학술논문

Low-Energy Plasma Source for Clean Vacuum Environments: EUV Lithography and Optical Mirrors Cleaning
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. Plasma Science, IEEE Transactions on. 49(10):3132-3141 Oct, 2021
Subject
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Ions
Plasmas
Radio frequency
Ultraviolet sources
Electrodes
Cleaning
Mirrors
Electron beams
gas discharge devices
low-temperature plasmas
nuclear and plasma sciences
plasma applications
plasma devices
plasma materials processing
plasma properties
plasmas
Language
ISSN
0093-3813
1939-9375
Abstract
Plasma cleaning of extreme ultra-violet (EUV) optics for the semiconductor industry requires atomic-level precision. Low-energy ions and neutrals can be highly beneficial for this purpose. However, ion energies in many industrial capacitively or inductively coupled plasmas may be too high for atomic precision processing so that ions can cause sputtering and re-deposition of materials and produce vacuum system contamination. We discuss two sources that create low-energy ions: a capacitively coupled (CCP) plasma source operating at several tens of MHz and an electron beam gas ionization source. The goal here is to minimize the contamination by limiting the ion impact energy to a few tens of electron-volts. Ion energy and flux measurements on a grounded surface are characterized with a compact retarding field ion spectrometer. Plasma-induced contamination is quantified using X-ray photo-electron spectroscopy (XPS). Low ion energy plasma sources introducing little surface contamination may be interesting for cleaning and accelerated testing in EUV lithography (EUVL)-related research and for cleaning of front-end optical mirrors in fusion reactor diagnostics.