Laboratory X-ray Microscopy of 3D Nanostructures in the Hard X-ray Regime Enabled by a Combination of Multilayer X-ray Optics.
Bartlomiej LechowskiKristina KutukovaJoerg GrenzerIuliana PanchenkoPeter KruegerAndre ClausnerEhrenfried ZschechPublished in: Nanomaterials (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
High-resolution imaging of buried metal interconnect structures in advanced microelectronic products with full-field X-ray microscopy is demonstrated in the hard X-ray regime, i.e., at photon energies > 10 keV. The combination of two multilayer optics-a side-by-side Montel (or nested Kirkpatrick-Baez) condenser optic and a high aspect-ratio multilayer Laue lens-results in an asymmetric optical path in the transmission X-ray microscope. This optics arrangement allows the imaging of 3D nanostructures in opaque objects at a photon energy of 24.2 keV (In-Kα X-ray line). Using a Siemens star test pattern with a minimal feature size of 150 nm, it was proven that features < 150 nm can be resolved. In-Kα radiation is generated from a Ga-In alloy target using a laboratory X-ray source that employs the liquid-metal-jet technology. Since the penetration depth of X-rays into the samples is significantly larger compared to 8 keV photons used in state-of-the-art laboratory X-ray microscopes (Cu-Kα radiation), 3D-nanopattered materials and structures can be imaged nondestructively in mm to cm thick samples. This means that destructive de-processing, thinning or cross-sectioning of the samples are not needed for the visualization of interconnect structures in microelectronic products manufactured using advanced packaging technologies. The application of laboratory transmission X-ray microscopy in the hard X-ray regime is demonstrated for Cu/Cu 6 Sn 5 /Cu microbump interconnects fabricated using solid-liquid interdiffusion (SLID) bonding.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- dual energy
- mass spectrometry
- high speed
- computed tomography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- optical coherence tomography
- machine learning
- photodynamic therapy
- radiation therapy
- ionic liquid
- magnetic resonance
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high throughput
- single cell
- density functional theory
- single molecule
- label free