Paper
26 March 2019 Oxygen effects in thin films for high-resolution , 3-color lithography
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Three-color lithography (3CL) produces features on the scale of tens of nanometers using visible light. In this technique, one beam pre-activates a photoresist, a second beam deactivates it, and a third beam activates the pre-activated regions that have not been deactivated. The deactivation beam trims features, allowing for improved feature size and resolution. Creating permeable thin films enables us to further control feature size using oxygen as a quencher. We will discuss these thin-film studies, which are a promising step towards large-area patterning.
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Sandra A. Gutierrez Razo, Nikolaos Liaros, Adam Pranda, Gottlieb Oehrlein, John T. Fourkas, and John Petersen "Oxygen effects in thin films for high-resolution , 3-color lithography", Proc. SPIE 10958, Novel Patterning Technologies for Semiconductors, MEMS/NEMS, and MOEMS 2019, 1095814 (26 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2516544
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KEYWORDS
Oxygen

Thin films

Photoresist materials

Polymerization

Lithography

Optical lithography

Bioalcohols

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