Presentation
22 February 2021 Elucidating the radiation chemistry of prototypical tin-oxo resist with first-principles computations
Jonathan H. Ma, Patrick P. Naulleau, David Prendergast, Andrew Neureuther
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Metal-organic systems have shown great promise as EUV resists. They have demonstrated good sensitivity and etch resistance while maintaining high resolution and low line edge roughness, making them a potential pathway to modify the tradeoff between resolution, line edge roughness, and sensitivity common to organic chemically amplified resists. In particular, tin-based systems have attracted significant interest and the two known families of fab-ready metal organic resist are based on organotin compounds. Part of this interest derives from the high EUV absorption cross-section of tin, but an equally important driver is the unique chemistry of the element, which affords a multiplicity of coordination environments and a tin-carbon bond stable with respect to hydrolysis, yet sensitive to cleavage by ionizing radiation. Realizing the patterning potential promised by these empirical properties will require a better understanding of the fundamental chemistry behind them, and has already motived several academic and industrial investigations. In this contribution we continue our previous work to develop a deeper understanding of tin-carbon bond chemistry with quantum chemistry using the well-known Sn12 “football” cluster archetype. We demonstrate the consistency between our computations and experimental data. And then we move on to explore a more detailed description of ionization and electron attachment induced chemistry. Investigations of electronic structure would shed light on what chemical reactions can happen subsequently.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jonathan H. Ma, Patrick P. Naulleau, David Prendergast, and Andrew Neureuther "Elucidating the radiation chemistry of prototypical tin-oxo resist with first-principles computations", Proc. SPIE 11609, Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) Lithography XII, 116091B (22 February 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2588731
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KEYWORDS
Chemistry

Extreme ultraviolet

Line edge roughness

Etching

Ionization

Ionizing radiation

Metals

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