Close

Search

Search Menu
Photonics Media Photonics Marketplace Photonics Spectra BioPhotonics Vision Spectra Photonics Showcase Photonics ProdSpec Photonics Handbook

Precise Measuring Tool for Light Source Could Advance Chipmaking

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
ENSCHEDE, Netherlands, Sept. 19, 2023 — To improve the quality of microchips and make the chipmaking process more efficient, researchers at the University of Twente’s MESA+ Institute of Nanotechnology developed an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) broadband imaging spectrometer. The new spectrometer simultaneously measures the size and color of the light emitted by a plasma source.

The ability to measure the size and color of the light at the same time could improve a crucial step in chipmaking — lithography — by enabling lithography machines to make smaller, faster chips. To produce the microsize chips used in most electronic devices, lithography machines need precision-engineered lenses, mirrors, and light sources.

“Traditionally, we could only look at the amount of light produced, but to further improve the chipmaking process, we also want to study the colors of that light and the size of its source,” professor Muharrem Bayraktar said.

A plasma source for EUV light is produced by aiming lasers at metal droplets. To create microchips, the plasma source is directed at a silicon wafer via special sets of mirrors. “We want to make the plasma as small as possible,” Bayraktar said. “Too large and you ‘waste’ a lot of light because the mirrors cannot catch all the light.”

In addition to the size of the light source, the color that is emitted from the source can also affect the microchip-making process. “The plasma does not only emit extreme ultraviolet light, but also other colors,” Bayraktar said. The new spectrometry tool will make it possible to investigate the relationship between the size of the source and the color it emits, by allowing researchers to look at the size and color of the plasma source together.


To build the spectrometer, the team used a tapered zone plate that was matched to the dispersion of a transmission grating. The tapered zone plate enabled the researchers to manipulate the EUV light emitted from the plasma source, in order to precisely image the source.

The researchers used the transmission grating to disperse the light into individual colors. This allowed the researchers to measure each color separately.

The tapered zone plates were designed and fabricated in the 5- to 80-nm wavelength regime, with a spatial resolution of about 10 µm and a spectral resolution of about 0.8 nm.

The researchers benchmarked the imaging spectrometer with a solid tin, target laser-produced plasma source. They further showed that plane wave propagation simulations qualitatively matched the experimental results, confirming the device’s performance.

The research was published in Optics Letters (www.doi.org/10.1364/OL.496995).

Photonics.com
Sep 2023
GLOSSARY
optoelectronics
A sub-field of photonics that pertains to an electronic device that responds to optical power, emits or modifies optical radiation, or utilizes optical radiation for its internal operation. Any device that functions as an electrical-to-optical or optical-to-electrical transducer. Electro-optic often is used erroneously as a synonym.
spectrometry
The study and measurement of spectra and their components.
Research & TechnologyeducationEuropeUniversity of Twentespectroscopylasersultraviolet lightimagingintegrated photonicslight sourcesplasma light sourcesopticsoptoelectronicsTest & MeasurementlensesmirrorsWafersConsumersemiconductorslithographymicrochipsspectrometryindustrialphotonic integrated circuitsmanufacturing

back to top
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn YouTube RSS
©2023 Photonics Media, 100 West St., Pittsfield, MA, 01201 USA, [email protected]

Photonics Media, Laurin Publishing
We use cookies to improve user experience and analyze our website traffic as stated in our Privacy Policy. By using this website, you agree to the use of cookies unless you have disabled them.