Wafer scanning process traveler: Difference between revisions

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==== Recipe parameters ====
==== Recipe parameters ====
This section describes the parameters listed in the Recipe dialog box.
[[File:Recipe parameters.jpg|none|thumb|Recipe parameters]]
<u>Data collection</u> parameters specify the substrate, data collection range, and instrument throughput.

<u>Data display</u> parameters specify primary and secondary data types, wafer map and histogram display options, the number of bin splits to be used, and haze display parameters.

<u>Configuration</u> parameters specify cassette usage, sorting option, automatic operations, and substrate type and thickness.

<u>Sort parameters</u> establish the pass/fail limits for wafers. If scan results exceed any of the enabled sort parameters in the recipe, the wafer fails, otherwise the wafer passes.

Certain recipe parameters interact. When you change Gain, for example, Threshold, Area From, and Haze Range values automatically change to the default values for that gain. You can change the values for these parameters after setting the gain.

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* Recipe parameters:
* Recipe parameters:

Revision as of 00:23, 2 April 2020

The wafers used for process calibration are ordered from SVM. These are 4 inch silicon wafers with low particle count (LPD= light particle detection<100). The box with 25 wafers is stored in the cleanroom and used only for process calibration. Wafers are handled very carefully, because with every loading and unloading some particles will be added.

Scanning procedure

Scan before process calibration

  1. Log in (access code is boss)
  2. Load wafers(face up) to the carrier that says " SURFSCAN" .
  3. Place the carrier with wafers to the right indexer.
  4. In the menu option select "CAS" (this will read all wafers that are in the carrier).
  5. Go to "Recipes" and load one of standard recipes.
  6. Select one of the recipes:
    • UCSB Gain4 (measuring small particles 0.16-1.6um)
    • UCSB Gain2 (measuring larger particles 1.6-28um)
  7. View the recipe and modify it if needed, default the bin.
  8. Select the wafer you want to scan.
  9. Select START.
  10. Wait until scan is finished.
  11. Record: LPD (sum of all particles #1- #8), particles #1(0.160-0.213)um, particles #8(1.20-1.60)um, haze region(%).
  12. Take a picture of the scan (by phone).
  13. Select "Home" so indexer moves up to loading/unloading position.
  14. Unload wafers (ready for process calibration).
  15. Log out.

Scan after process calibration

  1. Log in (access code is boss)
  2. Load wafers(face up) to the carrier that says " SURFSCAN" .
  3. Place the carrier with wafers to the right indexer.
  4. In the menu option select "CAS" (this will read all wafers that are in the carrier).
  5. Go to "Recipes" and load one of standard recipes.
  6. Select one of the recipes :
    • UCSB Gain4 (measuring small particles 0.16-1.6um)
    • UCSB Gain2 (measuring larger particles 1.6-28um)
  7. View the recipe and modify it if needed, default the bin.
  8. Select the wafer you want to scan.
  9. Select START.
  10. Wait until scan is finished
  11. Record: LPD (sum of all particles #1- #8), particles #1(0.160-0.213)um, particles #8(1.20-1.60)um, haze region(%).
  12. Take a picture of the scan (by phone)
  13. Select "Home" so indexer moves up to loading/unloading position
  14. Unload wafers.
  15. Log out.

Surfscan photo

Plotting data

Make an excel sheet.

Enter info for Gain4 (particles#1, particles#8, LPD, haze) before and after process calibration.

Enter info for Gain2 (particles#1, particles#8, LPD, haze) before and after process calibration.

For each gain figure out delta ( LPD after- LPD before).

Make a plot delta vs. time.

Surfscan additional information

Introduction

Surfscan 6200 locates, sizes, and counts defects in semiconductor substrate material down to 0.157um at a 95% capture rate and down to 0.09um at an 80% capture rate. The instrument uses laser beam scanning for detecting defect contamination and displays scan results in color-coded wafer maps, histograms, and summaries. The instrument scans wafers contained in a cassette. Cassettes can be loaded onto the left indexer, right indexer, or both indexers. Cassette configuration can be ( R only, L only, Right to left, Left to right, Sort wafers). When manually aligning wafers, one of the flats of each wafer should face the front of the cassette. When using a mechanical aligner, the flats should face the rear of the cassette. If wafers get scratched, damaged or mishandled immediately perform cassette calibration. The instrument communicates with an operator using the Microsoft Windows. To use an application, choose menus or commands displayed in the menu bar, or use keypad commands. The system menu is an icon-based menu. Double click on the application icon to start an application. In the Scan window , the menu bar displays: ID, CASS, AUTO, HOME, SAVE, and PRINT commands.  

Basic skills

This chapter describes instrument controls, including keypad, mouse, floppy drive, and cassette indexer. This chapter also describes how to load a cassette and introduces you to basic program operation using the mouse or keypad.

Getting started

This chapter provides basic startup procedures for the instrument, including: (Powering up the instrument , Logging on to the instrument , Starting Scan , Quitting from an application, Logging off the system, Setting up the system for first use, Using the DOS shell (advanced use), Monitoring disk and database space)

Log in, access code is boss.

Double click on the icon of the application to start application.

Log off the system, to exit the current application.

The Tencor Instrument banner at the top of the screen contains a disk status. If it is green the database space is available. If it is yellow, free disk or data space is getting low, so it needs to be increased free space. It is red, there is no free space.

Scanning

Start the scan application

At the System Menu, choose the Scan icon. A blank Scan window appears. The Scan window is divided into areas that display results of scans.The Scan window displays the recipe name in the title bar and the scan sequence in the status box. Scan sequence indicates the order in which slots are scanned: from top-to-bottom or bottom-to-top.

Choose the recipe to be used

Load the cassette of substrates onto the right locator

Choose scan options

Enter a Lot ID, if desired

Scanning methods

This section describes scanning methods. The procedure describes how to scan all substrates, selected substrates, or one substrate from a cassette(called direct access). The table at the end of this section tells you where to go in this manual to use advanced scan features and options. The recipe sets the primary data of interest (defect or haze) and the initial data displays (map or histogram or both). For each scan, the instrument displays the primary data and lists the results of the scan in the summary. If the recipe specifies alternate data, the data can be manually chosen for display. The recipe also can specify automatic saving or printing of data. When the last substrate in the cassette is scanned or when you press HOME, the instrument homes the cassette and displays the Lot Summary window. (The Lot Summary screen does not appear if Suppress Lot Summary Display is enabled in the User Configuration dialog box.) The Cassette catalog lists the occupied slots of the cassette. The catalog can be numbered from bottom-to-top (the default) or top-to-bottom and the scanning sequence can be set to bottom-to-top or top-to-bottom.

Scanning options are: automatic or manual operation, scan sequence, and microscope hold for MicroViewing.

Using the scan window

When you scan a substrate, the instrument displays the results in the scan summary. Depending upon recipe settings, the instrument also displays scan results in a map, histogram, or both. Data are color-coded as shown by the bin splits in the summary. The cassette catalog displays the contents of the cassette and can be used to select individual substrates for scanning. The Scan window contains the following areas: summary box, wafer map, cassette catalog, histogram, and status box. In the Scan menu bar, choosing ID, Cass, Start, Auto, Home, or Save is the same as pressing the key of the same name on the instrument keypad. Recipe, XY, Print, and Display are pull-down menus.

The Recipe menu allows you to load a new recipe, view and modify the current recipe, create a new recipe, save a recipe, set user IDs, delete a recipe, enter the Lot ID, extend the puck for inspection and cleaning, and exit the Scan application. For details on recipes, see Chapter 5, “Recipes.” The Print menu allows you to print wafer summaries and lot summaries on the text printer. Summaries can be printed in 40, 80, or 132 column format. The Select Printers item allows you to select the text and graphics printers for the system. The Resume Printer item starts a suspended print job. See Section 4.11, “Printing Summaries,” for details on printing. The Display menu provides data display combinations: defect map only, defect histogram only, defect map plus histogram, haze map only, haze histogram only, or haze map plus histogram. The recipe specifies the initial data display. The Help menu provides help topics. Choose Using Scan to view the help topics related to the Scan application or choose Contents to open the help system. Choosing Using Help displays the Microsoft Windows Using Help topics.

Quick reference

This section summarizes the actions available when using the Scan application (change the scan order, change the data display, choose automatic scan, enter the Lot ID, enter the wafer (substrate) ID and etc.)

Using the summary box

The summary displays the date and time of the scan, the results of the scan, bin splits, overlay controls, and a selection of recipe parameters. The bin splits are color-coded, as shown by the numbered buttons. You can enable or disable a bin from the map or histogram by selecting a bin split button. The summary updates when you enable or disable a bin split, edit a defect or haze bin, or magnify the map. Buttons 1 through 8 control the bin splits for the primary data. Button 0 overlays the alternate data. Button 9 overlays area data. For example, all haze data can be overlayed onto a defect map by selecting button 0. The summary lists primary data and alternate data (if one is selected in the recipe).

The recipe sets: Primary data of interest (defect or haze); Initial data displays (map or histogram or both).

To add the comment in the summary screen, press the minus key on the keypad or the minus button (Top left corner)

Data from summary box
  • LPD Cnt - the total of all light point defects and their total surface area
  • Bins (1-8) - Bin splits intervals and the count of LPDs for each bin
  • Mean (T) - the mean of collected LPDS
  • Std Dev - the standard deviation of collected LPDs
  • Area Cnt –The count of all areas (areas and scratches) on the substrate and the their total surface area
  • Scratch Cnt-The total number of scratches and their total surface area
  • Sum of All Defects-The sum of all LPDs and areas, including scratches
  • Haze Region-The percentage of the measurable surface area containing haze
  • Haze average- The sum of all haze values divided by the number of haze values, including those that are over the Haze Range limit and under the Haze From limit. When the haze map is zoomed, only those haze values in the magnified map are included in the average, including values under or over the haze range limits. When the haze histogram is zoomed, only those haze values within in the zoomed histogram interval are included in the haze average. Values under or over the haze range limits are not included.
  • Haze peak - The highest haze value
Using the cassette catalog

The Scan application displays the Cassette catalog at the right of the screen. To display the contents of the cassette loaded on the indexer, press CASS. The Cassette catalog displays the cassette’s substrate status, as follows:

  • If the status of a slot cannot be determined, the slot contains a question mark (?).
  • A white slot number indicates that the substrate has not yet been scanned.
  • A green slot number indicates that the substrate has been scanned and has passed all pass/fail criteria.
  • A red slot number indicates that the substrate has been scanned and has failed one or more pass/fail criteria.
  • A yellow slot number indicates that the instrument is processing the substrate.
Using the histogram

The histogram displays the distribution of light point defects or haze values. The color coding corresponds to the bin splits shown in the summary. Using the histogram window, you can zoom the histogram and change bin splits. A LPD histogram plots the LPD count versus LPD diameter or cross-section as specified in the recipe. A haze histogram plots the number of defects versus haze values. Defect histograms display a red total area bar at the right.

There are options as: 1) Zoom the histogram (allowing you to narrow the data range); 2) Edit the bin split (the histogram can be used to change LPD bin splits).

Using the wafer mapper

The Scan application can display a wafer map of LPDs or haze. The wafer map can be displayed in combination with a histogram. The recipe sets the initial substrate map/ histogram display combination and the combination can be changed for the current scan by using the Display menu.

Zooming the map

The instrument provides a multilevel zoom feature. When you zoom the map, the instrument displays a panning window and magnifies the map. The menu bar lists the instrument keys that can be used when zooming.

Examining a microview

The Surfscan 6000-series MicroView feature allows you to examine a three dimensional representation of the surface of the substrate. The amplitude axis (Z-axis) is evenly scaled from the smallest to largest amplitudes in the MicroView area.

You can view the MicroView area from different angles, display the MicroView in color or wireframe format, and use the MicroView cursor to obtain approximate defect amplitude or sizing. Also, you can change the threshold level. A MicroView removes the haze data and sizing information is given in approximate diameter or cross section units.

Recipes

Recipes allow you to specify data collection, data display, configuration, pass/fail sort settings, and automatic saving and printing operations for a given wafer substrate size and type. To create a new recipe or modify an existing recipe, you must know how to use Recipe menus and the Recipe dialog box, and know how to set recipe parameters. Also, your user account must allow you to create, edit, and save recipes. The instrument stores recipes in the database by name. A recipe name can be up to 19 characters long and can contain any combination of alphabetic, numeric, or special characters. When you load a recipe from the database, the recipe becomes the current recipe, or the recipe used for scanning. Scan and Setup application windows display the current recipe name in parentheses in their title bars, and the Recipe dialog box displays the current recipe name as its title in parentheses. For step-by-step instructions on setting recipe parameters, see Section 5.3.5, “Selecting Substrate Parameters.” Recipe actions are available from the following applications:

SCAN or SETUP application - to create,

DATABASE Export/Import utility - to export or import recipes

DATABASE Reports utility - to print a recipe listing

Recipe menus

Recipe menus in the Scan and Setup applications provide recipe actions:

  • Load - Open and load a selected recipe. Displays the recipe selection dialog box.
  • View/Modify – View or change the current recipe. Displays the Recipe dialog box.
  • New - Create a new recipe. Displays the New Name dialog box. Type the recipe name and choose OK. The instrument sets initial data collection, data display (except haze range and haze from), and configuration values to the previous recipe’s values. The instrument sets haze display and sort parameters to maximum values. Use View/Modify to change recipe settings.
  • Save- save the recipe using the current recipe name
  • Save as- Save the current recipe using a new name. Displays the New Name dialog box
  • Delete- Delete a selected recipe. Displays the selection dialog box.

Using the recipe dialog box

A recipe can be created, modified, or viewed by opening the Recipe dialog box from the Scan or Setup applications. The dialog box contains four general parameter areas: data collection, data display, configuration, and sort.

Recipe parameters

This section describes the parameters listed in the Recipe dialog box.

Recipe parameters

Data collection parameters specify the substrate, data collection range, and instrument throughput.

Data display parameters specify primary and secondary data types, wafer map and histogram display options, the number of bin splits to be used, and haze display parameters.

Configuration parameters specify cassette usage, sorting option, automatic operations, and substrate type and thickness.

Sort parameters establish the pass/fail limits for wafers. If scan results exceed any of the enabled sort parameters in the recipe, the wafer fails, otherwise the wafer passes.

Certain recipe parameters interact. When you change Gain, for example, Threshold, Area From, and Haze Range values automatically change to the default values for that gain. You can change the values for these parameters after setting the gain.

  • Recipe parameters:
    • substrate diameter
    • Edge exclusion-excluded from scan results, min=1mm. max=1/2 of wafer diameter
    • Gain/Max size- gain determines the range of data collected during a scan
    • For Surfscan 6200 gain is value from 1-8.
      • For value=1, size=63um or 250um2 ( GAIN 1).
      • For value=8, size=0.12um or 0.005um2 (GAIN8).
    • When you change Gain, the instrument automatically sets Area Form to Max Size.
    • Threshold specifies the smallest LPD size to be included in the scan results
    • Throughput is the speed at which the wafer is processed through the instrument: High, medium, normal, low.
    • Area From - this value determines the LPD size above which the instrument classifies LPD as areas
    • LPD count- the max number of light particle defects allowed( 0-99999)
    • LPD/cm2- Number of LPDs allowed per square centimeter
    • Area count-total number of areas allowed ( areas+ scratches)
    • Area mm2- total of all areas allowed in mm2
    • Scratch count-number of scratches allowed in mm
    • Selecting substrate parameters:
      • Edge exclusion=4mm (choose the select button at the bottom left of the recipe dialog box-to select a new substrate and thickness)
      • T (Tencor Instruments supplied calibration curve is used)
      • C (Customer supplied calibration curve is used)
  • The instrument collects defects and haze data from a wafer by illuminating the wafer surface with a laser beam, collecting the scattered light through an optics system, and amplifying the scattered light with a photomultiplier tube(PMT). The gain of the PMT determines the dynamic range for collecting data.
  • Selecting an LPD range
    • To specify the LPD range, use Gain, Threshold, and Area From parameters.
    • The gain setting determines the maximum LPD size of interest.
    • The threshold determines the smallest LPD collected during a scan. Using a combination of gain and the threshold settings, you can scan for a broad or narrow band of LPDs.