ILLUMINATION OPTICS APPARATUS, EXPOSURE METHOD, EXPOSURE APPARATUS, AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURING ELECTRONIC DEVICE
An illumination optical apparatus which constantly controls a plurality of polarization states with high accuracy. An illumination optical system, which illuminates a pattern surface of a mask with illumination light, includes a polarization optical system and a depolarizer. The polarization optical system includes a half wavelength plate and PBS, which varies a polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a predetermined polarization direction. The depolarizer is arranged toward the mask from the polarization optical system and varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the polarization optical system.
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This application claims priority to, and the benefit of, U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/287,497, filed on Oct. 8, 2008, issued as U.S. Pat. No. 8,300,213, on Oct. 30, 2012, which claims priority to, and the benefit of, U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/996,033, filed on Oct. 25, 2007, which claims priority to, and the benefit of, Japan Patent Application No. 2007-267256, filed on Oct. 12, 2007. All of these priority applications are incorporated herein by reference in their respective entireties.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention relates to illumination optical apparatus for illuminating an irradiated surface with illumination light in a plurality of polarization states, exposure techniques using such an illumination optical apparatus, and methods for manufacturing an electronic device with such an exposure technique.
A lithography process for manufacturing electronic devices (including micro-devices) such as a semiconductor device or a liquid-crystal display device uses an exposure apparatus such as a batch-exposure type projection-exposure apparatus, like a stepper, or a scanning-exposure type projection-exposure apparatus, like a scanning stepper, to transfer a pattern of a mask (reticle or photomask) onto each shot region of a wafer (or glass plate). In such an exposure apparatus, exposure wavelengths have been shortened to increase the resolution. Excimer laser light sources, such as a KrF excimer layer (wavelength, 248 nm) and ArF excimer laser (wavelength, 193 nm) are nowadays being used as exposure light sources. Further, to increase the resolution, polarization illumination is used to set the polarization state of illumination to a predetermined linear polarization in accordance with the pattern of a transfer subject. An excimer laser light source emits substantially linear polarization laser light and is thus optimal for use in polarization illumination.
During an actual application, depending on the pattern of a transfer subject, the polarization direction of illumination light may be set to a random and non-polarized state. Therefore, an exposure apparatus using an excimer laser light source as an exposure light source has been proposed in which a polarization control unit includes a rotatable half-wavelength plate and a quarter-wavelength plate, which are arranged in an illumination-optical system, and an optical member for setting a non-polarized state, which is freely positionable in and out of an optical path. The rotation of the wavelength plates and positioning of the optical member in the polarization-control unit are combined to control various polarization states of illumination light that illuminate a mask. For example, refer to International Patent Publication No. 2004/051717.
In the prior art, the polarization-control unit is formed under the assumption that the laser light from the excimer laser light is in a predetermined polarization state, for example, in linear polarization in a predetermined direction. However, changes may occur in the actual laser light emitted from a laser light source such as an excimer laser light source due to time-dependent change or other reasons. Further, when a light-transmission optical system or the like extends from the excimer laser light source to the polarization-control unit, and the optical path to the polarization-control unit is long, the polarization state of the laser light may slightly change from the excimer laser light source to the polarization-control unit.
In this manner, when the polarization state of the laser light that enters the polarization-control unit changes from the designed state, the polarization state of the laser light (illumination light) emitted from the polarization-control unit may deviate from the ideal polarization state. This may lower the resolution.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONAccordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide illumination-optical apparatus for illuminating an irradiated surface with illumination light in a plurality of polarization states, exposure techniques using such an illumination-optical apparatus, and techniques for manufacturing an electronic device with such exposure technique that constantly control the polarization state of illumination light with high accuracy.
One aspect of the present invention is an illumination-optical apparatus for illuminating an irradiated plane with illumination light. The illumination-optical apparatus includes a variable linear polarization mechanism arranged in an optical path of the illumination light and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a polarization direction. A variable polarization-state mechanism is arranged in the optical path downstream from the variable linear polarization mechanism and varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the variable linear polarization mechanism.
The present invention provides a variable polarization-state mechanism with linear polarization light polarized in a predetermined direction that is set by a variable linear polarization mechanism even when, for example, the polarization state of illumination light from an external light source or the like slightly changes due to the time-dependent change or the like. Further, light having a plurality of polarization states can be generated by supplying the variable polarization state mechanism with linear polarization light beams in different polarization directions. Accordingly, the polarization state can always be controlled with high accuracy.
One example of an embodiment of the present invention will now be discussed with reference to the drawings.
The exposure apparatus of
The illumination light IL, which includes substantially linear polarization laser light of substantially parallel light beams emitted in the Z direction from the light source 1, has a rectangular cross-section elongated in the X direction and enters a beam expander 2 (shaping optical system), which includes two lenses 2a and 2b having refractive powers in the ZY plane. The beam expander enlarges the cross-sectional shape of the illumination light IL in the Y direction so as to shape light having a predetermined cross-section.
The illumination light IL emitted from the beam expander 2 is reflected in the Y direction by an optical path deflection mirror 3. Then, the illumination light IL sequentially travels along the optical axis AXI of the illumination-optical system ILS and sequentially through a half-wavelength plate 5, a prism type polarization beam splitter (hereafter referred to as a PBS) 4, and a depolarizer 6 to enter one of diffractive optical elements (DOEs) 7A, 7B, and 7C. The half-wavelength plate 5, PBS 4, and depolarizer 6 form a polarization-control unit.
Returning to
In
In
The illumination light IL emitted from the diffractive optical elements (7A etc.) forms illumination regions (illumination fields) having predetermine shapes, such as a circular shape or a dipolar shape, on the rear focal plate of the zoom lens 9 (and ultimately, the incident surface of the micro-lens array 11). In this manner, the diffractive optical element (7A, etc.) and the zoom lens 9 form an illumination-region formation means. The size of the entire illumination region varies in accordance with the focal length of the zoom lens 9. The lens systems 9a and 9b of the zoom lens 9 are each driven along the optical axis AXI based on a command from the illumination-control system 21 by drive units 24 and 26 including, for example, slide mechanisms. This controls the focal length of the zoom lens to a predetermined value.
In the axicon system 10, conical surfaces of the first prism 10a and second prism 10b are arranged facing toward each other. The second prism 10b is driven along the optical axis AXI based on a command from the illumination-control system 21 by a drive unit 25 including, for example, a slide mechanism. In this manner, the interval between the prisms 10a and 10b along the optical axis AX1 is controlled to control the radial position of the light beam emitted from the diffractive optical element (7A, etc.) on the incident surface of the micro-lens array 11 with respect to the optical axis AXI. Accordingly, when using, for example, dipolar illumination regions 32A and 32B shown in
The micro-lens array 11 is an optical device formed by a matrix of multiple densely arranged microscopic lenses having positive refractive power. Each microscopic lens of the micro-lens array 11 includes a rectangular cross-section, which is in similarity with the shape of the illumination field that is to be formed on the mask M (consequently, the shape of the exposure region that is to be formed on a wafer W). Generally, a micro-lens array is formed by conducting an etching process on a parallel planar glass plate to produce a micro-lens group. The micro-lenses in the micro-lens array are smaller than the lens elements of a normal fly's-eye lens. To clarify the drawing, the micro-lens array 11 is shown with much fewer lesser micro-lenses than actually present.
Accordingly, the light beams entering the micro-lens array 11 is divided two-dimensionally by the plurality of micro-lenses so as to form many secondary light sources at rear focal planes of the micro-lenses. In this manner, on a pupil plane (illumination pupil plane) 12 of the illumination-optical system ILS, which serves as the rear focal plane of the micro-lens array 11, secondary light sources having substantially the same light-intensity distribution as the illumination fields are formed by the light beams entering the micro-lens array 11 (for example, circular regions or the dipolar illumination regions 32A and 32B, etc.), that is, secondary light sources are formed by substantially planar light sources about the optical axis AXI.
In
The illumination light IL that has traveled through the pattern of the mask M proceeds to a projection-optical system PL and forms an image of the mask pattern of a wafer W to which resist (photosensitive material) is applied. In this manner, the pattern of the mask M is sequentially exposed onto each shot region of the wafer W by performing batch exposure or scanning exposure while two-dimensionally drive-controlling the wafer W on a plane (XY plane) that is orthogonal to the optical axis of the projection-optical system PL (parallel to Z axis).
In batch exposure, a mask pattern is batch-exposed onto the shot regions of a wafer through a so-called step-and-repeat technique. In this case, the illumination regions on the mask M have a rectangular shape that is close to a square, and the cross-section of each micro-lens in the micro-lens array 11 has a rectangular shape that is close to a square. In scanning exposure, a mask pattern is exposed onto the shot regions of the wafer W while moving the mask M and wafer W relative to the projection-optical system PL. In this case, the illumination region on the mask M has a rectangular shape in which the ratio of the short side to the long side is, for example, 1:3. The micro-lenses of the micro-lens array 11 each have a similar rectangular cross-sectional shape.
The structure and operation of the polarization-control unit, which includes the half-wavelength plate 5, the PBS 4, and the depolarizer 6 in the illumination-optical system ILS of
Referring to
In this embodiment, for example, the drive unit 22 shown in
In this embodiment, the light source 1 of
Further, the PBS 4 may be manufactured by applying a polarization-beam-splitter film to the bonding surfaces of two prisms, which have cross-sectional shapes of a regular triangle and are formed by optical materials such as silica and fluorite (CaF2) that transmit Arf excimer laser (wavelength, 193 nm), and then bonding the two prisms together. In the illumination light entering the half-wavelength plate 5, the PBS 4 transmits illumination light of P-polarization components (light that is linearly polarized parallel to the incident surface) toward the depolarizer 6 and reflects illumination light IL of S-polarization components (light that is linearly polarized orthogonal to the incident surface). For example, in this embodiment, the half-wavelength plate 5 has rotation angle θ, whereas the PBS 4 has rotation angle 2θ. Thus, when the rotation angle of the half-wavelength plate 5 is 45° and 22.5°, the rotation angle of the PBS 4 is 90° and 45°. Even if the polarization state of the illumination light IL entering the half-wavelength plate 5 changes, the employment of the PBS 4 supplies the depolarizer 6, which is in a latter stage, with illumination light linearly constantly polarized in the desired direction. This controls polarization with high accuracy.
The depolarizer 6 shown in
Referring to
When a pattern on the mask M of
As a result, in
Further, the dipolar illumination regions 32A and 32B of the illumination pupil plane 12 shown in
When a pattern on the mask M of
As a result, in
When a pattern on the mask M of
As a result, in
The exposure apparatus of this embodiment controls the rotation angles of the half-wavelength plate 5 and the PBS 4 in the illumination-optical system ILS to set the polarization state of the illumination light that illuminates the mask M to a linearly polarized state in which the polarization direction is the X direction, linearly polarized state in which the polarization direction is the Y direction, and non-polarized state in which the polarization directions are random. Accordingly, the polarization state of the illumination light is easily optimized in accordance with the pattern that is subject to transfer. Thus, various types of patterns can be exposed to the wafer W with a high resolution.
It is desirable that the PBS 4 have a complete or high extinction ratio. However, as long as the transmission rate of the PBS 4, which is for linear polarization in a polarization direction generally perpendicular to a desired polarization direction, is 10% or less, a pattern can be exposed without decreasing the contrast of a wafer pattern for a great extent.
This embodiment has the advantages described below.
(1) In an illumination-optical apparatus for illuminating a pattern surface (mask surface, irradiated surface), the illumination-optical system ILS of
(2) Further, as shown in
(3) The depolarizer 6 varies the illumination light IL3 (or IL4) in the first polarization state to the illumination light IL4 (or IL6), which is linearly polarized in the same polarization direction (third polarization state), and varies the illumination light IL7 in the second polarization state to the illumination light IL8, which is non-polarized (fourth polarization state). This generates linearly polarized illumination light in two perpendicular directions, or non-polarized illumination light, without lowering the usage efficiency of the incident illumination light IL.
(4) In
(5) In
(6) In this case, the half-wavelength plate 5 is rotated about the axis 5Y in accordance with the illumination conditions of the mask surface. This enables the control of polarization while maintaining a high illumination-light usage efficiency.
(7) The PBS 4 is rotatable about the axis 4Y (second rotation axis) and rotated in cooperation with the half-wavelength plate 5. The axis 4Y is equivalent to the optical axis AXI of the illumination-optical system ILS but may be parallel to the optical axis AX1. In this manner, rotation of the PBS 4 in cooperation with the half-wavelength plate 5 keeps the usage efficiency of the illumination light IL high and accurately sets the polarization state of the illumination light on the mask surface to either linearly polarized in two perpendicular direction or non-polarized.
(8) When the rotation angle of the half-wavelength plate 5 is θ, the PBS 4 is rotated by 2θ in cooperation with the half-wavelength plate 5. Generally, when the rotation angle of the half-wavelength plate 5 is θ, the polarization direction of the incident illumination light is rotated by 2θ. Accordingly, whenever the incident illumination light IL is linearly polarized, the rotation angle of the PBS 4 is two times greater than the rotation angle of the half-wavelength plate 5. Thus, linearly polarized light that differs in the polarization direction by 2θ from the incident illumination light IL is generated with a significantly low luminance loss.
(9) In
(10) The rotation axis about which the half-wavelength plate 5 and the PBS 4 rotate may be the axis 5Y or axis 4Y of
(11) The depolarizer 6 includes the double-refraction crystal prism 6a. Accordingly, a component for generating light in a non-polarized state can easily be manufactured just by forming the crystal prism 6a to have a wedge shape.
As shown in
In a modification shown in
(12) In
(13) Instead of the half-wavelength plate 5, as shown in
(14) Further, in the illumination optical system ILS of
(15) When it is difficult to form a polarization beam splitter film on the PBS 4 for ArF excimer laser light and the manufacturing cost of the PBS 4 is high, an optical member 35 as shown in
As shown in
It is desirable that the optical member 35 (here, for example, ten to twenty diagonally stacked glass plates 34) have a complete or high extinction ratio. However, as long as the transmission rate of the optical member 35, which is for linear polarization in a polarization direction generally perpendicular to a desired polarization direction, is 10% or less, a pattern can be exposed without decreasing the contrast of a wafer pattern for a great extent.
(16) The illumination-optical system ILS shown in
In lieu of the micro-lens array 11, which is a wave-surface divisional type integrator, a rod-type integrator can be used as an inner-surface reflection type optical integrator. In this case, referring to
Further, a relay optical system for forming on the mask M an image of an illumination field stop, which is arranged on or near an emission-end surface of the rod-type integrator. In such a structure, a secondary light source is formed on a pupil plane of the relay optical system (virtual image of the secondary light source is formed near the incidence end of the rod-type integrator). Further, a relay optical system for guiding light from the rod-type integrator to the mask M serves as a light-guide optical system.
(17) The illumination-optical system ILS further includes a relay optical system (13, 15) and the condenser-optical system 17 (light-guide optical system) for guiding light from the micro-lens array to the mask surface. This superimposes the light from the optical integrator and irradiates the mask M.
(18) The illumination-optical system ILS includes a light-intensity distribution formation means composed of the diffractive optical elements 7A to 7C, etc., freely positionable in and out of an optical path between the depolarizer 6 and the mask surface and forming illumination light having a light-intensity distribution of a predetermined shape. If the usage efficiency of the illumination light IL becomes decreased, an aperture-stop system including aperture stops of various shapes may be arranged on the illumination pupil plane in lieu of the diffractive optical elements.
(19) The embodiment of
(20) In an exposure method for exposing a pattern onto a wafer W (photosensitive substrate) with the projection-optical system PL, the exposure method of the above-described embodiment includes an illumination step for illuminating a mask surface with the illumination-optical system ILS, and an exposure step for exposing a pattern of a mask on a mask surface onto the wafer W.
Further, the exposure apparatus of the above-described embodiment includes the illumination-optical system ILS, the light source 1 for supplying illumination light that illuminates the mask M arranged on a mask surface, and a projection-optical system PL for exposing a pattern of the mask M onto the mask surface.
In this case, polarization can be controlled with high accuracy. Thus, a fine pattern can be transferred onto the wafer W with a high resolution.
The present invention may be applied to a liquid-immersion type exposure apparatus disclosed in, for example, International Patent Publication No. 99/49504 or proximity-type exposure apparatus etc.
Further, when manufacturing an electronic device (micro-device) such as a semiconductor device using the exposure apparatus of the above-described embodiment, as shown in
In other words, this device-manufacturing method includes a lithography process and exposes a photosensitive substrate with the exposure apparatus of the above embodiment in the lithography process. Since polarization can be controlled with high accuracy to transfer a fine pattern onto the photosensitive substrate with a high resolution, an electronic device with sophisticated functions can be manufactured with high accuracy.
The application of the present invention is not limited to a semiconductor-device manufacturing process. The present invention may be widely applied to, for example, a process for manufacturing a liquid-crystal display device, a plasma display, or the like and a process for manufacturing various types of devices (electronic devices) such as an imaging device (CMOS type device, CCD, etc.), a micro-machine, a microelectromechanical system (MEMS), a thin-film magnetic head, a DNA chip, or the like.
Further, the present invention was described above using an exposure apparatus that includes an illumination-optical apparatus as an example. However, it is apparent that the present invention may be applied to a typical illumination-optical system that illuminates an irradiated plane other than a mask.
Claims
1. An illumination optical apparatus for illuminating a plane with illumination light, the illumination optical apparatus comprising:
- a variable linear polarization mechanism arranged in an optical path of the illumination light and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a polarization direction; and
- a variable polarization state mechanism arranged in the optical path downstream from the variable linear polarization mechanism and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the variable linear polarization mechanism.
2. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 1, wherein the variable linear polarization mechanism includes:
- a variable linear polarization element which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to substantially a first polarization state or a second polarization state; and
- a linear polarization extraction element which selectively transmits linearly polarized light having the first polarization state or linearly polarized light having the second polarization state.
3. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the variable polarization state mechanism varies the first polarization state to a third polarization state, and varies the second polarization state to a fourth polarization state.
4. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein:
- the linear polarization extraction element is arranged between the variable linear polarization element and the plane; and
- the variable polarization state mechanism is arranged between the linear polarization extraction element and the plane.
5. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the variable linear polarization element is rotatable about a first rotation axis.
6. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the variable linear polarization element is rotated about the first rotation axis in accordance with illumination conditions for illuminating the plane.
7. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 5, wherein the linear polarization extraction element is rotatable about a second rotation axis and rotated in cooperation with the variable linear polarization element.
8. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 7, wherein when expressing the rotation angle of the variable linear polarization element as θ, the linear polarization extraction element is rotated by angle 2θ in cooperation with the variable linear polarization element.
9. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 7, wherein the variable linear polarization element and the linear polarization extraction element are rotatable about the same rotation axis.
10. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 9, wherein the rotation axis includes the first rotation axis or the second rotation axis.
11. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein:
- the variable polarization state mechanism includes an optical member having a double refraction property; and
- the optical member is rotatable about a third rotation axis.
12. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the variable linear polarization element includes a half wavelength plate.
13. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the variable linear polarization element includes an optically active element.
14. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the variable linear polarization element includes at least two optically active elements which are switchable in the optical path of the illumination light.
15. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the linear polarization extraction element includes a polarization beam splitter.
16. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 2, wherein the linear polarization extraction element includes a plurality of stacked planar glass plates.
17. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising an optical integrator which is arranged in an optical path between the variable polarization state mechanism and the plane and which uniformly illuminates the plane with the illumination light.
18. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 17, further comprising:
- a light guide optical system which is arranged in an optical path between the optical integrator and the plane and which guides light from the optical integrator to the plane.
19. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising:
- a light intensity distribution formation means freely positionable in and out of an optical path between the variable polarization state mechanism and the plane for forming the illumination light including a light intensity distribution of a predetermined shape.
20. The illumination optical apparatus according to claim 1, further comprising: a light source which supplies the illumination light.
21. A method for exposing a pattern onto a photosensitive substrate using a projection optical system, the method comprising:
- illuminating an irradiated plane defined on a mask with illumination light using an illumination optical apparatus, the illumination optical apparatus including a variable linear polarization mechanism arranged in an optical path of the illumination light and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a polarization direction, and a variable polarization state mechanism arranged in the optical path downstream from the variable linear polarization mechanism and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the variable linear polarization mechanism; and
- exposing a pattern of the mask in the irradiated plane onto the photosensitive substrate.
22. An exposure apparatus comprising:
- an illumination optical apparatus including a variable linear polarization mechanism arranged in an optical path of illumination light and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a polarization direction, and a variable polarization state mechanism arranged in the optical path downstream from the variable linear polarization mechanism and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the variable linear polarization mechanism;
- a light source which supplies the illumination light that illuminates an irradiated plane defined on a mask; and
- a projection optical system which exposes a pattern of the mask onto the photosensitive substrate.
23. A method for manufacturing an electronic device, the method comprising:
- directing illumination light from a light source to illuminate a plane defined on a mask including a pattern for the electronic device;
- transferring the pattern onto a photosensitive substrate by a lithography process using an exposure apparatus, the exposure apparatus including an illumination optical apparatus including a variable linear polarization mechanism arranged in an optical path of illumination light and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light to form a linear polarization state having a polarization direction, a variable polarization state mechanism arranged in the optical path downstream from the variable linear polarization mechanism and which varies the polarization state of the illumination light emitted from the variable linear polarization mechanism; and
- directing illumination light from the illumination optical apparatus to the photosensitive substrate using a projection optical system.
Type: Application
Filed: Oct 30, 2012
Publication Date: May 9, 2013
Applicant: Nikon Corporation (Chiyoda-ku)
Inventor: Nikon Corporation (Chiyoda-ku)
Application Number: 13/664,185
International Classification: G03F 7/20 (20060101); F21V 9/14 (20060101);