DIFFER
DIFFER Publication

Characterization of carbon contamination under ion and hot atom bombardment in a tin-plasma extreme ultraviolet light source

Author
Abstract

Molecular contamination of a grazing incidence collector for extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography was experimentally studied. A carbon film was found to have grown under irradiation from a pulsed tin plasma discharge. Our studies show that the film is chemically inert and has characteristics that are typical for a hydrogenated amorphous carbon film. It was experimentally observed that the film consists of carbon (similar to 70 at.%), oxygen (similar to 20 at.%) and hydrogen (bound to oxygen and carbon), along with a few at.% of tin. Most of the oxygen and hydrogen are most likely present as OH groups, chemically bound to carbon, indicating an important role for adsorbed water during the film formation process. It was observed that the film is predominantly sp(3) hybridized carbon, as is typical for diamond-like carbon. The Raman spectra of the film, under 514 and 264 nm excitation, are typical for hydrogenated diamond-like carbon. Additionally, the lower etch rate and higher energy threshold in chemical ion sputtering in H2 plasma, compared to magnetron-sputtered carbon films, suggests that the film exhibits diamond-like carbon properties. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Year of Publication
2015
Journal
Applied Surface Science
Volume
353
Number of Pages
708-713
Date Published
Oct 30
ISBN Number
0169-4332
URL
http://arxiv.org/abs/1411.4509
DOI
10.1016/j.apsusc.2015.06.079
PId
cdef24e502033140f4d038525cd806cc
Alternate Journal
Appl. Surf. Sci.
Journal Article
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