Paper
5 June 2001 High-resolution IC inspection technique
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We demonstrate a through the substrate, numerical aperture increasing lens (NAIL) technique for high-resolution inspection of silicon devices. We experimentally demonstrate a resolution of 0.2 micrometers , with the ultimate diffraction limit of 0.14 micrometers . Absorption limits inspection in silicon to wavelengths greater than 1 micrometers , placing an ultimate limit of 0.5 micrometers resolution on standard subsurface microscopy techniques. Our numerical aperture increasing lens reduces this limit to 0.14 micrometers , a significant improvement for device visual inspection (patent pending). The NAIL technique yields a resolution improvement over standard optical microscopy of at least a factor of n, the refractive index of the substrate material, and up to a factor of n 2. In silicon, this constitutes a resolution improvement between 3.6 and 13. This is accomplished by increasing the numerical aperture of the imaging system, without introducing any spherical aberration to the collected light. A specialized lens made of the same material as the substrate is placed on the back surface of the substrate. The convex surface of this lens is spherical with a radius of curvature, R. The vertical thickness of the lens, D, should be selected according to D equals $ (1 + 1/n)-X and the substrate thickness X.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Stephen Bradley Ippolito, Anna K. Swan, Bennett B. Goldberg, and M. Selim Unlu "High-resolution IC inspection technique", Proc. SPIE 4275, Metrology-based Control for Micro-Manufacturing, (5 June 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.429355
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Monochromatic aberrations

Spherical lenses

Silicon

Microscopes

Microscopy

Inspection

Sensors

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