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Timestamp: 2014-09-22 21:43:33
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Patent US7386829 - Method of fabricating a photomask - Google PatentsSearch Images Maps Play YouTube News Gmail Drive More »Sign in<nobr>Advanced Patent Search</nobr>PatentsA method of fabricating a photomask automatically generates a microscopic supplementary pattern by selective sizing to reduce a product cost and by which a precise line width is provided in a manner of decreasing unnecessary microscopic supplementary patterns to raise precision of a photomask pattern....http://www.google.com/patents/US7386829?utm_source=gb-gplus-sharePatent US7386829 - Method of fabricating a photomaskAdvanced Patent SearchPublication numberUS7386829 B2Publication typeGrantApplication numberUS 11/024,658Publication dateJun 10, 2008Filing dateDec 30, 2004Priority dateDec 31, 2003Fee statusPaidAlso published asUS20050142460Publication number024658, 11024658, US 7386829 B2, US 7386829B2, US-B2-7386829, US7386829 B2, US7386829B2InventorsJun Seok LeeOriginal AssigneeDongbu Electronics Co., Ltd.Export CitationBiBTeX, EndNote, RefManPatent Citations (6), Referenced by (10), Classifications (9), Legal Events (3) External Links: USPTO, USPTO Assignment, EspacenetMethod of fabricating a photomaskUS 7386829 B2Abstract A method of fabricating a photomask automatically generates a microscopic supplementary pattern by selective sizing to reduce a product cost and by which a precise line width is provided in a manner of decreasing unnecessary microscopic supplementary patterns to raise precision of a photomask pattern. The method includes the steps of selectively carrying out a sizing on a main pattern to form a microscopic supplementary pattern with a difference of the corresponding sizing and selectively removing the microscopic supplementary pattern.
1. A method of fabricating a photomask, comprising steps of:
(a) selectively carrying out a same sizing of a common feature distributed throughout an original main pattern in occupied parts and a remaining part, said sizing being consistent with a predetermined design rule, and said remaining part being void of said common feature and having a two dimensional area that is greater in each dimension than a system resolution;
(b) selectively carrying out another sizing with the common feature being increased by a predetermined amount, and representing any overlapping areas as a single predetermined amount;
(c) subtracting a result of step (b) and step (a) and adding the original main pattern to a subtraction result;
(d) selectively identifying the remaining part as including the common feature so as to remove the remaining part; and
(e) subtracting a resulting pattern formed in step (d) from a result of step (c) to form a resulting photomask, wherein
said resulting photomask having a resulting remaining part that is two dimensional and a shortest dimension thereof being less than a system resolution.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the common feature is contact hole and the remaining part is a shield part.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the method is a computer implemented method.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein step (b) is performed by expressing a result as A1=bias(x, A0), where x is a predetermined fraction and A0 is original contact hole data.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein x=0.220.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein step (c) is represented as A3=(A2−A1)+A0, where A2=bias(0.270, A0).
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the resulting photomask is represented as A5=(A4−A3), where A4=bias(0.900, A0). Description
The present invention relates to a method of fabricating a photomask, and more particularly, to a method of fabricating a microscopic hole photomask, in which line width patterning is appropriately compensated by a supplementary pattern and by which a precise line width can be provided.
Generally, a photomask pattern directly affects a precision of a real pattern formed on a semiconductor substrate. If an optical proximity effect of the photomask pattern fails to be correctly taken into consideration, a pattern line width is distorted, unlike the intended exposure of a photolithography process. Hence, line width linearity is shortened to degrade semiconductor device characteristics.
In a method of fabricating a microscopic photomask according to a related art, even if design line widths, as shown in FIG. 1, are equal to each other regardless of a density of contact hole patterns, the optical proximity effect showing a light interference difference due to exposure intensity occurs in a real exposure, as shown in FIG. 2. Specifically, the difference in resolution is severe for a particular hole or holes in a contact hole mask. For instance, a hole 1B in a dense area of a mask is formed with greater proximity to adjacent holes than a more isolated hole, such as hole 1A which is formed in a sparse area. Hence, the quality of a hole that can be made in photoresist for hole A in the sparse area considerably differs (in a negative way) from a hole B formed in a more dense area in resolution.
However, since the related art method needs a supplementary pattern for controlling the optical proximity effect to overcome such a problem, time is wasted in fabricating the photomask and the number of the supplementary patterns increases in the photomask. Hence, the precision of the photomask pattern is lowered and is not able to yield precise critical dimensions.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION Accordingly, the present invention is directed to a method of fabricating a photomask that substantially obviates the above-identified and other problems due to limitations and disadvantages of the related art.
An object of the present invention is to provide a method of fabricating a photomask, in which a microscopic supplementary pattern is automatically generated by selective sizing to reduce a product cost and by which a precise line width is provided in a manner of decreasing unnecessary microscopic supplementary patterns to raise the precision of a photomask pattern.
To achieve these objects and other advantages and in accordance with the purposes of the invention, as embodied and broadly described herein, a method of fabricating a photomask according to the present invention includes the steps of selectively carrying out a sizing on all hypotenuses of a main pattern to form a microscopic supplementary pattern with a difference of the corresponding sizing and selectively removing the microscopic supplementary pattern.
Preferably, the main pattern comprises an opening for a contact hole and a shield part.
In another aspect of the present invention, a method of fabricating a photomask includes a first step of selectively carrying out a same sizing on all hypotenuses of a main pattern to adjust a size of the main pattern, a second step of selectively carrying out the same sizing on all the hypotenuses of the main pattern to adjust the size of the main pattern differently, a third step of subtracting a pattern of a small line width from a pattern of a large line width among the patterns formed in the first and second steps and adding an original main pattern thereto, a fourth step of selectively carrying out the same sizing on all the hypotenuses of the main pattern to enlarge the size of the main pattern into an overall mask applying area, and a fifth step of subtracting the pattern formed in the third step from the main pattern enlarged into the overall mask applying area.
Preferably, the main pattern includes an opening for a contact hole and a shield part.
FIG. 1 is a layout of a photomask according to a related art;
FIG. 2 is a resolution photograph of photoresist using a photomask according to a related art;
FIGS. 3 to 10 are layouts for explaining a method of fabricating a photomask according to the present invention; and
FIG. 11 is a layout of holes after exposure using a photomask according to the present invention.
First of all, in the present invention, a microscopic supplementary pattern is separated from a main pattern to leave a prescribed distance in-between to fabricate a photomask having no line width difference between holes in sparse and dense areas. Specifically, the microscopic supplementary pattern is inserted while the distance between the main and microscopic supplementary patterns is fixed.
The microscopic supplementary pattern is a microscopic pattern having a critical dimension below a solution limit. The microscopic pattern exists on the photomask but fails to be formed on a semiconductor substrate after exposure. The pattern resolution is determined by Rayleigh's Equation of �R(resolution)=k*λ/N.A., where k, λ, and N.A. are constant, illumination system wavelength, and lens aperture of illumination system, respectively�. If k, λ, and N.A. are set to 0.5, 0.248, and 0.65, respectively, R=0.19 μm. In case of independently applying a microscopic pattern having a line width smaller than 0.19 μm, light physically passes through the photomask but fails to be imaged in photoresist.
A method of fabricating a photomask according to the present invention is explained as follows.
FIGS. 3 to 10 are layouts for explaining a method of fabricating a photomask according to the present invention.
Referring to FIG. 3, sizing is carried out on all hypotenuses according to a design rule, such as a contact hole on a design drawing having contact holes 1 according to a 0.18 μm design rule and a remaining part 3, except the extended hole areas 4 is reduced. In doing so, the contact holes 1 and 4 are openings and the remaining part 3 is a shield part. The extended hole areas 4 define areas of higher contact hole density than that of contact holes 1, which are isolated. What is to be noticed is the relatively large 2-dimensional areas of the remaining parts 3. The present inventor recognized that by having the large 2-dimensional areas of the remaining parts, is symptomatic of more isolated areas, which pose a challenge for making high precision contact holes due to the difficulty in realizing the required resolution as discussed above. In a more ideal situation, the remaining parts would have one dimension that is smaller than the resolution of the optical system. Visually, a better layout would be one where a large percentage of the remaining parts 3 would appear as long, narrow lines, have a width smaller than the system resolution.
Referring to FIG. 4, another sizing operation is carried out on the original contact hole 1 to enlarge it by 0.05 μm by the same method discussed in reference to FIG. 3. In doing so, a sizing part 5 is selectively applied to a border of parts 4 and 1 enlarging them by 0.05 μm. If however the enlarged parts would encroach an area of an adjacent part, the enlarged parts are made to overlap one another.
Next mask data of FIG. 3 is subtracted from the mask data of FIG. 4, and then the original contact hole information is added to the difference.
FIG. 5 shows a result of adding the original contact hole 1 to the data resulting from subtraction of the mask data of FIG. 3 from the mask data of FIG. 4, in which a part to be realized as a pattern corresponds to the original contact hole 1 and the 0.05 μm-enlarged sizing part 5.
While the mask data is subtracted in the above manner, resizing is carried out yet again so as to avoid leaving large two-dimensional shield parts (where �large� refers to a dimension larger than the system's resolution). FIG. 6 shows a result of the resizing carried out so as to avoid leaving any of the shield parts 3, in which all �remaining parts� appear as an opening. In doing so, the shield parts 3 and 6 prior to the overall sizing and the original contact hole 1 are overlapped to simultaneously present the enlarged parts 4 & 5 & 6 and 5 & 6. Namely, the remaining shield parts 3 and 6 are transformed so as to be viewed as opening areas.
Subsequently, by the subtraction of mask data of FIG. 5 from mask data of FIG. 6, a photomask is prepared. FIG. 7 shows a real drawing of a final photomask resulting from subtracting mask data of FIG. 5 from mask data of FIG. 6. Namely, a microscopic supplementary pattern is automatically arranged in the vicinity of the isolated contact hole according to the design rule to contribute to patterning of a contact hole mask. The microscopic supplementary pattern 7 is unable to substantially provide a pattern to photoresist on a semiconductor substrate due to a resolution limit of an exposure machine.
The above-explained method of fabricating the microscopic hole photomask according to the present invention can be expressed by Bool Equation as follows.
A1=bias(0.220, A0), where A0 is original contact hole data,A2=bias(0.270, A0), A3=(A2−A1)+A0,A4=bias(0.900, A0), and A5=(A4−A3).
Namely, A1, A2, A3, A4, and A5 correspond to the sizings in FIG. 3, FIG. 4, FIG. 5, FIG. 6, and FIG. 7, respectively.
In case of removing an unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern existing in a vertical direction, sizing by +0.015 μm is performed on the result of FIG. 7 and sizing is performed again by (−)0.015 μm. Hence, the unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern 7 is removed as shown in FIG. 8. FIG. 9 shows a result after removing the unnecessary supplementary pattern 7, in which the unnecessary supplementary pattern 7 is turned into the shield part. Hence, it is able to reduce a size of the unnecessary supplementary pattern.
In case of removing an unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern existing in a vertical and horizontal direction, sizing by +0.030 μm is performed on the result of FIG. 7 and sizing is performed again by (−)0.030 μm. Hence, the unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern 10 is removed as shown in FIG. 10.
Using the unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern removing method, one is able to perform contact hole patterning with minimum supplementary patterns only. A process of removing the unnecessary microscopic supplementary patterns is expressed by Bool Equations as follows.
A6=Over_Under_Size(0.015, A5) A7=Over_Under_Size(0.030, A5)
In the above equations, A6 corresponds to a result of �0.015 μm sizing and A7 corresponds to a result of �0.030 μm sizing by taking A5 as a reference.
Comparing exposure results of the application of the photomask of the present invention to the related art photomask in FIG. 1 under the same condition, the related art hole image 1B, as shown in FIG. 11, is more irregular in hole formation than the hole image 1C of the present invention.
Accordingly, the present invention automatically generates the microscopic supplementary pattern by the selective sizing to avoid the separate microscopic supplementary pattern formation, thereby fabricating the microscopic hole photomask economically.
And, the present invention determines the separated distance of the microscopic supplementary pattern by accurate automatic distance calculation, thereby providing the accurate effect of the microscopic supplementary pattern.
Moreover, the present invention automatically forms the microscopic supplementary pattern in the vicinity of the contact hole to reduce a mask fabrication time considerably, thereby fabricating the microscopic hole photomask economically.
Moreover, the present invention considerably reduces the size of the microscopic supplementary pattern by the selective sizing, thereby facilitating the data base processing.
Furthermore, the present invention removes the unnecessary microscopic supplementary pattern to raise the precision of the mask pattern and the depth of a focus of a contact hole, thereby forming the precise line width. Calculations may be performed on a personal computer or workstation configured to process the Bool equations as discussed above, and in view of the present teachings.
This application claims the benefit of the Korean patent application No. P2003-0101353 filed on Dec. 31, 2003, the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference.
Patent CitationsCited PatentFiling datePublication dateApplicantTitleUS6794118 *Aug 7, 2001Sep 21, 2004Renesas Technology Corp.Process for fabricating semiconductor integrated circuit device, and exposing system and mask inspecting method to be used in the processUS20020166107 *Nov 5, 2001Nov 7, 2002Luigi CapodieciMethod and apparatus for generating masks utilized in conjunction with dipole illumination techniquesUS20020177050 *May 23, 2002Nov 28, 2002Nec CorporationPhotoresists for semiconductor integrated circuit device; photolithography; miniaturizationUS20040003368 *Mar 25, 2003Jan 1, 2004Hsu Stephen D.Method and apparatus for performing rule-based gate shrink utilizing dipole illuminationUS20050044513 *Jul 9, 2004Feb 24, 2005Robles Juan Andres TorresContrast based resolution enhancement for photolithographic processingUS20070214448 *May 3, 2007Sep 13, 2007Asml Masktools B.V.Orientation dependent shielding for use with dipole illumination techniques* Cited by examinerReferenced byCiting PatentFiling datePublication dateApplicantTitleUS8225237Nov 27, 2008Jul 17, 2012United Microelectronics Corp.Method to determine process windowUS8423923Jul 20, 2011Apr 16, 2013United Microelectronics Corp.Optical proximity correction methodUS8486587Dec 20, 2011Jul 16, 2013United Microelectronics Corp.Method for correcting layout pattern and method for manufacturing photomaskUS8627242Jan 30, 2013Jan 7, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Method for making photomask layoutUS8661372Feb 4, 2013Feb 25, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Optical proximity correction methodUS8701052Jan 23, 2013Apr 15, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Method of optical proximity correction in combination with double patterning techniqueUS8741507Jan 16, 2013Jun 3, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Method for separating photomask patternUS8745547Jul 11, 2013Jun 3, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Method for making photomask layoutUS8806391Jul 31, 2012Aug 12, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Method of optical proximity correction according to complexity of mask patternUS8810785Aug 26, 2011Aug 19, 2014United Microelectronics Corp.Mask inspecting methodClassifications U.S. Classification716/53, 430/5International ClassificationG06F17/50, G03F1/00, G03F9/00, H01L21/027, G03F1/14Cooperative ClassificationG03F1/144European ClassificationG03F1/14GLegal EventsDateCodeEventDescriptionSep 20, 2011FPAYFee paymentYear of fee payment: 4May 23, 2006ASAssignmentOwner name: DONGBU ELECTRONICS CO., LTD., KOREA, REPUBLIC OFFree format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:DONGBU-ANAM SEMICONDUCTOR, INC.;REEL/FRAME:017663/0468Effective date: 20060324Owner name: DONGBU ELECTRONICS CO., LTD.,KOREA, REPUBLIC OFFree format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:DONGBU-ANAM SEMICONDUCTOR, INC.;US-ASSIGNMENT DATABASE UPDATED:20100302;REEL/FRAME:17663/468Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:DONGBU-ANAM SEMICONDUCTOR, INC.;US-ASSIGNMENT DATABASE UPDATED:20100323;REEL/FRAME:17663/468Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:DONGBU-ANAM SEMICONDUCTOR, INC.;US-ASSIGNMENT DATABASE UPDATED:20100420;REEL/FRAME:17663/468Free format text: CHANGE OF NAME;ASSIGNOR:DONGBU-ANAM SEMICONDUCTOR, INC.;US-ASSIGNMENT DATABASE UPDATED:20100504;REEL/FRAME:17663/468Dec 30, 2004ASAssignmentOwner name: DONGBUANAM SEMICONDUCTOR INC., KOREA, REPUBLIC OFFree format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:LEE, JUN SEOK;REEL/FRAME:016148/0788Effective date: 20041221RotateOriginal ImageGoogle Home - Sitemap - USPTO Bulk Downloads - Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - About Google Patents - Send FeedbackData provided by IFI CLAIMS Patent Services©2012 Google