Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Conventional positive-resist chemistry

While "conventional positive photoresists" are sensitive, high-resolution materials, they are essentially opaque to radiation below 300 nm. This has led researchers to examine alternate chemistry for deep-UV applications. Examples of deep-UV sensitive dissolution inhibitors include aliphatic diazoketones (61-64) and nitrobenzyl esters (65). Certain onium salts have also recently been shown to be effective inhibitors for phenolic resins (66). A novel e-beam sensitive dissolution inhibition resist was designed by Bowden, et al a (67) based on the use of a novolac resin with a poly(olefin sulfone) dissolution inhibitor. The aqueous, base-soluble novolac is rendered less soluble via addition of -10 wt % poly(2-methyl pentene-1 sulfone)(PMPS). Irradiation causes main chain scission of PMPS followed by depolymerization to volatile monomers (68). The dissolution inhibitor is thus effectively "vaporized", restoring solubility in aqueous base to the irradiated portions of the resist. Alternate resist systems based on this chemistry have also been reported (69,70). [Pg.11]

Interest in solution inhibition resist systems is not limited to photoresist technology. Systems that are sensitive to electron-beam irradiation have also been of active interest. While conventional positive photoresists may be used for e-beam applications (31,32), they exhibit poor sensitivity and alternatives are desirable. Bowden, et al, at AT T Bell Laboratories, developed a novel, novolac-poly(2-methyl-l-pentene sulfone) (PMPS) composite resist, NPR (Figure 9) (33,34). PMPS, which acts as a dissolution inhibitor for the novolac resin, undergoes spontaneous depolymerization upon irradiation (35). Subsequent vaporization facilitates aqueous base removal of the exposed regions. Resist systems based on this chemistry have also been reported by other workers (36,37). [Pg.140]

Both negative and positive acting, oxygen RIE resistnt e-beam resist systems have been prepared through the incorporation of the trimethylsilylmethyl functionality into standard resist chemistry. Resins containing >10 wt% silicon display an RIE resistance more than 10 times greater than conventional photoresists and allow submicron pattern transfer with minimum linewidth loss. [Pg.117]

Knowledge that silyl substituents may be incorporated into standard resist chemistry to effect etching resistance has prompted several workers to evaluate silylated novolacs as matrix resins for conventional positive-photoresist formulations. Typically, these resists operate via a dissolution inhibition mechanism whereby the matrix material is rendered insoluble in aqueous base through addition of a diazonaphthoquinone. Irradiation of the composite induces a Wolff rearrangement to yield an indenecarboxylic acid (Figure 4), which allows dissolution of the exposed areas in an aqueous-base developer (35). [Pg.275]


See other pages where Conventional positive-resist chemistry is mentioned: [Pg.140]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.147]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.140]    [Pg.82]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.1113]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.1142]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.34]    [Pg.509]    [Pg.165]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.140 , Pg.141 , Pg.143 , Pg.145 ]




SEARCH



Conventional positive-resist

Positive resist

Positive resists

Resist chemistry

© 2024 chempedia.info