CO2 laser drives extreme ultraviolet nano-lithography - Second life of mature laser technology

42Citations
Citations of this article
8Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

It was shown both theoretically and experimentally that nanosecond order laser pulses at 10.6 micron wavelength were superior for driving the Sn plasma extreme ultraviolet (EUV) source for nano-lithography for the reasons of higher conversion efficiency, lower production of debris and higher average power levels obtainable in CO2 media without serious problems of beam distortions and nonlinear effects occurring in competing solid-state lasers at high intensities. The renewed interest in such pulse format, wavelength, repetition rates in excess of 50 kHz and average power levels in excess of 18 kiloWatt has sparked new opportunities for a matured multi-kiloWatt CO 2 laser technology. The power demand of EUV source could be only satisfied by a Master-Oscillator-Power-Amplifier system configuration, leading to a development of a new type of hybrid pulsed CO2 laser employing a whole spectrum of CO2 technology, such as fast flow systems and diffusion-cooled planar waveguide lasers, and relatively recent quantum cascade lasers. In this paper we review briefly the history of relevant pulsed CO 2 laser technology and the requirements for multi-kiloWatt CO 2 laser, intended for the laser-produced plasma EUV source, and present our recent advances, such as novel solid-state seeded master oscillator and efficient multi-pass amplifiers built on planar waveguide CO2 lasers. © 2013 Versita Warsaw and Springer-Verlag Wien.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Nowak, K. M., Ohta, T., Suganuma, T., Fujimoto, J., Mizoguchi, H., Sumitani, A., & Endo, A. (2013). CO2 laser drives extreme ultraviolet nano-lithography - Second life of mature laser technology. Opto-Electronics Review. De Gruyter Open Ltd. https://doi.org/10.2478/s11772-013-0109-3

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free