Abstract:
An exposure apparatus which operates based on a set of parameters contained in a parameter file. The apparatus includes an acquiring section which acquires a first parameter file containing a first set of parameters, a converting section which converts the first parameter file acquired by the acquiring section into a second parameter file containing a second set of parameters, the second set of parameters corresponding to a version of a software used in the exposure apparatus, and a setting section which sets a value of a parameter contained in the second parameter file obtained by the converting section, based on a configuration file which describes a value of the parameter contained in the second parameter file.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention relates to an exposure apparatus and a control method therefor, and a semiconductor device manufacturing method and, more particularly, to an exposure apparatus which operates on the basis of a parameter file containing a set of parameters and a control method therefor, and a manufacturing method of manufacturing a semiconductor device using an exposure apparatus controlled by the control method. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     When a device pattern is to be projected and exposed to a wafer by a semiconductor exposure apparatus, a recipe (parameter file) for controlling the exposure process must be prepared for each device pattern. A recipe is formed from 1,000 or more parameters including layout information, alignment information, and information about exposure. Exposure apparatuses of different models require different recipes, as a matter of course. Even exposure apparatuses of the same model require difference recipes depending on the version of software. 
     For these reasons, a recipe for an exposing apparatus cannot be directly used for another exposure apparatus. The recipe needs to be corrected in accordance with the function and the like of another exposure apparatus. Conventionally, to use a recipe for an exposure apparatus in another exposure apparatus, the number of parameters in the recipe is increased or decreased in accordance with the function and the like of another exposure apparatus using an automatic converter, thereby reconstructing the recipe. 
     However, the conventional automatic recipe converter has only a function of increasing or decreasing the number of parameters. The converter cannot automatically correct the values of the generated parameters to be adapted for the function and the like of another exposure apparatus. Hence, conventionally, to convert a recipe (parameter file) for an exposure apparatus into the recipe generated by the automatic converter must be manually corrected using a recipe editor to be adapted for another exposure apparatus. Such manual correction is very time consuming. In addition, an operation error may occur. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention has been made in consideration of the above situation, and has as its object, for example, in an exposure apparatus which operates on the basis of a parameter file containing a set of parameters and a control method therefor, to automatically convert a parameter file for another apparatus or a parameter file, which is not adapted for an apparatus into a parameter file adapted for the apparatus. 
     According to the present invention, there is provided an exposure apparatus which operates on the basis of a parameter file containing a set of parameters, comprising an acquiring section which converts the parameter file acquired by the acquiring section into a parameter file containing parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus, and a changing section which changes values of parameters contained in the parameter file converted by the converting section, on the basis of a configuration file which describes the parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus and appropriate values of the parameters. 
     According to a preferred aspect of the present invention, the converting section preferably deletes some parameters contained in the parameter file acquired by the acquiring section and/or adds parameters to the parameter file acquired by the acquiring section to generate the parameter file containing the parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus. 
     According to a preferred aspect of the present invention, the acquiring section acquires the parameter file from e.g., an external device (e.g., another exposure apparatus or a managing apparatus for managing the parameter file). Alternatively, the acquiring section may acquire the parameter file from a memory medium. 
     According to the second aspect of the present invention, there is provided a control method for an exposure apparatus which operates on the basis of a parameter file containing a set of parameters, comprising the acquiring step of acquiring a parameter file, the converting step of converting the parameter file acquired in the acquiring step into a parameter file containing parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus, and the changing step of changing values of parameters contained in the parameter file converted in the converting step, on the basis of a configuration file which describes the parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus and appropriate values of the parameters. 
     According to the third aspect of the present invention, there is provided a semiconductor device manufacturing method comprising the application step of applying a photosensitive material to a substrate, the exposure step of transferring a pattern onto the substrate to which the photosensitive material is applied in the application step using an exposure apparatus controlled by the above control method, and the developing step of developing the photosensitive material on the substrate to which the pattern is transferred in the exposure step. 
     According to the fourth aspect of the present invention, there is provided a program which runs on a computer to generate a parameter file that contains a set of parameters and is used in an exposure apparatus, comprising the acquiring step of acquiring a parameter file, the converting step of converting the parameter file containing parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus, and the changing step of changing values of parameters contained in the parameter file converted in the converting step, on the basis of a configuration file which describes the parameters necessary for controlling the exposure apparatus and appropriate values of the parameters. The computer is, e.g., a computer configured to control the exposure apparatus. 
     Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like reference characters designate the same or similar parts throughout the figures thereof. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated in and constitute a part of the specification, illustrate embodiments of the invention and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the invention. 
     FIG. 1 is a perspective view showing the outer appearance of a semiconductor exposure apparatus according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention; 
     FIG. 2 is a view showing the internal structure of the semiconductor exposure apparatus shown in FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing the electric circuit arrangement of the semiconductor exposure apparatus shown in FIG. 1; 
     FIG. 4 is a view for explaining a problem to be solved by the present invention; 
     FIG. 5 is a view for explaining the flow of conventional recipe conversion; 
     FIG. 6 is a view for explaining the recipe conversion function in the semiconductor exposure apparatus according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention; 
     FIG. 7 is a flow chart showing the flow of processing in an automatic recipe conversion tool according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention; 
     FIG. 8 is a flow chart showing the flow of an entire semiconductor device manufacturing process; and 
     FIG. 9 is a flow chart showing a detailed flow of the wafer process shown in FIG.  8 . 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
     A preferred embodiment of the present invention will be described below with reference to the accompanying drawings. 
     FIG. 1 is a perspective view showing the outer appearance of a semiconductor exposure apparatus according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention. A semiconductor exposure apparatus  100  comprises a semiconductor exposure apparatus main body (not shown) constituted by an illumination system, a projecting system, a stage, and the like, a temperature control chamber  101  for controlling the ambient temperature of the apparatus main body, an EWS (Engineering Work Station) main body  106  for controlling the apparatus main body, a console portion  120 , an exhaust duct  111  for removing heat generated by the console portion  120  to the outside, an exhaust device  112  for exhausting the atmosphere (e.g., air) in the chamber  101 , and the like. The console portion  120  has a display device  102  which is controlled by the EWS main body  106  connected through a cable  110  and displays predetermined information related to the semiconductor exposure apparatus, a monitor  105  for displaying image information obtained by an image sensing unit of the semiconductor exposure apparatus main body, an operation panel  103  used by an operator to input various kinds of information to the semiconductor exposure apparatus, an EWS keyboard  104 , an ON/OFF switch  107 , an emergency stop switch  108 , various switches  109 , and the like. 
     As the EWS display  102 , for example, a flat display panel such as an EL display, a plasma display, or a liquid crystal display is preferably used. The display  102  is accommodated on the front surface of the chamber  101  and connected to the EWS main body  106  through the cable  110 . The operational panel  103 , keyboard  104 , monitor  105 , and the like, are also arranged on the front surface of the chamber  101 . 
     FIG. 2 is a view showing the internal structure of the semiconductor exposure apparatus  100  shown in FIG.  1 . FIG. 2 shows a stepper (step-and-repeat semiconductor exposure apparatus) as an example of the semiconductor exposure apparatus. A light beam emitted from a light source device  204  passes through an illumination optical system  205 . Then, a reticle  202  is illuminated with the light beam. The pattern of the illuminated reticle  202  is projected onto a photosensitive layer on a wafer  203  through a projecting lens  206 . Thus, the pattern is transferred to the wafer  203 . The reticle  202  is held by a reticle stage  207 . The wafer  203  is exposed while being vacuum-checked by a wafer chuck  291 . The wafer chuck  291  is driven by a wafer stage  209  to the directions of, e.g., X-, Y-, Z-, and θ-axes. A reticle optical system  281  for detecting the displacement amount of the reticle  202  is arranged above the reticle  202 . An off-axis microscope  282  is arranged above the wafer stage  209  to be adjacent to the projecting lens  206 . The off-axis microscope  282  is mainly used to detect the relative position between an internal reference mark and an alignment mark on the wafer  203 . 
     A reticle library  220  and wafer carrier elevator  230  as peripheral devices are arranged adjacent to the exposure apparatus main body. A necessary reticle and wafer are transferred to the exposure apparatus main body by a reticle transfer device  221  and wafer transfer device  231 . 
     The chamber  101  is mainly constructed by an air-conditioning room  210  for adjusting the air temperature, a filter box  213  for capturing very small foreign substances and forming a uniform flow of clean air, and a booth  214  for shielding the apparatus environment from the outside. In the chamber  101 , air that is temperature-controlled by a cooler  215  and reheater  216  in the air-conditioning room  210  is supplied into the booth  214  by a blower  217  through an air filter g. The air supplied into the booth  214  is taken into the air-conditioning room  210  through a return port ra and circulated in the chamber  101 . Strictly speaking, normally, the chamber  101  is not a perfect circulation system. To always keep the internal pressure in the booth  214  positive, air outside the booth  214  in an amount corresponding to about 10% of the circulated air amount is supplied through a blower from an outer air inlet oa provided in the air-conditioning room  210 . In this way, the chamber  101  keeps a predetermined temperature in the environment where the semiconductor exposure apparatus main body is installed and also keeps the air clean. 
     The light source device  204  has an air intake ea to prepare for cooling of an ultrahigh-pressure mercury-vapor lamp or generation of a poisonous gas in the case of laser abnormality. The air in the booth  214  is partially, forcibly exhausted to the factory facility through the light source device  204  and a dedicated exhaust fan provided in the air-conditioning room  210 . In addition, chemical absorption filters cf for removing chemical substances in the air are connected to the outer air inlet oa and return port ra of the air-conditioning room  210 , respectively. 
     FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing the electric circuit arrangement of the semiconductor exposure apparatus  100  shown in FIG.  1 . Referring to FIG. 3, a main body CPU  321  is incorporated in the EWS main body  106  to control the entire apparatus. The main body CPU  321  is formed from a central arithmetic processing unit such as a microcomputer or minicomputer. Reference numeral  322  denotes a wafer stage driving device;  323 , an alignment detection system including the off-axis microscope  282 ;  324 , a reticle stage driving device;  325 , an illumination system including the light source device  204 ;  326 , a shutter driving device;  327 , a focus detection system; and  328 , a Z-driving device. These components are controlled by the main body CPU  321 . Reference numeral  329  denotes a transfer system including the reticle transfer device  221  and wafer transfer device  231 . The console unit  120  having the display  102 , keyboard  104 , and the like, is used by the operator to supply to the main body CPU  321  various kinds of commands or parameters related to the operation of the exposure apparatus. Reference numeral  331  denotes a console CPU;  332 , a memory for storing recipes (parameter files), and the like; and  333 , a network interface. As a communication protocol, normally, a standard network protocol such as TCP/IP can be used. 
     A problem to be solved by the present invention will be described again with reference to FIGS. 4 and 5. As shown in FIG. 4, to copy a recipe in an apparatus A to an apparatus B through an external medium (e.g., a floppy disk or MO) or a network and to use the recipe in the apparatus B, parameter values in the copied recipe must be corrected (changed) in accordance with a function supported by the apparatus B or its components. 
     This will be described using a simple example. The recipe in the apparatus A is formed from parameters  1  to  4 , as indicated by a recipe  501  in FIG. 5, and values indicated in the recipe  501  are set. When this recipe is copied to the apparatus B, parameters are automatically deleted or added (increased or decreased), as indicated by a recipe  502 , in correspondence with software version in the apparatus B. In the recipe  502 , parameter  4  is deleted, and parameter  5  is added. A default value is given to added parameter  5 . After that, the values of parameters  1  to  3  are manually rewritten using a recipe editor  503  or the like, as indicated by a recipe  504 . The rewrite of parameters is indispensable when, for example, parameter  1  defines a switch for turning on/off a function and is used as OFF in the apparatus A, though it must always be used as ON in the apparatus B. 
     FIG. 6 is a view for explaining the recipe conversion function in the semiconductor exposure apparatus according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. Referring to FIG. 6, in this embodiment, when a recipe (parameter file) is to be copied to the semiconductor exposure apparatus  100  (corresponding to the apparatus B described above) through an external medium or a network, parameters are added or deleted (increased or decreased) to the original recipe by an automatic conversion tool  601  such that the recipe is adapted for the semiconductor exposure apparatus  100 , thereby converting the parameter configuration. After that, the recipe is automatically changed (corrected) on the basis of a configuration file  602  and stored in the memory  332 . The configuration file  602  shown in FIG. 6 describes the parameter  1  is corrected to “ON”, parameter  2  is corrected to “OFF”, and parameter  3  is corrected to “ 200 ”. When the automatic conversion tool  601  automatically converts the original recipe (transferred recipe) on the basis of the configuration file  602 , the perfect recipe  504  (i.e., a recipe adapted for the semiconductor exposure apparatus  100  serving as the apparatus B) shown in FIG. 5 is generated. The automatic conversion tool  601  can be formed by, e.g., running an automatic conversion tool program  601   a  (FIG.  3 ), which serves as software and is stored in a memory  321 M such as a hard disk, on the main body CPU  321 . In addition, the configuration file  602  is stored in, e.g., the memory  321 M in advance. Instead, the automatic conversion tool  601  may be formed by hardware. The automatic conversion tool  601  and configuration file  602  may be wholly or partially provided by an external device. 
     FIG. 7 is a flow chart showing the flow of processing in the automatic conversion tool  601 . In step S 701 , the automatic conversion tool  601  acquires a recipe for another exposure apparatus or a recipe which is not adapted for an apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ) through an external medium or a network. In step S 702 , the automatic conversion tool  601  adds or deletes (increases or decreases) parameters to the recipe acquired in step S 701  to convert the recipe into a parameter configuration adapted for the apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ). With this conversion, a recipe having a parameter configuration adapted for the apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ) is generated in terms of the types or numbers of parameters. However, the values of the parameters are not always adapted for the apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ). In step S 703 , the automatic conversion tool  601  refers to the configuration file  602  and acquires parameters and their values for the apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ). In step S 704 , on the basis of the acquired parameters and their values, the values of corresponding parameters in the intermediate recipe generated in step S 702  are changed (corrected) to generate a recipe completely adapted for the apparatus (exposure apparatus  100 ). In step S 705 , the automatic conversion tool  601  stores the recipe completed in step S 704  in the memory  332 . The recipe thus stored in the memory  332  is referred to in the exposure operation to control the exposure operation. 
     When the automatic conversion tool  601  is formed by hardware, the automatic conversion tool  601  comprises, e.g., a recipe acquiring device (e.g., a network interface or media reader) (corresponding to step S 701 ) for acquiring a recipe (parameter file) from an external device or medium, a conversion device (corresponding to step S 702 ) for converting the parameter configuration in the recipe by adding or deleting parameters, a correction parameter value acquiring device (corresponding to step S 703 ) for acquiring parameters and values corresponding to the parameters from the configuration file  602 , a changing device (corresponding to step S 704 ) for completing a recipe by changing, on the basis of the parameter values acquired by the correction parameter value acquiring device, the values of the parameters in the recipe converted by the conversion device, and a storing device (corresponding to step S 705 ) for storing the completed recipe in an external memory. All or some of the devices may be formed in cooperation with software. 
     Recipes (parameter files) can generally be classified into recipes related to exposure, recipes related to reticles, recipes related to system control, and the like, and managed. The present invention can be applied to conversion of any recipe. 
     Additionally, in the above embodiment, a recipe is acquired from another exposure apparatus through an external medium or a network and converted into a recipe adapted for the apparatus (exposure apparatus). The apparatus of the transfer source is not limited to an exposure apparatus. It may be a file server (file management apparatus) for managing recipes. 
     A semiconductor device manufacturing process using the above-described exposure apparatus will be explained next. FIG. 8 is a flow chart showing the flow of the whole manufacturing process of the semiconductor device. In step  1  (circuit design), a semiconductor device circuit is designed. In step  2  (mask formation), a mask is formed on the basis of the designed circuit pattern. In step  3  (wafer formation), a wafer is formed by using a material such as silicon. In step  4  (wafer process), called a pre-process, an actual circuit is formed on the wafer by lithography using the mask and wafer. Step  5  (assembly), called a post-process, is the step of forming a semiconductor chip by using the wafer formed in step  4 , and includes an assembly process (dicing and bonding) and a packaging process (chip encapsulation). In step  6  (inspection), the semiconductor device manufactured in step  5  undergoes inspections such as an operation confirmation test and a durability test. After these steps, the semiconductor device is completed and shipped (step  7 ). 
     FIG. 9 is a flow chart showing the detailed flow of the wafer process. In step  11  (oxidation), the wafer surface is oxidized. In step  12  (CVD), an insulating film is formed on the wafer surface. In step  13  (electrode formation), an electrode is formed on the wafer by vapor deposition. In step  14  (ion implantation), ions are implanted in the wafer. In step  15  (resist processing), a photosensitive agent is applied to the wafer. In step  16  (exposure), the circuit pattern is transferred onto the wafer by the above-mentioned exposure apparatus. In step  17  (developing), the exposed wafer is developed. In step  18  (etching), the resist is etched except for the developed resist image. In step  19  (resist removal), an unnecessary resist after etching is removed. These steps are repeated to form multiple circuit patterns on the wafer. 
     According to the exposure apparatus of the present invention and the control method therefor, a parameter file for another apparatus or a parameter file which is not adapted to an apparatus can be automatically converted into a parameter file adapted for the apparatus. Hence, load in editing a parameter file can be greatly reduced. In addition, any error caused by a manual editing operation can be prevented. 
     As many apparently widely different embodiments of the present invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the specific embodiments thereof except as defined in the claims.