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1.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 23(25): 13878-13884, 2021 Jul 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34114582

RESUMO

An atomistic description of tin deposition on ruthenium and its effect on blistering damage is of great interest in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. In EUV machines, tin debris from the EUV-emitting tin plasma may be deposited on the mirrors in the optical path. Tin facilitates the formation of hydrogen-filled blisters under the ruthenium top layer of the multi-layer mirrors. We have used Density Functional Theory (DFT) to show that tin deposition on a clean ruthenium surface exhibits a film-plus-islands (Stranski-Krastanov) growth mode, with the first atomic layer bonding strongly to the substrate. We find that a single tin layer allows hydrogen to reach the ruthenium surface and subsurface more easily than on clean ruthenium, but hydrogen penetration through the tin film becomes progressively more difficult when more layers are added. The results indicate that hydrogen penetration and blistering occur when only a thin layer of tin is present.

2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 22(15): 7935-7941, 2020 Apr 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32232240

RESUMO

Hydrogen permeation into mirrors used in extreme ultraviolet lithography results in the formation of blisters, which are detrimental to reflectivity. An understanding of the mechanism via which hydrogen ends up at the interface between the top ruthenium layer and the underlying bilayers is necessary to mitigate the blistering damage. In this study, we use density functional theory to examine the ways in which hydrogen, having entered the near-surface interstitial voids, can migrate further into the metal or to its surface. We show that with hydrogen and tin adsorbed on the ruthenium surface, diffusion to the surface is blocked for interstitial hydrogen in the metal, making diffusion further into the metal more likely than out-diffusion. The dependence on surface conditions matches and confirms similar findings on hydrogen permeation into metals. This suggests control and modification of surface conditions as a way to influence hydrogen retention and blistering.

3.
J Phys Chem C Nanomater Interfaces ; 126(13): 5950-5959, 2022 Apr 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35422891

RESUMO

Ruthenium (Ru) thin films are used as protective caps for the multilayer mirrors in extreme ultraviolet lithography machines. When these mirrors are exposed to atomic hydrogen (H), it can permeate through Ru, leading to the formation of hydrogen-filled blisters on the mirrors. H has been shown to exhibit low solubility in bulk Ru, but the nature of H diffusion through Ru and its contribution to the mechanisms of blistering remain unknown. This work makes use of reactive molecular dynamics simulations to study the influence of imperfections in a Ru film on the behavior of H. For the Ru/H system, a ReaxFF force field which reproduces structures and energies obtained from quantum-mechanical calculations was parametrized. Molecular dynamics simulations have been performed with the newly developed force field to study the effect of tilt and twist grain boundaries on the overall diffusion behavior of H in Ru. Our simulations show that the tilt and twist grain boundaries provide energetically favorable sites for hydrogen atoms and act as sinks and highways for H. They therefore block H transport across their planes and favor diffusion along their planes. This results in the accumulation of hydrogen at the grain boundaries. The strong effect of the grain boundaries on hydrogen diffusion suggests tailoring the morphology of ruthenium thin films as a means to curb the rate of hydrogen permeation.

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