Infrared Laser Confocal Microscopy for Microelectronic Manufacturing
Thursday, May 24th, 2007Microelectronics and semiconductor wafer manufacturing are believed to be among the fastest evolving technology industries in the world today. Wafer sizes typically are 200 mm to 300 mm while critical dimensions are shrinking to 0.09 um and smaller in size. As the size of discrete devices continues to be reduced while device density increases, the need for fast, accurate, and very flexible metrology and inspection tools in the microelectronics industry increases. Back in the early 1980s, semiconductor inspection was performed primarily by brightfield optical microscopes and with automated detection tools. The adaptation of automated detection tools led to the systematic control of increasingly smaller defects. The smallest detectable defect using these automated tools fell to below the 0.30-micron mark during the 1990s. As semiconductor design rules decreased, it then pushed the requirements for defect inspection into the domain of the Scanning Electron Microscope or the SEM. These instruments were able to easily resolved defects of 0.25 um and smaller. However, the increase in resolution came at a price in speed and flexibility. Likewise, SEM inspection took longer due to time consuming manual sample preparation. The delay in the manufacturing environment was often too long and as a result, a bridge tool was developed that was based on confocal imaging. (more…)