Sirish Reddy
Lam Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sirish Reddy.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2017
Andrew Liang; Jan Hermans; Timothy Tran; Katja Viatkina; Chen-wei Liang; Brandon Ward; Steven Chuang; Jengyi Yu; Greg Harm; Jelle Vandereyken; David Rio; Michael Kubis; Samantha Tan; Rich Wise; Mircea Dusa; Sirish Reddy; Akhil Singhal; Bart van Schravendijk; Girish Dixit; Nader Shamma
Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography is crucial to enabling technology scaling in pitch and critical dimension (CD). Currently, one of the key challenges of introducing EUV lithography to high volume manufacturing (HVM) is throughput, which requires high source power and high sensitivity chemically amplified photoresists. Important limiters of high sensitivity chemically amplified resists (CAR) are the effects of photon shot noise and resist blur on the number of photons received and of photoacids generated per feature, especially at the pitches required for 7 nm and 5 nm advanced technology nodes. These stochastic effects are reflected in via structures as hole-to-hole CD variation or local CD uniformity (LCDU). Here, we demonstrate a synergy of film stack deposition, EUV lithography, and plasma etch techniques to improve LCDU, which allows the use of high sensitivity resists required for the introduction of EUV HVM. Thus, to improve LCDU to a level required by 5 nm node and beyond, film stack deposition, EUV lithography, and plasma etch processes were combined and co-optimized to enhance LCDU reduction from synergies. Test wafers were created by depositing a pattern transfer stack on a substrate representative of a 5 nm node target layer. The pattern transfer stack consisted of an atomically smooth adhesion layer and two hardmasks and was deposited using the Lam VECTOR PECVD product family. These layers were designed to mitigate hole roughness, absorb out-of-band radiation, and provide additional outlets for etch to improve LCDU and control hole CD. These wafers were then exposed through an ASML NXE3350B EUV scanner using a variety of advanced positive tone EUV CAR. They were finally etched to the target substrate using Lam Flex dielectric etch and Kiyo conductor etch systems. Metrology methodologies to assess dimensional metrics as well as chip performance and defectivity were investigated to enable repeatable patterning process development. Illumination conditions in EUV lithography were optimized to improve normalized image log slope (NILS), which is expected to reduce shot noise related effects. It can be seen that the EUV imaging contrast improvement can further reduce post-develop LCDU from 4.1 nm to 3.9 nm and from 2.8 nm to 2.6 nm. In parallel, etch processes were developed to further reduce LCDU, to control CD, and to transfer these improvements into the final target substrate. We also demonstrate that increasing post-develop CD through dose adjustment can enhance the LCDU reduction from etch. Similar trends were also observed in different pitches down to 40 nm. The solutions demonstrated here are critical to the introduction of EUV lithography in high volume manufacturing. It can be seen that through a synergistic deposition, lithography, and etch optimization, LCDU at a 40 nm pitch can be improved to 1.6 nm (3-sigma) in a target oxide layer and to 1.4 nm (3-sigma) at the photoresist layer.
Meeting Abstracts | 2011
George Andrew Antonelli; Sirish Reddy; Pramod Subramonium; Jon Henri; Jim Sims; Jennifer O'Loughlin; Nader Shamma; Don Schlosser; Tom Mountsier; Wei Guo; Herb Sawin
Amorphous carbon hard mask films grown with plasma enhanced chemical vapor deposition are an enabling technology for advanced front-end-of-line patterning technologies. These films must have a low etch rate and be weakly roughened in dielectric etch chemistries, high transparency at lithography alignment wavelengths, and the mechanical properties to mitigate elastic instabilities such as line bending. The deposition process affects all of these parameters through the resulting structure and composition. Highly graphitic films deposited at 550°C are common; however, other process spaces relying on ion bombardment rather than temperature can create less graphitic films with improved film properties like transparency, hardness, and etch selectivity.
Archive | 2013
Nader Shamma; Bart van Schravendijk; Sirish Reddy; Chunhai Ji
Archive | 2008
Qingguo Wu; James S. Sims; Mandyam Sriram; Seshasayee Varadarajan; Haiying Fu; Pramod Subramonium; Jon Henri; Sirish Reddy
Archive | 2012
Alice Hollister; Sirish Reddy; Keith Fox; Mandyam Sriram; Joseph L. Womack
Archive | 2012
Bhadri N. Varadarajan; Gengwei Jiang; Sirish Reddy; James S. Sims
Archive | 2013
Chunhai Ji; Sirish Reddy; Tuo Wang; Mandyam Sriram
Archive | 2010
Damien Slevin; Brad Laird; Curtis Bailey; Ming Li; Sirish Reddy; James S. Sims; Mohamed Sabri; Saangrut Sangplug
Archive | 2013
George Andrew Antonelli; Alice Hollister; Sirish Reddy
Archive | 2012
Sirish Reddy; Alice Hollister; Pramod Subramonium; Jon Henri; Chunhai Ji; Zhi Yuan Fang