Journal of Vacuum Science & Technology B, Vol.11, No.6, 2342-2345, 1993
Spatial-Phase-Locked Electron-Beam Lithography - Initial Test-Results
Earlier spatial-phase-locked e-beam lithography (SPLEBL) was proposed as a means of eliminating the well-known problem of feature placement precision in scanning electron-beam lithography. In SPLEBL, a grid with long-range spatial-phase coherence is created on a substrate (or on top of its resist coating) and this grid is used to feedback information on beam location to the control system. In initial tests a standard deviation (sigma) of 0.3 nm for phase-locking precision in one dimension was demonstrated, which represents the finest field stitching ever obtained with any lithographic method. In two dimensions (2D), sigma(x), sigma(y) = 0.6, 0.4 nm was obtained. Moire spatial-phase locking was also demonstrated in 2D. Two strategies for the global-fiducial grid appear feasible : plating base modulation and a thin film of holographically exposed photoresist on thin-film Al above the e-beam resist. Either would permit spatial-phase locking without exposure of resist.