Thin-film interference in photoresist stacks can become a significant source of uncertainty in lithographic focus metrology, particularly when high measurement stability is required. To evaluate this effect, a Fresnel-based multilayer reflection model is used to analyze the optical response of the resist stack and to guide the selection of dual-wavelength illumination. On this basis, a dual-wavelength optical triangulation system is developed for focus metrology in 350 nm lithography, with signal acquisition performed by a linear charge-coupled device (LCCD). Rather than improving precision by reducing detector pitch, the system employs a two-stage sub-pixel localization strategy in which template matching provides coarse spot localization and weighted centroid interpolation refines the final position within localized calculation windows, keeping the computational cost manageable. A covariance-based uncertainty analysis predicts a total root-mean-square uncertainty of 27.23 nm. Prototype experiments were performed on a bare silicon wafer to establish the intrinsic performance of the instrument before introducing process-dependent optical effects. Under these conditions, the system achieved a vertical resolution of 10 nm, a repeatability of 35 nm, and a stability of 13.16 nm. The additional uncertainty expected under resist-coated-wafer conditions was assessed separately through the thin-film model. These results verify the baseline capability of the proposed system and support the feasibility of the dual-wavelength strategy for focus metrology in 350 nm lithography.
Guan et al. (Tue,) studied this question.