IMAGING ELLIPSOMETRY REVISITED - DEVELOPMENTS FOR VISUALIZATION OF THIN TRANSPARENT LAYERS ON SILICON SUBSTRATES

Citation
G. Jin et al., IMAGING ELLIPSOMETRY REVISITED - DEVELOPMENTS FOR VISUALIZATION OF THIN TRANSPARENT LAYERS ON SILICON SUBSTRATES, Review of scientific instruments, 67(8), 1996, pp. 2930-2936
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Applied","Instument & Instrumentation
ISSN journal
00346748
Volume
67
Issue
8
Year of publication
1996
Pages
2930 - 2936
Database
ISI
SICI code
0034-6748(1996)67:8<2930:IER-DF>2.0.ZU;2-T
Abstract
Imaging ellipsometry is presented as a technique for quantification an d visualization of the lateral thickness distribution of thin (0-30 nm ) transparent layers on solid substrates. The main advantage of imagin g ellipsometry is that every point on a surface is measured at the sam e time with a high lateral resolution. The method is based on the use of combined null and off-null ellipsometry at an incident angle close to the pseudo-Brewster angle of a high index substrate such as silicon . In the present experimental setup, a xenon lamp, a collimator, and a wavelength-selective filter provide an expanded collimated probe beam with a diameter of 25 mm. Other major components in the system are a polarizer, a compensator, and an analyzer. In this way, a 15x30 mm(2) image of a sample surface can be focused onto a charge-coupled-device video camera and transferred to a computer for further evaluation by i mage processing. Thickness measurements are performed for calibration purposes with ordinary null ellipsometry. The imaging ellipsometer has an accuracy of better than 0.5 nm at a lateral resolution of 5 mu m i n the present configuration, but improvements of at least a factor of 5 can be foreseen. Several aspects of the ellipsometric imaging system are illustrated in selected applications including continuous protein thickness distributions, stepped silicon dioxide thickness distributi ons, and visualization of protein patterning of surfaces. The latter c an be used in a biosensor system as illustrated here by antigen-antibo dy binding studies. (C) 1996 American Institute of Physics.