For electron beam lithography, the substrate is first coated with an electron-beam-sensitive resist. An electron beam then scans previously defined structures on the coated substrate. The structures can either be located in a single writing field (typically < 1 mm²) or created by placing several writing fields next to each other. In the exposed areas, the resist is chemically altered in such a way that, depending on the type of resist used, the exposed or unexposed areas can be dissolved in a developer. After the development step the patterned resist remains. By means of a dry or wet-chemical etching step, the structures can then be transferred into the layers below. Alternatively, an additional metal layer can be deposited after development. The remaining resist is then removed and the excess areas of the metallization process are also rinsed off. Electron beam lithography allows structure sizes up to 10 nm, but is a very time-consuming and therefore expensive process.
JEOL JSM-6500F
Our scanning electron microscope is also equipped with a PG2 from XENOS Semiconductor Technologies GmbH. The SEM offers typical beam currents of 20 - 400 pA and has a maximum resolution of 2 nm. Thus, structures of up to 10 nm can be realized in electron beam resists. The substrate sizes are limited to a maximum of 20 x 20 mm². The desktop software can be installed by LISA+ members on any PC. The software makes it possible to create structures and arrays from the common basic shapes (points, rectangles, triangles, polygons, circles, rings and segments of each) in a very simple way. It is extremely flexible and offers an integrated editor for calculating complex structures.