Paper
21 March 2007 Photoresist adhesion effect of resist reflow process
Joon-Min Park, Ji-Eun Lee, Moon-Seok Kim, Jung-Hun Kim, Jai-Soon Kim, Sung-Muk Lee, Jun-Tack Park, Chul-Kyu Bok, Seung-Chan Moon, Seung-Wook Park, Joo-Yoo Hong, Hye-Keun Oh
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Making a sub-100 nm contact hole pattern is one of the difficult issues in semiconductor process. Compared with another fabrication process, resist reflow process is a good method to obtain very high resolution contact hole. However it is not easy to predict the actual reflow result by simulation because very complex physics and/or chemistry are involved in resist reflow process. We must know accurate physical and chemical constant values and many fabrication variables for better prediction. We made resist reflow simulation tool to predict approximate resist reflow as functions of pitch, temperature, time, array, and so on. We were able to see the simulated top view, side view and the changed hole size. We used Navier-Stokes equation for resist reflow. We had varied the reflow time, temperature, surface tension, and 3-dimensional volume effect for old model. However the photoresist adhesion is another very important factor that was not included in the old model. So the adhesion effect was added on Navier-Stokes equation and found that there was a distinctive difference in reflowed resist profile and the contact hole width compared to the case of no adhesion effect.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Joon-Min Park, Ji-Eun Lee, Moon-Seok Kim, Jung-Hun Kim, Jai-Soon Kim, Sung-Muk Lee, Jun-Tack Park, Chul-Kyu Bok, Seung-Chan Moon, Seung-Wook Park, Joo-Yoo Hong, and Hye-Keun Oh "Photoresist adhesion effect of resist reflow process", Proc. SPIE 6519, Advances in Resist Materials and Processing Technology XXIV, 65193O (21 March 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.712498
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KEYWORDS
Photoresist processing

Photoresist materials

Glasses

Semiconductors

Thin films

Chemistry

Computer simulations

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