PROJECTION OBJECTIVE OF A MICROLITHOGRAPHIC PROJECTION EXPOSURE APPARATUS
A projection objective of a microlithographic projection exposure apparatus has a plurality of optical elements, for example lenses or mirrors. The objective furthermore includes an actuator for exerting a mechanical force that deforms a selected optical element of the projection objective. A manipulator modifies the spatial position of one of the optical elements as a function of the force exerted by the actuator.
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This is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/464,934, filed Aug. 16, 2006, which is a continuation of International Patent Application PCT/EP2005/000947, filed on Feb. 1, 2005 and claims priority of German Patent Application 10 2004 008 285.5 filed Feb. 20, 2004. The full disclosure of these earlier applications is incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a projection objective for microlithographic projection exposure apparatus, such as those used for the production of large-scale integrated electrical circuits and other microstructured components. The invention relates in particular to projection objectives in which at least one optical element can be deformed with the aid of an actuator. The invention furthermore relates to a method for correcting optical properties of such a projection objective.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The purpose of projection objectives in microlithographic projection exposure apparatus is to project a reduced image of structures contained in a mask onto a photosensitive layer, which is applied on a support. Very stringent requirements are placed on the imaging properties of the projection objectives owing to the small size of the structures to be image.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,388,823 assigned to the Applicant discloses a projection objective in which forces can be exerted on an optical element with the aid of actuators, which are distributed around the circumference of the optical element. These forces lead to bending of the optical element which, for example, may be a lens or a mirror. The bending does not affect the thickness profile of the optical element, or at least does not substantially affect it. In particular, astigmatic imaging errors can be corrected with such a bendable optical element.
It has however been found that the bending is not only accompanied by the desired corrective effect; rather, undesired impairment of the imaging properties of the projection objective can also occur. This applies in particular to optical elements which are isostatically mounted. Isostatic mounting means that the optical element is held merely at three mounting points offset by 120° along the circumference.
Such undesired impairment of the imaging properties, however, may also be caused by optical elements which are not bent but otherwise deformed in order to correct imaging errors, as is known per se in the prior art.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONIt is an object of the invention to provide a projection objective of a microlithographic projection exposure apparatus, in which such undesired impairment of the imaging due to deliberate deformations of optical elements is substantially avoided.
It is a further object of the invention to provide an improved method for correcting optical properties of a projection objective.
The first object is achieved by a projection objective comprising a plurality of optical elements and at least one actuator, by which a selected optical element of the projection objective can be deformed. According to the invention, the projection objective has at least one manipulator by which the spatial position of one of the optical elements can be modified preferably automatically as a function of a force exerted by at least one actuator.
With respect to the method, the object is achieved in such a projection objective in that the spatial position of one of the optical elements is modified as a function of a force exerted by the at least one actuator.
The invention is based on the discovery that, particularly when the relevant optical element is mounted only at relatively few points as is the case for instance with isostatic mounting, the actuators induce forces which lead not only to a deformation but also to a change in the spatial position of the optical element. The type of position change depends in particular on the points at which the optical element is held and where the forces generated by the actuators engage on the optical element. With isostatic mounting of the optical element in which three mounting points are provided offset by 120° along the circumference, for example, tilting of the optical element takes place about a transverse axis of the optical element when it is bent in a saddle fashion to correct astigmatism. With a different constellation of mounting points of the optical element and actuators engaging thereon, the position change may also consist in a translational displacement of the optical element in a plane perpendicular to the symmetry axis.
However, undesired position changes due to deformations can take place even when the optical element is mounted at very many points. The reasons for this are in general fabrication tolerances and mounting-induced asymmetries.
With the aid of the at least one manipulator according to the invention, it is possible to compensate for the aforementioned position changes of the optical element which lead to impairment of the imaging properties. A single manipulator is not sufficient for this in most cases, so that a plurality of manipulators are to be provided and their effects on the optical element should be appropriately tuned.
The at least one manipulator preferably acts on the selected optical element for which the undesired position change has occurred owing to the deformation. Nevertheless, it is also possible for an optical element other than the deformed optical element to be tilted, displaced or otherwise have its position changed with the aid of the at least one manipulator, so as to compensate for the effects which have been caused by the position change of the selected optical element owing to the deformation.
If both the at least one actuator, which can deform the optical element, and the at least one manipulator, which induces the position change, can be actuated fluidically i.e. hydraulically or pneumatically, then it is preferable for the at least one actuator and the at least one manipulator to be connected to a fluidic pressure system so that they can both be fluidically actuated simultaneously. Specifically, fluidic pressure systems provide the opportunity to make forces act simultaneously at different positions inside the system. With an appropriate design of the pressure system, it is then possible to induce an automatic position change with the at least one manipulator so that, when the at least one actuator is actuated, the at least one manipulator without its own additional control or regulation applies the required force which leads to the desired position change of the optical element.
One possibility for simultaneous actuation of the at least one actuator and the at least one manipulator consists in designing the pressure system so that changes in the fluid pressure applied to the actuator lead to corresponding changes in the fluid pressure applied to the manipulator. For example, this may be done by connecting the manipulator in parallel with the actuator in the pressure system.
In a particularly preferred configuration of the invention a resilient compensating element, whose deformations caused by pressure fluctuations can be transmitted via a transmission element to the at least one manipulator, is integrated into a pressure line leading to the at least one actuator. The manipulator will in this way be actuated not by changes in the fluid pressure in the pressure line, but mechanically via the transmission element which is coupled to the compensating element. The purpose of the resilient compensating element, which may for example be a kind of bellows, is to decouple the actuator from supply devices of the pressure system and the housing of the projection objective so that vibrations cannot be transmitted onto the selected optical element. Since pressure changes in such a compensating element lead to deformations and therefore to movements, a mechanical force which can be used for the position change of the one optical element with the aid of the at least one manipulator can be derived from the compensating element or the pressure line connected to it.
If such transmission of forces from the compensating element to the at least one manipulator is not provided, then it may be expedient to improve the decoupling of the pressure line from the optical element by integrating a plurality of resilient compensating elements in a pressure line, which are arranged relative to one another so that the deformation forces formed therein in the event of a pressure change mutually compensate least substantially. Deformation forces which act in the event of a pressure change in a compensating element cannot therefore be undesirably transmitted to the optical element. This force-free connection of the optical element to a supply device of the pressure system may also advantageously be used independently of the manipulators according to the invention.
Such an arrangement can be produced most simply if two compensating elements, connected together to a pressure feed line and together to a pressure discharge line, are arranged lying diametrically opposite each other. Merely one additional compensating element is required in such an arrangement.
The at least one manipulator itself may engage directly on the optical element or, alternatively, it may engage thereon via a mounting which contains the selected optical element. If the at least one manipulator engages on the mounting, then when the at least one manipulator is actuated this leads to a relative movement between the mounting and the optical element contained in it, on the one hand, and the housing of the objective on the other hand.
If the mounting is in turn supported in a frame, which is fixed relative to the housing of the objective, then the at least one manipulator may also engage on such a frame. In this way, the mounting of the optical element in the mounting is not affected by the at least one manipulator.
Instead of a fluidic pressure system, the at least one actuator and/or the at least one manipulator may of course also be actuated with the aid of other controlling elements. For example, precisely adjustable forces may be exerted with the aid of piezoelectric elements. In this case, it is generally necessary to provide a control or regulating device for driving the at least one actuator and/or the at least one manipulator.
Various features and advantages of the present invention may be more readily understood with reference to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing in which:
After passing through the reticle 11, projection light 14 indicated by dashes in
After reflection by the spherical mirror 20, the projection light 14 passes back through the lenses L4 and L3, the quarter-wave plate 18 and the lens L2, and strikes the polarisation-selective beam splitter layer 17. There, however, the projection light 14 is not reflected but transmitted since the polarisation of the projection light 14 has been rotated through 90° by the double transit through the quarter-wave plate 18. From the beam splitter cube 16, the projection light 14 travels via a plane mirror 21 into a purely dioptric parts 23 of the projection objective 10, in which refractive optical elements (not denoted in detail) are arranged along an optical axis indicated by 25.
The mounting units 22a, 22b, 22c are fastened on a frame 24 which, for example, may have a circularly round base shape. For the isostatic mounting described here, it is nevertheless also conceivable to use a triangular base shape as likewise known from the aforementioned EP 1 245 982 A2.
The frame 24 is fixed relative to a housing 28 of the projection objective 10 via three manipulators 26a, 26b and 26c, which are arranged at the vertices of an imaginary equilateral triangle. The manipulators 26a to 26c in the exemplary embodiment represented respectively comprise two hydraulically telescopable cylinders, so that the length of the manipulators 26a to 26c can be mechanically varied. With appropriate driving of the manipulators 26a to 26c, the frame 24 can be tilted relative to the housing 28 about any axis perpendicular to the optical axis 25 of the projection objective 10.
An actuator unit denoted overall by 30, by which the mirror 20 can be bent, is arranged on the lower side of the mirror 20. To this end, the actuator unit 30 comprises a plurality of individual actuators (not shown because they are known per se) which are arranged around the optical axis 25. The actuator unit 30 may be designed so that the individual actuators act on the mirror 20 from the circumference. Possible embodiments of an actuator unit 30 having a plurality of individual actuators can be found in DE 198 59 634 A1, which corresponds to U.S. Pat. No. 6,307,688, and DE 198 27 603 A1, which corresponds to U.S. Pat. No. 6,388,823.
In the exemplary embodiment represented, it is assumed that a second-order astigmatism can be corrected with the aid of the actuator unit 30. To this end, the individual actuators contained in the actuator unit 30 should engage on the mirror 20 so that the mirror 20 is bent in a saddle fashion owing to the bending moments thereby generated. This saddle-like bending is indicated in
In order to generate such saddle-like bending, the individual actuators of the actuator unit 30 may be arranged and actuated so that compressive forces in the direction of the optical axis 25 are generated at two points lying opposite each other at an angle of 180°, whereas oppositely directed forces act on the mirror 20 at two points respectively offset by angles of 90° thereto.
As can be seen clearly from
The tilting about the axis 34 is absorbed by the mounting units 22a to 22c which, to this end, may have resilient properties as described in EP 1 245 982 A2, which corresponds to US Pat. Appl. 2002/0176094 A1.
The three manipulators 26a to 26c are now driven so that the tilted symmetry axis 32 of the mirror 20 is returned to its setpoint position which is vertical in
In the mirror unit 119, it is not the frame 24 but only the mirror 20 which is correspondingly tilted in order to compensate for tilting movements due to bending. To this end, a manipulator 126a or 126b which can adjust the lengths of the three mounting units is respectively integrated into two mounting units 122a, 122b and a third mounting unit (concealed by the mounting unit 122b in
The mirror unit 219 represented in
The mirror unit 319 corresponds essentially to the mirror unit 19 as represented in
The hydraulic device 40 contains a controller 42 which, via valves (in a manner not represented in detail), controls the pressure of the hydraulic liquid which is used to actuate the individual actuators contained in the actuator unit 30 and the manipulators 26a, 26b, 26c. To this end, in the mirror unit 319, the four individual actuators contained in the actuator unit 30 are connected to the hydraulic device 40 via respectively independent first pressure lines 44a to 44d.
The hydraulic device 40 is furthermore connected via second pressure lines 46a, 46b and 46c to the manipulators 326a, 326b, 326c. A compensating element 48 in the form of a bellows is integrated into each of the first and second pressure lines 44a to 44d and 46a to 46c. The purpose of the compensating element is to decouple the hydraulic device 40 from the actuator unit 330 and the manipulators 326a to 326c so that vibrations, which are caused in the hydraulic device 40 by valves or pumps contained therein or by the projection objective housing 28 connected thereto, cannot be transmitted to the mirror 20 via the first and second pressure lines 44a to 44d and 46a to 46c.
The controller 42 of the hydraulic device 40 is designed so that actuation of the actuator unit 330 is accompanied by synchronous actuation of the manipulators 326a to 326c. To this end, the controller 42 accesses a stored table in which the setpoint excursions of the manipulators 326a to 326c, which are necessary so that the tilting of the mirror 20 due to the bending caused by the actuator unit 330 can be rectified again, are stored for a multiplicity of settings of the individual actuators contained in the actuator unit 330.
The mirror unit 419 differs from the mirror unit 319 shown in
In the mirror unit 519, only the manipulator 526b is actively configured. The other two manipulators 526a and 526c, on the other hand, are passively configured. This means that the manipulators 526a, 526c can in turn accomplish length changes only passively; an active length change, for example by varying an applied hydraulic pressure, is not possible.
The active manipulator 526b consists essentially of the upper arm of a lever mechanism 54, the lower arm 55 of which is coupled to a pressure line 56 which connects a pressure device (not shown) to an actuator unit 530.
When the pressure of the hydraulic liquid in the pressure line 56 increases in order to actuate the individual actuators contained in the actuator unit 530, this leads to an extension of the resilient compensating element 48 as indicated by a double arrow 58 in
If the tilting movement generated by manipulators is intended to be controllable independently of the actuator unit 30, as is the case in the mirror unit 319 according to
Since the compensating elements 48a, 48b lie symmetrically opposite each other, length changes of the compensating elements 48a, 48b as indicated by double arrows 72, 74 do not lead to a force in the longitudinal direction of the pressure line 44′ leading off from the second T-piece 70. The take-off through the second T-piece 70, lying between the two compensating elements 48a, 48b, thus induces a force equilibrium which prevents undesired controlling forces from propagating via the pressure line 44′ and an actuator unit and/or a manipulator to the mirror 20.
The above description of the preferred embodiments has been given by way of example. From the disclosure given, those skilled in the art will not only understand the present invention and its attendant advantages, but will also find apparent various changes and modifications to the structures and methods disclosed. The applicant seeks, therefore, to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the spirit and scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims, and equivalents thereof.
Claims
1. An objective, comprising:
- a) a plurality of optical elements,
- b) at least one actuator configured to exert a mechanical force that deforms a first optical element of the plurality of optical elements such that the first optical element is deformed and changes its spatial position, wherein a change of the spatial position of the first optical element causes an impairment of the imaging properties of the objective,
- c) at least one manipulator configured to modify the spatial position of a second optical element of the plurality of optical elements without deforming the second optical element when the manipulator is driven,
- d) a device adapted to drive the at least one manipulator such that the second optical element changes its spatial position in a way that reduces the impairment of the imaging properties,
- wherein the objective is designed to be used as projection objective of a microlithographic projection exposure apparatus.
2. The objective of claim 1, wherein the device is adapted to automatically modify the spatial position of the second optical element.
3. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator is configured to tilt the second optical element about an axis that is substantially perpendicular to a symmetry axis of the second optical element.
4. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator is configured to displace the second optical element in a plane that is substantially perpendicular to a symmetry axis of the second optical element.
5. The objective of claim 1, wherein the second optical element is the first optical element.
6. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one actuator is configured to be fluidically actuated.
7. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator is configured to be fluidically actuated.
8. The objective of claim 6, wherein the at least one manipulator is configured to be fluidically actuated, and wherein the at least one actuator and the at least one manipulator are connected to a fluidic pressure system which is configured to fluidically actuate the at least one actuator and the at least one manipulator simultaneously.
9. The objective of claim 8, wherein the fluidic pressure system is configured such that changes in the fluid pressure applied to the at least one actuator result in changes in the fluid pressure applied to the at least one manipulator.
10. The objective of claim 9, wherein the at least one manipulator is connected in series with the at least one actuator in the fluidic pressure system.
11. The objective of claim 1, wherein the device adapted to drive the at least one manipulator comprises a regulator configured to regulate spatial position changes of the second optical element as a function of the changes of the spatial position of the first optical element caused by the actuator.
12. The objective of claim 1, wherein the device adapted to drive the at least one manipulator comprises a controller configured to control the spatial position changes of the second optical element as a function of the changes of the spatial position of the first optical element caused by the actuator.
13. The objective of claim 6, further comprising a pressure line, which leads to the at least one actuator, and a resilient compensating element, which is integrated into the pressure line, wherein deformations of the compensating element caused by pressure fluctuations are transmitted via a transmission element to the at least one manipulator.
14. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator engages directly on the second optical element.
15. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator engages on a mounting containing the second optical element.
16. The objective of claim 1, wherein the at least one manipulator engages on a frame on which a mounting containing the second optical element is supported.
17. The objective of claim 6, comprising a pressure line, which leads to the at least one actuator, and a plurality of resilient compensating elements, which are integrated in the pressure line and are arranged relative to one another so that deformation forces in the compensating elements caused by pressure changes mutually compensate at least substantially.
18. The objective of claim 17, wherein two compensating elements are connected together to a pressure feed line and together to a pressure discharge line such that they are arranged diametrically opposite each other.
19. The objective of claim 1, wherein the first and second optical elements are mirrors.
20. An objective, comprising:
- a) a plurality of optical elements,
- b) at least one actuator configured to exert a mechanical force that deforms a first optical element of the plurality of optical elements,
- c) at least one manipulator configured to modify the spatial position of a second optical element of the plurality of optical elements when the manipulator is driven,
- d) a controller adapted to drive the at least one manipulator as a function of the forces exerted by the at least one actuator if the at least one actuator is actuated, wherein the objective is a projection objective designed to be used in a microlithographic projection exposure apparatus.
21. The objective of claim 20, wherein the controller is adapted to drive the at least one manipulator synchronously with an actuation of the at least one actuator.
22. The objective of claim 20, wherein the controller is in configured to be in communication with a look up table comprising a first set of data related to positions of the at least one manipulator and a second set of data related to forces exerted by the at least one actuator.
23. The objective of claim 20, wherein the first and second optical elements are mirrors.
Type: Application
Filed: May 18, 2009
Publication Date: Sep 10, 2009
Applicant: CARL ZEISS SMT AG (Oberkochen)
Inventor: Juergen Fischer (Heidenheim)
Application Number: 12/467,879
International Classification: G03B 27/54 (20060101);