuel cell manufacturing using spectral reflectance imaging
US10480935B2 (en) 2016-12-02 2019-11-19 Alliance For Sustainable Energy, Llc Thickness mapping using multispectral imaging

Citations (71)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3091154A (en) * 1961-01-06 1963-05-28 Barnes Eng Co Reflectometer
US3160752A (en) * 1963-02-19 1964-12-08 Harold E Bennett Reflectometer for measuring surface finishes
US3572951A (en) * 1968-10-29 1971-03-30 Us Army Single mirror normal incidence reflectometer
US3751643A (en) * 1972-05-23 1973-08-07 Ibm System for performing spectral analyses under computer control
US3825347A (en) * 1970-08-07 1974-07-23 Max Planck Gesellschaft Apparatus for determining a substance by an optical radiation
US4029419A (en) * 1975-10-10 1977-06-14 International Business Machines Corporation Textile color analyzer calibration
US4368983A (en) * 1980-11-13 1983-01-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Absolute reflectometer
US4645349A (en) * 1984-09-21 1987-02-24 O R C Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Method of measuring film thickness
US4729657A (en) * 1986-06-23 1988-03-08 Miles Laboratories, Inc. Method of calibrating reflectance measuring devices
US4899055A (en) * 1988-05-12 1990-02-06 Tencor Instruments Thin film thickness measuring method
US4984894A (en) * 1988-08-17 1991-01-15 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US5042949A (en) * 1989-03-17 1991-08-27 Greenberg Jeffrey S Optical profiler for films and substrates
US5045704A (en) * 1990-02-01 1991-09-03 Nanometrics Incorporated Method for determining absolute reflectance of a material in the ultraviolet range
US5182618A (en) * 1985-11-27 1993-01-26 Aimo Heinonen Reflectometric method of measurement and apparatus for realizing the method
US5241366A (en) * 1992-03-04 1993-08-31 Tencor Instruments Thin film thickness monitor
US5251006A (en) * 1991-03-07 1993-10-05 Nirsystems Incorporated Automatic spectrophotometer calibration system
US5357448A (en) * 1993-02-02 1994-10-18 Quad/Tech, Inc. Method and apparatus for controlling the printing of an image having a plurality of printed colors
US5440141A (en) * 1993-08-20 1995-08-08 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of measuring a thickness of a multilayered sample using ultraviolet light and light with wavelengths longer than ultraviolet
US5452091A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-09-19 Nanometrics Incorporated Scatter correction in reflectivity measurements
US5486701A (en) * 1992-06-16 1996-01-23 Prometrix Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring reflectance in two wavelength bands to enable determination of thin film thickness
US5493401A (en) * 1993-09-20 1996-02-20 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of measuring film thicknesses
US5581350A (en) * 1995-06-06 1996-12-03 Tencor Instruments Method and system for calibrating an ellipsometer
US5607800A (en) * 1995-02-15 1997-03-04 Lucent Technologies Inc. Method and arrangement for characterizing micro-size patterns
US5608526A (en) * 1995-01-19 1997-03-04 Tencor Instruments Focused beam spectroscopic ellipsometry method and system
US5686993A (en) * 1995-07-18 1997-11-11 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US5747813A (en) * 1992-06-16 1998-05-05 Kla-Tencop. Corporation Broadband microspectro-reflectometer
US5771094A (en) * 1997-01-29 1998-06-23 Kla-Tencor Corporation Film measurement system with improved calibration
US5781304A (en) * 1994-09-19 1998-07-14 Textron Systems Corporation Laser ultrasonics-based material analysis system and method
US5784167A (en) * 1996-12-03 1998-07-21 United Microelectronics Corp. Method of measuring thickness of a multi-layers film
US5798837A (en) * 1997-07-11 1998-08-25 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US5880831A (en) * 1997-12-09 1999-03-09 N & K Technology, Inc. Reflectance spectrophotometric apparatus with optical relay
US5917594A (en) * 1998-04-08 1999-06-29 Kla-Tencor Corporation Spectroscopic measurement system using an off-axis spherical mirror and refractive elements
US5991022A (en) * 1997-12-09 1999-11-23 N&K Technology, Inc. Reflectance spectrophotometric apparatus with toroidal mirrors
US6091485A (en) * 1999-12-15 2000-07-18 N & K Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for optically determining physical parameters of underlayers
US6181427B1 (en) * 1998-07-10 2001-01-30 Nanometrics Incorporated Compact optical reflectometer system
US6184529B1 (en) * 1998-01-28 2001-02-06 Lockheed Martin Corporation Methods and apparatus for performing scene based uniformity correction in imaging systems
US6184984B1 (en) * 1999-02-09 2001-02-06 Kla-Tencor Corporation System for measuring polarimetric spectrum and other properties of a sample
US6261853B1 (en) * 2000-02-07 2001-07-17 Therma-Wave, Inc. Method and apparatus for preparing semiconductor wafers for measurement
US6278519B1 (en) * 1998-01-29 2001-08-21 Therma-Wave, Inc. Apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US6313466B1 (en) * 1999-05-12 2001-11-06 Philips Electronics North America Corp. Method for determining nitrogen concentration in a film of nitrided oxide material
US20010055118A1 (en) * 1999-12-02 2001-12-27 Bernd Nawracala Self-calibrating measuring setup for interference spectroscopy
US20020030826A1 (en) * 2000-07-06 2002-03-14 Chalmers Scott A. Method and apparatus for high-speed thickness mapping of patterned thin films
US6392756B1 (en) * 1999-06-18 2002-05-21 N&K Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for optically determining physical parameters of thin films deposited on a complex substrate
US6414302B1 (en) * 1998-08-11 2002-07-02 Interface Studies Inc High photon energy range reflected light characterization of solids
US20020110218A1 (en) * 2000-03-16 2002-08-15 Koppel Louis N. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US20020149774A1 (en) * 2001-04-11 2002-10-17 Mcaninch Jeffrey E. Purge system for optical metrology tool
US6485872B1 (en) * 1999-12-03 2002-11-26 Mks Instruments, Inc. Method and apparatus for measuring the composition and other properties of thin films utilizing infrared radiation
US20020180985A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining at least one characteristic of defects on at least two sides of a specimen
US20020182760A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining a presence of macro defects and overlay of a specimen
US20020180986A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Mehrdad Nikoonahad Methods and systems for determining a critical dimension, a presence of defects, and a thin film characteristic of a specimen
US20020180961A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining an adhesion characteristic and a thickness of a specimen
US6525829B1 (en) * 2001-05-25 2003-02-25 Novellus Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for in-situ measurement of thickness of copper oxide film using optical reflectivity
US6549279B2 (en) * 2001-04-09 2003-04-15 Speedfam-Ipec Corporation Method and apparatus for optical endpoint calibration in CMP
US20030071996A1 (en) * 2001-10-16 2003-04-17 Wang David Y. Measurement system with separate optimized beam paths
US6630673B2 (en) * 1998-11-23 2003-10-07 Abbott Laboratories Non-invasive sensor capable of determining optical parameters in a sample having multiple layers
US6657737B2 (en) * 1999-12-13 2003-12-02 Ebara Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US20040032593A1 (en) * 2002-08-13 2004-02-19 Lam Research Corporation Process endpoint detection method using broadband reflectometry
US6710865B2 (en) * 2000-09-14 2004-03-23 N&K Technology, Inc. Method of inferring optical parameters outside of a measurement spectral range
US6765676B1 (en) * 2000-08-30 2004-07-20 N & K Technology, Inc. Simultaneous compensation of source and detector drift in optical systems
US20040150820A1 (en) * 2002-11-26 2004-08-05 Mehrdad Nikoonahad Optical system for measuring samples using short wavelength radiation
US20050002037A1 (en) * 2003-01-16 2005-01-06 Harrison Dale A. Vacuum ultraviolet referencing reflectometer
US20050036143A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2005-02-17 Nanometrics Incorporated Reference calibration of metrology instrument
US20060001885A1 (en) * 2004-04-05 2006-01-05 Hertzsch Albrecht E Method and device for quantitative determination of the optical quality of a transparent material
US7026626B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-04-11 Metrosol, Inc. Semiconductor processing techniques utilizing vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer
US7067818B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-06-27 Metrosol, Inc. Vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer system and method
US7072050B2 (en) * 1999-12-13 2006-07-04 Ebara Corporation Substrate film thickness measurement method, substrate film thickness measurement apparatus and substrate processing apparatus
US7126131B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-10-24 Metrosol, Inc. Broad band referencing reflectometer
US20070181795A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Phillip Walsh Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
US20070182970A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Harrison Dale A Method and apparatus for performing highly accurate thin film measurements
US20070181793A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Harrison Dale A Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of VUV reflectometer
US20070215801A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-09-20 Phillip Walsh Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement

Family Cites Families (46)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4040750A (en) * 1976-05-28 1977-08-09 The United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Real time reflectometer
JPS62239027A (en) * 1986-04-11 1987-10-19 Ulvac Corp Azimuth angle correcting method for photometric type polarized light analyzing device
JPH0224502A (en) * 1988-07-12 1990-01-26 Dainippon Screen Mfg Co Ltd Film-thickness measuring method
US5128549A (en) * 1990-03-30 1992-07-07 Beckman Instruments, Inc. Stray radiation compensation
US5805285A (en) * 1992-09-18 1998-09-08 J.A. Woollam Co. Inc. Multiple order dispersive optics system and method of use
US5388909A (en) * 1993-09-16 1995-02-14 Johnson; Shane R. Optical apparatus and method for measuring temperature of a substrate material with a temperature dependent band gap
AU5367696A (en) * 1995-03-20 1996-10-08 Kansas State University Research Foundation Ellipsometric microscope
DE19545178B4 (en) * 1995-12-04 2008-04-10 Berthold Gmbh & Co. Kg spectral detector
US6195163B1 (en) * 1996-02-05 2001-02-27 Micron Technology, Inc. Reflectance method for evaluating the surface characteristics of opaque materials
US6052401A (en) * 1996-06-12 2000-04-18 Rutgers, The State University Electron beam irradiation of gases and light source using the same
GB9616853D0 (en) * 1996-08-10 1996-09-25 Vorgem Limited An improved thickness monitor
KR100238215B1 (en) * 1996-11-13 2000-01-15 윤종용 Instrument for analyzing of wafer surface and method for analyzing of wafer surface using the same
JPH10160572A (en) 1996-12-02 1998-06-19 Nikon Corp Spectrophotometer for ultraviolet region
US5867276A (en) * 1997-03-07 1999-02-02 Bio-Rad Laboratories, Inc. Method for broad wavelength scatterometry
EP1012571A1 (en) 1997-07-11 2000-06-28 Therma-Wave Inc. An apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US6129807A (en) * 1997-10-06 2000-10-10 Applied Materials, Inc. Apparatus for monitoring processing of a substrate
US6483580B1 (en) * 1998-03-06 2002-11-19 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corporation Spectroscopic scatterometer system
JPH11352057A (en) * 1998-04-27 1999-12-24 Perkin Elmer Corp:The Spectrum meter device and integrated spectrum meter device
US6361646B1 (en) * 1998-06-08 2002-03-26 Speedfam-Ipec Corporation Method and apparatus for endpoint detection for chemical mechanical polishing
US6265033B1 (en) * 1998-09-11 2001-07-24 Donald Bennett Hilliard Method for optically coupled vapor deposition
CN2430682Y (en) 1999-11-18 2001-05-16 金钦汉 High sensitive photometer
US6340602B1 (en) * 1999-12-10 2002-01-22 Sensys Instruments Method of measuring meso-scale structures on wafers
EP1257781A4 (en) * 2000-01-26 2006-12-13 Timbre Tech Inc Caching of intra-layer calculations for rapid rigorous coupled-wave analyses
US7026165B2 (en) * 2000-01-31 2006-04-11 The University Of Montana Calibration-free optical chemical sensors
US6572951B2 (en) * 2000-03-31 2003-06-03 Nippon Paper Industries Co., Ltd. Printing sheet
JP4372314B2 (en) * 2000-06-21 2009-11-25 大塚電子株式会社 Spectrum measuring device
US6665075B2 (en) * 2000-11-14 2003-12-16 Wm. Marshurice University Interferometric imaging system and method
WO2002040970A1 (en) * 2000-11-15 2002-05-23 Real Time Metrology, Inc. Optical method and apparatus for inspecting large area planar objects
EP1387181A1 (en) * 2000-12-12 2004-02-04 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Radio-wave arrival-direction estimating apparatus and directional variable transceiver
US6721052B2 (en) * 2000-12-20 2004-04-13 Kla-Technologies Corporation Systems for measuring periodic structures
US6433878B1 (en) * 2001-01-29 2002-08-13 Timbre Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for the determination of mask rules using scatterometry
US6556303B1 (en) * 2001-07-10 2003-04-29 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. Scattered signal collection using strobed technique
US6801309B1 (en) * 2001-10-16 2004-10-05 Therma-Wave, Inc. Detector array with scattered light correction
US6608690B2 (en) * 2001-12-04 2003-08-19 Timbre Technologies, Inc. Optical profilometry of additional-material deviations in a periodic grating
JP2003202266A (en) 2002-01-04 2003-07-18 Canon Inc Vacuum ultraviolet spectral measuring device
JP2003232681A (en) 2002-02-07 2003-08-22 Hitachi High-Technologies Corp Spectrophotometer
US6713775B2 (en) * 2002-06-21 2004-03-30 Lexmark International, Inc. Method to correct for sensitivity variation of media sensors
JP3703447B2 (en) * 2002-09-06 2005-10-05 キヤノン株式会社 Differential exhaust system and exposure apparatus
US20080246951A1 (en) * 2007-04-09 2008-10-09 Phillip Walsh Method and system for using reflectometry below deep ultra-violet (DUV) wavelengths for measuring properties of diffracting or scattering structures on substrate work-pieces
US7224471B2 (en) * 2003-10-28 2007-05-29 Timbre Technologies, Inc. Azimuthal scanning of a structure formed on a semiconductor wafer
US7282703B2 (en) 2004-08-11 2007-10-16 Metrosol, Inc. Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
US7643666B2 (en) * 2006-08-08 2010-01-05 Asml Netherlands B.V. Method and apparatus for angular-resolved spectroscopic lithography characterization
US7684037B2 (en) * 2007-02-27 2010-03-23 Metrosol, Inc. Spectrometer with collimated input light
US7485869B2 (en) * 2007-02-27 2009-02-03 Metrosol, Inc. Prism spectrometer
US7579601B2 (en) * 2007-02-27 2009-08-25 Metrosol, Inc. Spectrometer with moveable detector element
US8066738B2 (en) * 2008-03-31 2011-11-29 Playtex Products, Inc. Pacifier

Patent Citations (96)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3091154A (en) * 1961-01-06 1963-05-28 Barnes Eng Co Reflectometer
US3160752A (en) * 1963-02-19 1964-12-08 Harold E Bennett Reflectometer for measuring surface finishes
US3572951A (en) * 1968-10-29 1971-03-30 Us Army Single mirror normal incidence reflectometer
US3825347A (en) * 1970-08-07 1974-07-23 Max Planck Gesellschaft Apparatus for determining a substance by an optical radiation
US3751643A (en) * 1972-05-23 1973-08-07 Ibm System for performing spectral analyses under computer control
US4029419A (en) * 1975-10-10 1977-06-14 International Business Machines Corporation Textile color analyzer calibration
US4368983A (en) * 1980-11-13 1983-01-18 The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Absolute reflectometer
US4645349A (en) * 1984-09-21 1987-02-24 O R C Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Method of measuring film thickness
US5182618A (en) * 1985-11-27 1993-01-26 Aimo Heinonen Reflectometric method of measurement and apparatus for realizing the method
US4729657A (en) * 1986-06-23 1988-03-08 Miles Laboratories, Inc. Method of calibrating reflectance measuring devices
US4899055A (en) * 1988-05-12 1990-02-06 Tencor Instruments Thin film thickness measuring method
US4984894A (en) * 1988-08-17 1991-01-15 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US5042949A (en) * 1989-03-17 1991-08-27 Greenberg Jeffrey S Optical profiler for films and substrates
US5045704A (en) * 1990-02-01 1991-09-03 Nanometrics Incorporated Method for determining absolute reflectance of a material in the ultraviolet range
USRE34783E (en) * 1990-02-01 1994-11-08 Nanometrics Incorporated Method for determining absolute reflectance of a material in the ultraviolet range
US5251006A (en) * 1991-03-07 1993-10-05 Nirsystems Incorporated Automatic spectrophotometer calibration system
US5241366A (en) * 1992-03-04 1993-08-31 Tencor Instruments Thin film thickness monitor
US5486701A (en) * 1992-06-16 1996-01-23 Prometrix Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring reflectance in two wavelength bands to enable determination of thin film thickness
US5747813A (en) * 1992-06-16 1998-05-05 Kla-Tencop. Corporation Broadband microspectro-reflectometer
US5357448A (en) * 1993-02-02 1994-10-18 Quad/Tech, Inc. Method and apparatus for controlling the printing of an image having a plurality of printed colors
US5452091A (en) * 1993-03-22 1995-09-19 Nanometrics Incorporated Scatter correction in reflectivity measurements
US5440141A (en) * 1993-08-20 1995-08-08 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of measuring a thickness of a multilayered sample using ultraviolet light and light with wavelengths longer than ultraviolet
US5493401A (en) * 1993-09-20 1996-02-20 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of measuring film thicknesses
US5781304A (en) * 1994-09-19 1998-07-14 Textron Systems Corporation Laser ultrasonics-based material analysis system and method
US5608526A (en) * 1995-01-19 1997-03-04 Tencor Instruments Focused beam spectroscopic ellipsometry method and system
US5607800A (en) * 1995-02-15 1997-03-04 Lucent Technologies Inc. Method and arrangement for characterizing micro-size patterns
US5581350A (en) * 1995-06-06 1996-12-03 Tencor Instruments Method and system for calibrating an ellipsometer
US5686993A (en) * 1995-07-18 1997-11-11 Dainippon Screen Mfg. Co., Ltd. Method of and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US5784167A (en) * 1996-12-03 1998-07-21 United Microelectronics Corp. Method of measuring thickness of a multi-layers film
US5771094A (en) * 1997-01-29 1998-06-23 Kla-Tencor Corporation Film measurement system with improved calibration
US6934025B2 (en) * 1997-07-11 2005-08-23 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US5798837A (en) * 1997-07-11 1998-08-25 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US5900939A (en) * 1997-07-11 1999-05-04 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US6411385B2 (en) * 1997-07-11 2002-06-25 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US6304326B1 (en) * 1997-07-11 2001-10-16 Therma-Wave, Inc. Thin film optical measurement system and method with calibrating ellipsometer
US5880831A (en) * 1997-12-09 1999-03-09 N & K Technology, Inc. Reflectance spectrophotometric apparatus with optical relay
US6128085A (en) * 1997-12-09 2000-10-03 N & K Technology, Inc. Reflectance spectroscopic apparatus with toroidal mirrors
US5991022A (en) * 1997-12-09 1999-11-23 N&K Technology, Inc. Reflectance spectrophotometric apparatus with toroidal mirrors
US6184529B1 (en) * 1998-01-28 2001-02-06 Lockheed Martin Corporation Methods and apparatus for performing scene based uniformity correction in imaging systems
US20020154302A1 (en) * 1998-01-29 2002-10-24 Allan Rosencwaig Apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US6417921B2 (en) * 1998-01-29 2002-07-09 Therma-Wave, Inc. Apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US6278519B1 (en) * 1998-01-29 2001-08-21 Therma-Wave, Inc. Apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US6297880B1 (en) * 1998-01-29 2001-10-02 Therma-Wave, Inc. Apparatus for analyzing multi-layer thin film stacks on semiconductors
US5917594A (en) * 1998-04-08 1999-06-29 Kla-Tencor Corporation Spectroscopic measurement system using an off-axis spherical mirror and refractive elements
US6181427B1 (en) * 1998-07-10 2001-01-30 Nanometrics Incorporated Compact optical reflectometer system
US6414302B1 (en) * 1998-08-11 2002-07-02 Interface Studies Inc High photon energy range reflected light characterization of solids
US6630673B2 (en) * 1998-11-23 2003-10-07 Abbott Laboratories Non-invasive sensor capable of determining optical parameters in a sample having multiple layers
US6734968B1 (en) * 1999-02-09 2004-05-11 Haiming Wang System for analyzing surface characteristics with self-calibrating capability
US6184984B1 (en) * 1999-02-09 2001-02-06 Kla-Tencor Corporation System for measuring polarimetric spectrum and other properties of a sample
US6313466B1 (en) * 1999-05-12 2001-11-06 Philips Electronics North America Corp. Method for determining nitrogen concentration in a film of nitrided oxide material
US6392756B1 (en) * 1999-06-18 2002-05-21 N&K Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for optically determining physical parameters of thin films deposited on a complex substrate
US20010055118A1 (en) * 1999-12-02 2001-12-27 Bernd Nawracala Self-calibrating measuring setup for interference spectroscopy
US6485872B1 (en) * 1999-12-03 2002-11-26 Mks Instruments, Inc. Method and apparatus for measuring the composition and other properties of thin films utilizing infrared radiation
US6657737B2 (en) * 1999-12-13 2003-12-02 Ebara Corporation Method and apparatus for measuring film thickness
US7072050B2 (en) * 1999-12-13 2006-07-04 Ebara Corporation Substrate film thickness measurement method, substrate film thickness measurement apparatus and substrate processing apparatus
US6091485A (en) * 1999-12-15 2000-07-18 N & K Technology, Inc. Method and apparatus for optically determining physical parameters of underlayers
US6261853B1 (en) * 2000-02-07 2001-07-17 Therma-Wave, Inc. Method and apparatus for preparing semiconductor wafers for measurement
US6987832B2 (en) * 2000-03-16 2006-01-17 Kla-Tencor Technologies Corp. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US20040218717A1 (en) * 2000-03-16 2004-11-04 Koppel Louis N Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US6768785B2 (en) * 2000-03-16 2004-07-27 Therma-Wave, Inc. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US6453006B1 (en) * 2000-03-16 2002-09-17 Therma-Wave, Inc. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US20040052330A1 (en) * 2000-03-16 2004-03-18 Koppel Louis N. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US20020110218A1 (en) * 2000-03-16 2002-08-15 Koppel Louis N. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US6643354B2 (en) * 2000-03-16 2003-11-04 Therma-Wave, Inc. Calibration and alignment of X-ray reflectometric systems
US20020030826A1 (en) * 2000-07-06 2002-03-14 Chalmers Scott A. Method and apparatus for high-speed thickness mapping of patterned thin films
US6765676B1 (en) * 2000-08-30 2004-07-20 N & K Technology, Inc. Simultaneous compensation of source and detector drift in optical systems
US6710865B2 (en) * 2000-09-14 2004-03-23 N&K Technology, Inc. Method of inferring optical parameters outside of a measurement spectral range
US20020180986A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Mehrdad Nikoonahad Methods and systems for determining a critical dimension, a presence of defects, and a thin film characteristic of a specimen
US20020180985A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining at least one characteristic of defects on at least two sides of a specimen
US20020182760A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining a presence of macro defects and overlay of a specimen
US20020179867A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 John Fielden Methods and systems for determining flatness, a presence of defects, and a thin film characteristic of a specimen
US20020180961A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 Dan Wack Methods and systems for determining an adhesion characteristic and a thickness of a specimen
US20030011786A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2003-01-16 Ady Levy Methods and systems for determining overlay and flatness of a specimen
US20020190207A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-19 Ady Levy Methods and systems for determining a characteristic of micro defects on a specimen
US20020179864A1 (en) * 2000-09-20 2002-12-05 John Fielden Methods and systems for determining a thin film characteristic and an electrical property of a specimen
US6549279B2 (en) * 2001-04-09 2003-04-15 Speedfam-Ipec Corporation Method and apparatus for optical endpoint calibration in CMP
US20020149774A1 (en) * 2001-04-11 2002-10-17 Mcaninch Jeffrey E. Purge system for optical metrology tool
US6525829B1 (en) * 2001-05-25 2003-02-25 Novellus Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for in-situ measurement of thickness of copper oxide film using optical reflectivity
US20030071996A1 (en) * 2001-10-16 2003-04-17 Wang David Y. Measurement system with separate optimized beam paths
US20040032593A1 (en) * 2002-08-13 2004-02-19 Lam Research Corporation Process endpoint detection method using broadband reflectometry
US20040150820A1 (en) * 2002-11-26 2004-08-05 Mehrdad Nikoonahad Optical system for measuring samples using short wavelength radiation
US7126131B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-10-24 Metrosol, Inc. Broad band referencing reflectometer
US7271394B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2007-09-18 Metrosol, Inc. Vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer having collimated beam
US7394551B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2008-07-01 Metrosol, Inc. Vacuum ultraviolet referencing reflectometer
US7026626B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-04-11 Metrosol, Inc. Semiconductor processing techniques utilizing vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer
US20070030488A1 (en) * 2003-01-16 2007-02-08 Metrosol, Inc. Broad band referencing reflectometer
US7189973B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2007-03-13 Metrosol, Inc. Vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer integrated with processing system
US7067818B2 (en) * 2003-01-16 2006-06-27 Metrosol, Inc. Vacuum ultraviolet reflectometer system and method
US20080042071A1 (en) * 2003-01-16 2008-02-21 Metrosol, Inc. Broad band referencing reflectometer
US20050002037A1 (en) * 2003-01-16 2005-01-06 Harrison Dale A. Vacuum ultraviolet referencing reflectometer
US20050036143A1 (en) * 2003-08-15 2005-02-17 Nanometrics Incorporated Reference calibration of metrology instrument
US20060001885A1 (en) * 2004-04-05 2006-01-05 Hertzsch Albrecht E Method and device for quantitative determination of the optical quality of a transparent material
US20070215801A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-09-20 Phillip Walsh Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
US20070181793A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Harrison Dale A Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of VUV reflectometer
US20070182970A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Harrison Dale A Method and apparatus for performing highly accurate thin film measurements
US20070181795A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-08-09 Phillip Walsh Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8248607B1 (en) * 2009-08-04 2012-08-21 J.A. Woollam Co., Inc. Empirical correction for spectroscopic ellipsometric measurements of rough or textured surfaces
US20160245743A1 (en) * 2015-02-19 2016-08-25 SCREEN Holdings Co., Ltd. Testing apparatus and testing method
EP3438645A4 (en) * 2016-03-30 2019-12-04 Osang Healthcare Co., Ltd. Check cassette, measurement device, system for compensating for light intensity of light source for measurement device, method for compensating for light intensity of light source for measurement device, and recording medium
US11555689B2 (en) * 2017-08-22 2023-01-17 Kla-Tencor Corporation Measuring thin films on grating and bandgap on grating

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US7948631B2 (en) 2011-05-24
US20100171959A1 (en) 2010-07-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US7948631B2 (en) Method and apparatus for using multiple relative reflectance measurements to determine properties of a sample using vacuum ultra violet wavelengths
US8119991B2 (en) Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of VUV reflectometer
US7951672B2 (en) Measurement and control of strained devices
US7663097B2 (en) Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
US7522294B2 (en) Measuring a process parameter of a semiconductor fabrication process using optical metrology
US7282703B2 (en) Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
US7511265B2 (en) Method and apparatus for accurate calibration of a reflectometer by using a relative reflectance measurement
JP2009536354A (en) A method and apparatus for precisely calibrating a reflectometer using a specific reflectivity measurement method
US7271901B2 (en) Thin-film characteristic measuring method using spectroellipsometer
US7570353B2 (en) Fabrication and test methods and systems
JP3878027B2 (en) Polarization analysis method and optical film thickness measuring apparatus
US20070182970A1 (en) Method and apparatus for performing highly accurate thin film measurements
US7394539B2 (en) Method and apparatus for improved ellipsometric measurement of ultrathin films
Likhachev Efficient thin-film stack characterization using parametric sensitivity analysis for spectroscopic ellipsometry in semiconductor device fabrication
Woollam et al. Variable angle spectroscopic ellipsometry in the vacuum ultraviolet
Hilfiker et al. Spectroscopic ellipsometry for process applications
Luttmann et al. Optical properties of Cd1− x Mg x Te epitaxial layers: A variable‐angle spectroscopic ellipsometry study
Franke et al. Quantitative analysis of infrared reflection spectra from phosphosilicate glass films
McGahan et al. Combined spectroscopic ellipsometry and reflectometry for advanced semiconductor fabrication metrology
JP3983093B2 (en) Composition determination method for polycrystalline compound semiconductor using spectroscopic ellipsometer
Woollam et al. Metrology standards with ellipsometers
Shivaprasad et al. Sensitivity of the silicon layer thickness in SOI process in the UV regime
Solomon et al. Advanced process control in semiconductor manufacturing
Chen et al. Low-k n&k variation impact on CD accuracy of scatterometry
Blayo et al. New Applications of Ellipsometry for Materials Characterization and VLSI Device Process Control

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: METROSOL, INC., TEXAS

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:WALSH, PHILLIP;REEL/FRAME:020621/0753

Effective date: 20080228

AS Assignment

Owner name: SILICON VALLEY BANK, CALIFORNIA

Free format text: SECURITY AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:METROSOL, INC.;REEL/FRAME:023510/0495

Effective date: 20091109

Owner name: SILICON VALLEY BANK,CALIFORNIA

Free format text: SECURITY AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:METROSOL, INC.;REEL/FRAME:023510/0495

Effective date: 20091109

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION

AS Assignment

Owner name: METROSOL, INC.,TEXAS

Free format text: RELEASE AND REASSIGNMENT OF PATENTS AND PATENT APPLICATIONS;ASSIGNOR:SILICON VALLEY BANK;REEL/FRAME:024103/0794

Effective date: 20100319

Owner name: METROSOL, INC., TEXAS

Free format text: RELEASE AND REASSIGNMENT OF PATENTS AND PATENT APPLICATIONS;ASSIGNOR:SILICON VALLEY BANK;REEL/FRAME:024103/0794

Effective date: 20100319

AS Assignment

Owner name: JORDAN VALLEY SEMICONDUCTORS LTD.,ISRAEL

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:METROSOL INC.;REEL/FRAME:024103/0802

Effective date: 20100318

Owner name: JORDAN VALLEY SEMICONDUCTORS LTD., ISRAEL

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:METROSOL INC.;REEL/FRAME:024103/0802

Effective date: 20100318