Paper
24 July 2002 Bi/In bimetallic thermal resists for microfabrication, photomasks, and micromachining applications
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Abstract
Bilayer Bi/In thin films form thermal resists with many new microfabrication and micromachining applications due to their changed physical, chemical and optical characteristics after the laser exposures. Wavelength invariance has been shown from the results of both experiment and Airy Summation optical modeling. The modeling projects bimetallic resist sensitivity to be nearly constant at about ~7 mJ/cm2 from 248 to 13.4 nm and is still very sensitive at 1 nm in X-ray range. Two kinds of acid solutions were effective in developing the exposed films by removing the unexposed area. Both nitric acid mixture (HNO3:CH3COOH:H2O=1:3:6) and hydrochloride acid mixture (HCl:H2O2:H2O=1:1:48) give etching selectivity of exposed to unexposed area of larger than 60:1. The etch rate of unexposed area is about 2.6 nm/sec. The Bi/In resist can be stripped away by an RCA2 clean. Bi/In resist was successfully used as a mask layer for KOH anisotropic silicon etching process. Due to the unusual conductive property of its exposed and developed films, Bi/In has demonstrated that it can be used as a direct laser write electroplating resist material. Copper and nickel plating was carried out on developed Bi/In layers on various substrates such as Si wafers, glass slides, wet-oxidized wafers. Large optical transmission changes (OD>3.5 before exposure and OD<0.3 after exposure at I-line) indicate that Bi/In can be used as a direct-write photomask material.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Glenn H. Chapman, Richard Yuqiang Tu, and Marinko V. Sarunic "Bi/In bimetallic thermal resists for microfabrication, photomasks, and micromachining applications", Proc. SPIE 4690, Advances in Resist Technology and Processing XIX, (24 July 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.474201
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Cited by 14 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Etching

Silicon

Photomasks

Copper

Photoresist processing

Absorption

Bismuth

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