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Soft X-rays and extreme ultraviolet radiation : principles and applications / [...] XD-US PDF

503 Pages·1999·14.532 MB·English
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SOFT X-RAYS AND EXTREME ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION Thisself-contained,comprehensivebookdescribesthefundamentalpropertiesofsoftx-rays and extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation and discusses their applications in a wide variety of fields, including EUV lithography for semiconductor chip manufacture and soft x-ray biomicroscopy. Theauthorbeginsbypresentingtherelevantbasicprinciplessuchasradiationandscatter- ing,wavepropagation,diffraction,andcoherence.Hethengoesontoexamineabroadrange ofphenomenaandapplications.Eachchapterbeginswithasimplesummaryofkeyresultsand concepts,followedbyanintroductionwithlittleornomathematicssoastobeaccessibleto thewidestpossibleaudience.Thisisfollowedbyadetailedmathematicaldevelopmentofthe theoreticalstructureofthesubjectinquestion.ThetopicscoveredincludeEUVlithography, biomicroscopy, spectromicroscopy, EUV astronomy, synchrotron radiation, and soft x-ray lasers. Theauthoralsoprovidesagreatdealofusefulreferencematerialsuchaselectronbinding energies,characteristicemissionlines,andphotoabsorptioncross-sections.Thebookwillbeof greatinteresttograduatestudentsandresearchersinengineering,physics,chemistry,andthe lifesciences.Itwillalsoappealtopracticingengineersinvolvedinsemiconductorfabrication andmaterialsscience. David Attwood is the Director of the Center for X-Ray Optics at the Lawrence Berkeley NationalLaboratory.HeisalsoaProfessorinResidenceinboththeDepartmentofElectrical EngineeringandComputerScienceandtheGraduateGroupinAppliedScienceandTechnol- ogyattheUniversityofCalifornia,Berkeley.HeisaFellowoftheOpticalSocietyofAmerica andhaspublishedover100scientificarticles. SOFT X-RAYS AND EXTREME ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION PrinciplesandApplications DAVID ATTWOOD UNIVERSITYOFCALIFORNIA,BERKELEY AND LAWRENCEBERKELEY NATIONALLABORATORY CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, São Paulo Cambridge University Press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 2RU, UK Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York www.cambridge.org Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521652148 © Cambridge University Press 1999 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 1999 This digitally printed first paperback version (with amendments) 2007 A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Attwood. David T. Soft x-rays and extreme ultraviolet radiation : principles and applications / David Attwood. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-521-65214-6 (hbk.) 1. Grenz rays. 2. Ultraviolet radiation. I. Title. QC482.G68A88 1999 539.7´222 – dc21 99-21078 CIP ISBN-13 978-0-521-65214-8 hardback ISBN-10 0-521-65214-6 hardback ISBN-13 978-0-521-02997-1 paperback ISBN-10 0-521-02997-X paperback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party Internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate. The colour figures referred to in this publication have been replaced with black and white images for this digital reprinting. At the time of going to press the original images were available in colour for download from http://www.cambridge.org/9780521029971 ToProfessorsStanleyGoldstein andNathanMarcuvitz Contents PREFACE pagexiii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xv CHAPTER1. INTRODUCTION 1 1.1 TheSoftX-RayandExtremeUltravioletRegionsoftheElectromagnetic Spectrum 1 1.2 BasicAbsorptionandEmissionProcesses 5 1.3 AtomicEnergyLevelsandAllowedTransitions 10 1.4 Scattering,Diffraction,andRefractionofElectromagneticRadiation 18 References 21 HomeworkProblems 23 CHAPTER2. RADIATIONANDSCATTERINGATEUVANDSOFT X-RAYWAVELENGTHS 24 2.1 Maxwell’sEquationsandtheWaveEquation 24 2.2 CalculatingScatteredFields 27 2.3 RadiatedPowerandPoynting’sTheorem 33 2.4 ScatteringCrossSections 38 2.5 ScatteringbyaFreeElectron 39 2.6 ScatteringbyBoundElectrons 41 2.7 ScatteringbyaMulti-electronAtom 44 References 53 HomeworkProblems 54 CHAPTER3. WAVEPROPAGATIONANDREFRACTIVEINDEXATEUVANDSOFT X-RAYWAVELENGTHS 55 3.1 TheWaveEquationandRefractiveIndex 56 3.2 PhaseVariationandAbsorptionofPropagatingWaves 61 3.3 ReflectionandRefractionatanInterface 66 3.4 TotalExternalReflectionofSoftX-RaysandEUVRadiation 69 vii viii CONTENTS 3.5 ReflectionCoefficientsatanInterface 71 3.5.1 E PerpendiculartothePlaneofIncidence 71 0 3.5.2 E ParalleltothePlaneofIncidence 77 0 3.6 Brewster’sAngle 80 3.7 FieldPenetrationintoaLossyMediumNeartheCriticalAngle 82 3.8 Determinationofδandβ: TheKramers–KronigRelations 90 3.9 ApplicationstoGlancingIncidenceOptics 94 3.10 EnhancedReflectivityfromPeriodicStructures 95 References 96 HomeworkProblems 97 CHAPTER4. MULTILAYERINTERFERENCECOATINGS 98 4.1 Introduction 98 4.2 ConstructiveInterferenceofScatteredRadiation 99 4.3 ComputationalModelforCalculatingReflectionfromaMultilayerMirror 103 4.4 MultilayerFabrication 106 4.5 ApplicationsofMultilayerCoatedOptics 107 4.5.1 SoftX-RayandExtremeUltravioletPhotoemissionMicroscopy forSurfaceScience 108 4.5.2 ExtremeUltravioletandSoftX-RayAstronomy 108 4.5.3 ExtremeUltravioletLithography 110 4.5.4 PlasmaDiagnostics 113 4.5.5 PolarizationStudiesofMagneticMaterials 114 4.5.6 TheX-RayMicroprobe 116 References 119 HomeworkProblems 122 CHAPTER5. SYNCHROTRONRADIATION 123 5.1 Introduction 124 5.2 CharacteristicsofBendingMagnetRadiation 126 5.3 CharacteristicsofUndulatorRadiation 135 5.3.1 UndulatorRadiationPattern 137 5.3.2 TheCentralRadiationCone 139 5.4 UndulatorRadiation: CalculationsofRadiatedPower,Brightness, andHarmonics 141 5.4.1 TheUndulatorEquation 141 5.4.2 CommentsonUndulatorHarmonics 146 5.4.3 PowerRadiatedintheCentralRadiationCone 147 5.4.4 PowerasaFunctionofAngleandTotalRadiatedPower 156 5.4.5 SpectralBandwidthofUndulatorRadiation 161 5.4.6 SpectralBrightnessofUndulatorRadiation 165 5.4.7 TimeStructure 168 5.4.8 PolarizationPropertiesofUndulatorRadiation 170 5.5 TheScaleofHarmonicMotion 172 CONTENTS ix 5.6 TheTransitionfromUndulatortoWigglerRadiation 177 5.7 WigglerPowerandFlux 182 5.8 FemtosecondPulseGeneration 185 References 186 HomeworkProblems 188 CHAPTER6. PHYSICSOFHOTDENSEPLASMAS 189 6.1 Introduction 190 6.2 ShortandLongRangeInteractionsinPlasmas 191 6.3 BasicParametersforDescribingaPlasma 195 6.4 Microscopic,Kinetic,andFluidDescriptionsofaPlasma 197 6.4.1 TheMicroscopicDescription 197 6.4.2 TheKineticDescription 200 6.4.3 TheFluidDescription 202 6.4.4 PlasmaExpansion 211 6.4.5 Electron-AcousticWaves 213 6.4.6 Ion-AcousticWaves 217 6.4.7 TransverseElectromagneticWavesinaPlasma 219 6.4.8 ResonanceAbsorption 227 6.4.9 WavesinaMagnetizedPlasma 227 6.4.10 Non-linearProcessesinaPlasma 227 6.4.11 ThresholdforNon-linearProcesses 232 6.5 NumericalSimulations 234 6.5.1 ParticleinCellSimulations 234 6.5.2 LangrangianZonalCalculationsofPlasmaMassandEnergy Transport 236 6.6 DensityGradients: UVandEUVProbing 238 6.7 X-RayEmissionfromaHotDensePlasma 241 6.7.1 ContinuumRadiationandBlackbodySpectra 242 6.7.2 LineEmissionandIonizationBottlenecks 246 6.7.3 Sub-kilovoltLineandContinuumEmissions 248 6.7.4 Multi-kilovoltLineEmission 254 6.7.5 SuprathermalX-Rays 256 6.7.6 LaserWavelengthTrends 257 6.8 HighHarmonicGenerationwithFemtosecondLaserPulses 259 References 261 HomeworkProblems 266 CHAPTER7. EXTREMEULTRAVIOLETANDSOFTX-RAYLASERS 267 7.1 BasicProcesses 268 7.2 Gain 274 7.3 RecombinationLasingwithHydrogen-likeCarbonIons 279 7.4 CollisionallyPumpedNeon-likeandNickel-likeLasers 283 7.5 CompactEUVLasers 291 x CONTENTS References 295 HomeworkProblems 299 CHAPTER8. COHERENCEATSHORTWAVELENGTHS 300 8.1 ConceptsofSpatialandTemporalCoherence 301 8.2 ExamplesofExperimentsthatRequireCoherence 306 8.3 SpatialandSpectralFiltering 309 8.4 SpatialandSpectralFilteringofUndulatorRadiation 310 8.5 SpatiallyCoherentEUVandSoftX-RayLasers 318 8.6 TheVanCittert–ZernikeTheorem 321 8.7 ExamplesofHighContrastFringesFormedatShortWavelengths 330 References 333 HomeworkProblems 336 CHAPTER9. SOFTX-RAYMICROSCOPYWITHDIFFRACTIVEOPTICS 337 9.1 Introduction 338 9.2 TheFresnelZonePlateLens 342 9.3 DiffractionofRadiationbyPinholeAperturesandZonePlates 349 9.3.1 PinholeAperture 351 9.3.2 ZonePlate 353 9.4 SpatialResolutionofaZonePlateLens 357 9.5 DepthofFocusandSpectralBandwidth 361 9.6 SpatialResolutionBeyondtheRayleighLimit: TheEffectiveAngular IlluminationProfile 363 9.7 HighResolutionSoftX-RayMicroscopy 365 9.7.1 TheSoftX-RayMicroscope 366 9.7.2 TheScanningSoftX-RayMicroscope 367 9.8 ApplicationstotheLifeSciences 369 9.8.1 BiologicalApplicationsoftheSoftX-RayMicroscope 372 9.8.2 BiologicalApplicationsoftheScanningSoftX-RayMicroscope 377 9.9 ApplicationstothePhysicalSciences: AnalyticToolsforMaterialsand SurfaceScienceatSpatialResolutionsBelow100Nanometers 379 9.10 ZonePlateFabrication 385 References 388 HomeworkProblems 394 CHAPTER10. EXTREMEULTRAVIOLETANDX-RAYLITHOGRAPHY 395 10.1 DeepUltraviolet(DUV)LithographyandBeyond 396 10.2 ExtremeUltraviolet(EUV)Lithography 404 10.3 X-RayProximityLithography 408 References 412 HomeworkProblems 416

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