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  2. Photolithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photolithography

    Contact printing/lithography is liable to damage both the mask and the wafer, [38] and this was the primary reason it was abandoned for high volume production. Both contact and proximity lithography require the light intensity to be uniform across an entire wafer, and the mask to align precisely to features already on the wafer.

  3. Optical proximity correction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_proximity_correction

    An illustration of OPC (Optical Proximity Correction). The blue Γ-like shape is what chip designers would like printed on a wafer, in green is the pattern on a mask after applying optical proximity correction, and the red contour is how the shape actually prints on the wafer (quite close to the desired blue target).

  4. Photomask - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photomask

    In photolithography, several masks are used in turn, each one reproducing a layer of the completed design, and together known as a mask set. A curvilinear photomask has patterns with curves, which is a departure from conventional photomasks which only have patterns that are completely vertical or horizontal, known as manhattan geometry.

  5. Contact lithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contact_lithography

    There are several types of contact lithography masks. The standard binary intensity amplitude mask defines dark and light areas where light is blocked or transmitted, respectively. The dark areas are patterned films consisting of chromium or other metal. The light coupling mask has a corrugated dielectric surface. Each protrusion acts as a ...

  6. LIGA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LIGA

    The most accurate and expensive masks are those created by electron-beam lithography, which provides resolutions as fine as 0.1 μm in resist 4 μm thick and 3 μm features in resist 20 μm thick. An intermediate method is the plated photomask, which provides 3-μm resolution and can be outsourced at a cost on the order of $1000 per mask.

  7. Resolution enhancement technologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resolution_enhancement...

    With a proper optical imaging system between the mask and the wafer (or no imaging system if the mask is sufficiently closely positioned to the wafer such as in early lithography machines), the mask pattern is imaged on a thin layer of photoresist on the surface of the wafer and a light (UV or EUV)-exposed part of the photoresist experiences ...

  8. Inverse lithography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverse_lithography

    In semiconductor device fabrication, the inverse lithography technology (ILT) is an approach to photomask design. It is basically an approach to solve an inverse imaging problem : to calculate the shapes of the openings in a photomask ("source") so that the passing light produces a good approximation of the desired pattern ("target") on the ...

  9. Off-axis illumination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Off-axis_illumination

    By making the off-axis illumination (i.e., the light is illuminating the mask at an oblique angle), all the diffraction orders from the mask are tilted, which makes it more likely that the higher diffraction orders can make it through the projection lens and help form the image of the mask onto the wafer.