Mats
Ekberg, Per-Uno Skotte, and Tomas Utterbäck, Micronic Laser Systems;
Oleg Kishkovich, David Ruede, and John Higley, Extraction Systems; and
Vladimir L. Orkin, National Institute of Standards and Technology
The
proliferation of photomask laser pattern generators presents new challenges
to system designers and manufacturers. Laser pattern generators are
susceptible to the influence of airborne molecular contamination (AMC),
which affects both chemically amplified resists (CARs) and laser optics.
However, while semiconductor wafer lithographers have confronted similar
challenges and developed reasonable methods for dealing with AMC, photomask
and photomask equipment manufacturers have not acquired comparable experience.
Moreover, some AMC issues in the photomask area differ from those in
the semiconductor wafer lithography area.
Pattern
generators used in the maskmaking industry have shifted from the use
of E-beam writing technologies to higher-speed, higher-productivity
laser writing technologies. While the latter have appreciably increased
the throughput rates at which quality masks can be created, they have
also introduced AMC issues that manufacturers and users of mask pattern
generators have not previously encountered.
This
article addresses the challenge posed by AMC to modern mask-writing
tools. It is based on work performed by Micronic Laser Systems (Täby,
Sweden) to investigate the sources of AMC and identify suitable methods
for minimizing its effects.1 To accomplish that task, the
company teamed with Extraction Systems (Franklin, MA), whose air-filtration,
metrology, and analytical technologies had previously been developed
for the semiconductor fabrication industry for use in deep ultraviolet
(DUV) photolithography applications. The two companies performed a needs
analysis, which led to the development of a suitable air-filtration
system for DUV mask-writing tools.
First,
the article compares the effects of AMC on semiconductor manufacturing
and maskmaking. It discusses air-sampling and construction-material
analyses that were performed to understand AMC challenges. Then it details
the methods that were used to develop an appropriate filtration specification
for different classes of contaminants and to fabricate an air-filtration
system for a series of laser pattern generators. The article highlights
the importance of cooperation between tool designers and AMC experts
to maximize process stability and equipment productivity in advanced
maskmaking applications.
AMC
in IC Fabs and Mask Houses
In
2002 and 2003, Extraction's Airelab group collected and analyzed ambient
air samples from more than 30 fabs worldwide.2 As shown in
Table I, average NH3
levels were in the 10-ppbv range, half of the reported average a few
years earlier. SO2 levels were often lower than
the detection limits of common laboratory capture and analytical methods
(<0.1 µg/m3), possibly because of the natural tendency
of strong acids to combine with molecular bases. Since significant quantities
of ammonia exist in the air, acids can combine with the ammonia to form
salts, lowering ambient acid levels. HEPA and ULPA filters used in the
air-handling systems in photolithography bays can act as reaction beds
to promote the combination of acidic and basic species.
 |
| Figure
1: NH3, SO2, and organic
levels in a new cleanroom over a 17-month period. While inorganic
levels remained relatively steady, condensable organic levels fell. |
Levels
of condensable organic compounds (compounds with boiling points above
150°C) vary greatly from cleanroom to cleanroom. In fact, tests
have shown that in the same cleanroom, condensable organic compound
levels can double from one day to the next because of the use of cleaning
solvents and unplanned releases of such solvents as PGMEA, which is
used in photoresist processing. In addition, new cleanrooms have been
shown to have higher levels of condensable organics at start-up than
after a period of operation. The data presented in Figure 1 demonstrate
that in one fab, organic levels fell by more than four times, from >240
µg/m3 to <60 µg/m3, during its first
17 months of existence. The tendency of organic compound levels in new
buildings to decrease over time can be attributed to initially high
outgassing from cleanroom construction materials as well as construction
and tool-installation activities. Presumably that tendency affects both
mask and IC cleanrooms.
Effects
of AMC
To
understand the effects of AMC on maskmaking applications, it is useful
to review the experience of the semiconductor fabrication industry.
Leading-edge IC wafer production takes place at 130 nm. At such resolutions,
CARs and the optics systems used to print patterns are extremely sensitive
to AMC.
While
semiconductor fabricators have focused on airborne molecular contaminants
such as ammonia and 1-methyl-2-pyrrolidone (NMP), dozens of acids, bases,
condensable organics, and dopants—all of which are routinely found
in cleanroom environments—threaten DUV processes and equipment, as
seen in research performed by Extraction Systems, International Sematech,
IMEC, and other organizations.3 Moreover, refractory contaminants,
those that land on optics, are not removed effectively. All of these
contaminants can be found in ambient air, purge gases, and chemically
filtered chamber air surrounding optical components.
Molecular
contaminants can alter the physical properties of photoresists. For
example, in semiconductor fabrication applications, they can reduce
the quality of the lithographic image on the wafer by causing yield-limiting
"T-topping." Moreover, minute amounts of condensable organic contaminants
can deposit damaging films on 193- and 157-nm optical elements, causing
such forms of optics degradation as transmission loss, illumination
nonuniformity, and light scattering, which can result in stray light.
Contaminants can also shorten optics' service life spans.4,5
Removing
Acids and Organic Compounds. Molecular bases can contaminate
CARs. Since certain compounds can react with other compounds at room
temperatures to form condensable or nonvolatile products, they must
be removed. For example, because strong acids such as HCl and H2SO4
can react with ever-present NH3 to form nonvolatile
salts, it is important to filter strong acids. However, while filters
can be designed to remove any species, the practical limits of filtration
must address airflow requirements, pressure-drop budgets, size limitations,
and costs.
The
importance of filtering organics is acknowledged among microlithographers
and exposure-tool suppliers. A naturally occurring substance for removing
organic contaminants is ozone, or "active oxygen," which is formed in
air at wavelengths used in exposure tools. Since ozone can remove hydrocarbon
films from lens surfaces, toolmakers have adopted strategies based on
ozone formation during exposure and are investigating methods for using
ozone to maintain the cleanliness of 157-nm optical surfaces. However,
while this strategy works well for true hydrocarbons—compounds containing
only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen—it may not be suitable for the removal
of all organic species.
Very
large organic molecules found in engineered plastics, which can readily
condense to form monolayers of thin films, pose a great challenge, especially
when they contain not only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but also species
such as phosphorus and silicon. In the presence of ozone, such species,
which are commonly referred to as refractory compounds not because of
their optical nature but because they are difficult to corrode or draw
out, can be oxidized to form nonvolatile residues on optical surfaces.
Whole classes of compounds used as flame-retardant materials fall into
this category. Fortunately they are well known. Hence flame-retardant
materials used in flexible air ducts can be manufactured without such
compounds, or rigid metal ducting can be used.
The
Impact of AMC on Optics. Optical surfaces exposed to potentially
harmful species during exposure and idle times must be protected. The
absorption of UV radiation by contaminant molecules, especially at shorter
wavelengths, can cause the molecules to undergo photodecomposition,
resulting in chemical deposition on the optical surfaces of exposure
tools.
 |
| Figure
2: Absorption spectra of commonly used silicon-containing organics
through the range of wavelengths used in IC production fabs. |
In
an effort to understand the potential for optical degradation, Extraction
commissioned the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST;
Gaithersburg, MD) to analyze chemical species commonly found in the
photobay and determine their ability to interact with exposure radiation.
In particular, hexamethyldisilazane (HMDS) and some of its derivatives
were examined for their potential to absorb radiation through the range
of wavelengths used or soon to be used in production tools.
Figure
2 shows the absorption cross sections of compounds from 160 to 240 nm.
In the region of the krypton fluoride (KrF) laser (248 nm), all measured
absorption cross sections were far less than 10–20 cm2/molecule.
Absorption increased toward the argon fluoride (ArF) laser wavelength
of 193 nm, becoming as high as 3 X 10–18 cm2/molecule
in the case of HMDS and one to two orders of magnitude less than that
in the case of hexamethyldisiloxane and trimethylmethoxysilane. Near
the fluorine (F2) laser wavelength of 157 nm,
the silicon-containing contaminants under investigation exhibited very
strong absorption levels exceeding 10–17 cm2/molecule.
Notably,
these high absorption levels are related to chemical composition, not
just to the presence of silicon atoms in the contaminant molecules.
Thus, the absorption cross sections of siloxane (SiH4)
are at least two orders of magnitude smaller than those of all other
silicon compounds over the entire wavelength range. But because they
contain silicon, all of these compounds can leave SiO2
film deposits on optical surfaces that are difficult, if not impossible,
to remove without damaging optical coatings. Silicon-containing solvents
are handled so that they do not enter cleanroom air. Nevertheless, because
they can be spilled or otherwise released inadvertently, filtration
systems must be able to remove them from the cleanroom ambient.
AMC
Control in Chipmaking versus Maskmaking
As
in the semiconductor fabrication industry, the mask-making industry
must protect resists and optics against AMC as it shifts to the use
of laser pattern generation. Unlike the IC industry, however, mask-making
faces unique challenges stemming from the nature of maskmaking processes
and equipment.
•
Mask geometries are four times larger than wafer geometries. Hence the
mask industry is investigating the use of CARs to achieve optical proximity
correction and is developing fast, high-resolution atmospheric tools.
•
Long write times in maskmaking mean that the coated mask plate may be
in the tool exposure chamber for hours rather than a minute, as in chipmaking.
•
Whereas the chipmaking industry is relatively mature and accustomed
to AMC control in 248-nm-wavelength lithography, maskmakers are still
in the process of developing new molecular base materials criteria,
operating procedures, and even cleanroom designs to protect CARs.
•
In contrast to IC manufacturing, in which wafers are prepared, coated,
exposed, and baked in a clustered toolset comprising an exposure and
a development tool, lithography processing in the maskmaking industry
does not lend itself to the use of clustered exposure tools.
•
Resists are most at risk between the exposure and postexposure bake
steps. In chipmaking, the wafer may be coated, exposed, and baked at
the rate of 100 wafers/ hr. In maskmaking, however, the plate may be
coated by a plate manufacturer in one country and then transported to
the maskmaker in another country in a purged enclosure. Coating may
take place more than a month before exposure, and the exposure process
can take hours.
•
In wafer processing, resists are mature and optimized.6 In
maskmaking, however, resists are relatively new and not as well characterized.
Consequently, the critical dimension shift that occurs during a 10-ppb
ammonia spike is not as well understood in the mask-making as in the
chipmaking process.7 Thus, rework decisions must be made
based on less experience.
Developing
Methods to Combat AMC
Understanding
the importance of AMC control, Micronic performed a needs analysis to
design and build a suitable chemical air-filtration system for use in
the Sigma7000 series of 130–100- and 90–65-nm high-resolution
DUV laser pattern generators. The systems operate properly only in ultraclean
environments that are free of AMC. Therefore, early in the design phase,
AMC measurements were taken by Extraction to evaluate the laser generators'
as-built operating environments and existing air-filtration systems,
and to establish a baseline for characterizing the AMC challenge. Such
factors as construction materials, process chemicals, clean dry air
(CDA), ambient cleanroom atmosphere, cleaning solvents, and the presence
of humans were evaluated. The analysis had four objectives:
•
To define a performance specification encompassing acids, bases, and
organics.
•
To design a chemical air-filter system comprising tool-enclosure and
optics purge-gas filtration.
•
To devise a method for monitoring AMC in and around the tool during
construction.
•
To formulate a final AMC qualification procedure for production tools
being shipped to customers.
Measurements
were taken using a real-time total molecular base (TMB) monitoring system
from Extraction. Then trap sampling was performed, followed by ion chromatography
(IC) and gas chromatography–mass spectroscopy (GC-MS) analysis.
 |
| Figure
3: Comparative data derived from a TMB monitor illustrating how
different materials outgas molecular bases. |
Total
Molecular Base Monitoring. The TMB monitor combines patented
condition and conversion technology with chemiluminescence detection
to achieve a detection limit of 500 ppt. The monitor's multipoint measurement
capability enabled readings at locations such as the tool enclosure,
system optics, makeup air (MUA) duct, filter cabinet, and ambient cleanroom.
From these measurements, it was possible to determine the total molecular
concentration of ammonia, NMP, amines, and other pollutants.8
Figure 3 shows how different materials outgas molecular bases.
 |
| Figure
4: Output from a GC-MS analysis of a sealant containing silicon,
an unacceptable refractory contaminant, that has outgassed large
amounts of BHT, a well-known antioxidant added to polymeric materials. |
Trap
Sampling and Analysis. Trap sampling was used to identify and
quantify acids, bases, and organics with concentrations as low as 100
ppt. Acid and base samples were analyzed using IC, while organics were
analyzed using a GC-MS system equipped with a mass selective detector
and a thermal desorption system. Individual compounds were identified
by performing a library search of chromatographic peak positions, which
are presented in Figures 4 and 5.
The
ability to determine the quantities and types of compounds found in
the CDA and nitrogen used in exposure tools helped to specify these
gases' cleanliness levels and prevent potentially damaging compounds
from contacting lens surfaces.
 |
| Figure
5: Output from a GC-MS analysis of polymeric tubing. (Total siloxanes
= 0.001 µg/gr/min, and total emissions = 0.1 µg/gr/min.)
|
Developing
a Suitable AMC Air-Filtration System
In
response to the AMC challenge faced by the semiconductor fabrication
industry, Extraction had already developed an OEM-approved filtration
system to protect DUV lithography optics and resist processes. The objective
now was to transfer those AMC metrology and filtration technologies
to the maskmaking industry, facilitating the development and construction
of an effective air-filtration system for the Sigma7000-series laser
mask writers.
Air-Filtration
System Design. As more experience was gained on early ArF tools,
concerns increased about even low levels of specific volatile compounds
found in cleanroom air, leading to more-stringent filter requirements.
Filters had to be capable of removing not only NH3,
amines, and NMP, which contaminated highly sensitive early photoresists,
but also molecular acids and condensable organic compounds.
Protecting
lenses from a range of contaminants requires filtration strategies that
balance efficiency and longevity against real-world flow and pressure-drop
requirements. Extraction's filters use a pleated nonwoven fabric to
suspend high-surface-area media, ensuring that contaminants are removed
while purified air passes through freely. This design has a two-layer
structure to optimize media combinations. The pleated structure maximizes
filter area, resulting in higher removal efficiency and a lower pressure
drop than older packed-bed designs.
The
hybrid filter installed in the Micronic laser pattern generators uses
highly activated carbon to remove condensable organic species by means
of adsorption (sometimes referred to as chemisorption), a powerful filtration
process for nonpolar species such as hydrocarbons. To remove acids and
bases, the filter is chemically treated to react with the target species
and combine with it to form a nonvolatile compound that is locked into
the porous media structure.
The
pleated filter's low pressure-drop characteristic allows serial stacking
of filter cells, which has several advantages:
•
Serial filters can be fitted with sample-collection ports to gather
AMC data, enabling real-time monitoring. The data are used to plan filter
changes before contaminants break through the final filter and contact
photoresists and optics. Nonserial filters, particularly packed-bed
designs with a high pressure-drop characteristic, cannot provide advance
warning of filter failures.
•
Each filter is initially capable of removing >99% of the target contaminants.
Multiple serial filters protect against extreme contamination challenges,
such as developer spills or leaks.
•
Partially spent filters can help to extend the lifetime of fresh filters,
resulting in a low cost of operation. In nonserial designs, filters
can fail when their removal efficiency drops below 99%. In other words,
a 1% contamination breakthrough can be cause for a filter change. In
serial designs, filters with removal efficiencies of <99% still protect
the next filter downstream against most contaminants.
Figure
6 presents GC-MS scans of condensable organic compounds taken from filter
inlet, filter interstack, and filter outlet sampling ports in a production
lithography environment. While organic pollutants moved through the
filter, they did not break through. This example demonstrates that the
use of interstack sample ports to perform periodic monitoring enables
exposure-tool users to predict filter performance and plan maintenance
events around production requirements.
 |
| Figure
6: GC-MS scans of condensable organic compounds taken from (a) filter
inlet, (b) filter interstack, and (c) filter outlet sampling ports
in a production lithography environment. |
Redesigning
the Air-Filtration Prototype. A comparison between the preliminary
AMC specifications developed by Micronic and the actual values captured
during the needs analysis resulted in revised AMC guidelines, influencing
the design of a prototype air-filtration system for the laser pattern
generators.
 |
| Figure
7: Schematic diagram of the climate system of the laser pattern
generator. |
A
schematic diagram of the generator's airflow unit is presented in Figure
7. The unit's filtered-air climate module is based on global laminar
airflow. Air from the cleanroom is conveyed through a single-pass MUA
filter, and then recirculated climate air is successively passed through
the recirculation air-filter unit. The MUA unit isolates the writer's
climate air from the cleanroom, while the recirculation filter unit
handles possible internal outgassing. Low-outgassing particle filters
are the final filters before the interior of the writer chamber. Such
filters are tested without the use of aerosols from the synthetic oils
dioctylphthalate (DOP) or diethylhexyl sebacate, which can cause prolonged
filter outgassing. Compressed CDA and nitrogen gases are purified in
separate gas scrubbers (pictured in Figure 8a) before entering the writer
chamber.
 |
| Figure
8: (a) Gas scrubbers for compressed CDA and nitrogen, and (b) the
filtration module of the laser pattern generator. In the MUA unit
(left), airflow goes downward. Cleanroom air is taken from the ceiling,
where air quality is expected to be the highest. To the right, the
filter cartridges are visible. |
Designing
the laser generators' air-filtration system also included intensive
materials selection, which involved research and materials studies using
outgassing tests based on GC-MS analyses. As a result of those analyses,
the use of plastic and polymeric materials in the writer was minimized.
In addition, the differences between surface and bulk outgassing materials
were investigated. While surface outgassing materials can be cleaned
using organic solvents and can then be baked or vacuum baked, bulk outgassing
compounds—including antioxidants such as butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT),
plasticizers such as DOP, and fire retardants such as triethylphosphate—can
never be rendered clean or turned into low-outgassing materials.
Few
lubricants, greases, or elastomers are used in the air-filtration system.
When necessary, lubricants based on fluorine oils, such as vacuum greases,
are employed. However, mineral oil–based lubricants are excluded.
As much as possible, elastomers, including soft or elastic polymeric
materials and room-temperature vulcanizing materials, are not permitted
to have direct contact with the climate air, CDA, or nitrogen.
Electric
wires, a potential source of AMC, have been placed outside the climate
airflow unit. The optical system is subject to forced airflow. Critical
optical components are connected to a special purge system built with
clean components.
 |
| Figure
9: Data indicating a very low, stable, TMB concentration for amines
of <0.8 ppb at the stage area close to the mask plate.
|
Installing
the Air-Filtration System. When design and prototyping activities
were completed, the air-filtration system (pictured in Figure 8b) was
integrated with a laser pattern generator. Certification testing was
then performed using a TMB monitor and GC-MS analysis. The ability of
the air-filtration system to remove AMC is demonstrated in Figure 9,
which shows a very low, stable, TMB concentration (<0.8 ppb) of amines
at the stage area close to the mask plate.
Conclusion
The
joint AMC studies described in this article verified that the maskmaking
industry, specifically the sector involved with the development of DUV
laser pattern generators, faces AMC challenges comparable to those long
understood by the semiconductor fabrication industry.
AMC
at parts-per-billion-by-volume levels or below concerns advanced microlithographers
because low levels of certain species can contaminate CARs and exposed
optical surfaces. Extensive sampling has produced a baseline of chemical
contaminants that can be used in filtration systems to ensure that exposed
optics contact chemically clean air. Hybrid filters can remove potentially
damaging species, such as molecular acids, bases, and condensable organics.
Laboratory and field characterization of filter systems will continue
as more and more ArF tools are deployed and more data are collected.
Acknowledgments
The
authors wish to thank Michael Alexander, Phil Cate, Frank Belanger,
and Robert Peterson for air quality and filter test data. They also
wish to acknowledge Eric Bergeron, John Sergi, James Mastrobuono, and
William Goodwin for new filter media production data.
References
1. M
Ekberg, S Paul, and O Kishkovich, "Laser Pattern Generator Challenges
in Airborne Molecular Contamination Protection," in Proceedings
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2. D
Ruede, "Airborne Molecular Contamination: The Good, the Bad and the
Ugly" (paper presented at Interface 2003, Arch Chemicals Microlithography
Symposium, San Diego, September 21–23, 2003).
3. D
Ruede, M Ercken, and T Borgers, "The Impact of Airborne Molecular Bases
on DUV Photoresists," Solid State Technology 44 (2001): 63–70.
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Bloomstein et al., "Contamination Rates of Optical Surfaces at 157 nm:
Impurities Outgassed from Construction Materials and from Photoresists,"
in Proceedings of Optical Microlithography XVI (Bellingham,
WA: SPIE, 2003), 650–661.
5. A
Grayfer, O Kishkovich, and D Ruede, "Protecting DUV Optics from Airborne
Molecular Contamination," Microlithography World 11, no. 1
(2002): 20–24.
6. D
Kinkead, A Grayfer, and OP Kishkovich, "Prevention of Optics and Resist
Contamination in 300nm Lithography: Improvements in Chemical Air Filtration,"
in Proceedings of Metrology, Inspection, and Process Control for
Microlithography XV (Bellingham, WA: SPIE, 2001), 739–752.
7. JS
Hudzik, OP Kishkovich, and JK Higley, "Molecular Contamination Control
in Photomask/Reticle Manufacturing Using Chemically Amplified Resists
(CAR)—Lessons from Wafer Lithography," in Proceedings of Photomask
Japan (Bellingham, WA: SPIE, 2002), 260.
8. OP
Kishkovich et al., "Real-Time Methodologies for Monitoring Airborne
Molecular Contamination in Modern DUV Photolithography Facilities,"
in Proceedings of Metrology, Inspection, and Process Control for
Microlithography XIII (Bellingham, WA: SPIE, 2001), 348–376.
Mats
Ekberg, PhD, is manager of the physics group in the core development
department at Micronic Laser Systems (Täby, Sweden), where he focuses
on optics and diffractive optical elements (DOEs). He also works in
the areas of resist processing, proximity compensation methods, and
AMC. Previously, he was with ABB Corporate Research, where he worked
with photoconductivity, DOEs, and high-power lasers. Ekberg has authored
or coauthored approximately 20 scientific papers and holds more than
30 Swedish and international patents. He is a member of SPIE and the
European Optical Society. He attended Chalmers University of Technology
in Göteborg, Sweden, where he received a degree in engineering
physics in 1987 and a PhD based on work in design, analysis, and manufacture
of computer-generated phase holograms and DOEs manufactured by E-beam
and laser lithography. (Ekberg can be reached at +46 8 6385477 or mats.ekberg@micronic.se.)
Per-Uno
Skotte is involved with R&D design and the practical applications
and installation of pneumatic systems at Micronic Laser Systems. He
joined the company in 1995. He began his career working for the Swedish
defense department in the area of information-secure computer systems.
(Skotte can be reached at +46 8 6385200 or peruno.skotte@
micronic.se.)
Tomas
Utterbäck is a senior technology specialist at Micronic
Laser Systems. He joined the company in 1990 to build and manage the
mechanics group in the core development department. Previously, he was
a consultant. In 1987 he received an MS in engineering, with specialization
in applied mechanics, from the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm.
(Utterbäck can be reached at +46 8 6385262 or tomas.utterback@micronic.se.)
Oleg
Kishkovich, PhD, is technology director and principal scientist
at Extraction Systems (Franklin, MA), where he pursues method development
for molecular contamination monitoring and product analysis for chemical
air filtration of DUV lithography environments. He has expertise in
chemical kinetics, atmospheric chemistry, trace-gas analysis, and magnetic
resonance techniques. Kishkovich has presented papers at international
conferences on the subject of molecular contamination measurement and
control in ultraclean environments and has published papers on real-time
monitoring, measurement, and control of molecular contamination. He
received an MS in engineering physics from the Moscow Institute of Physics
and Technology and a PhD in chemical and molecular physics from the
Moscow Institute of Chemical Physics. (Kishkovich can be reached at
508/553-3900, ext. 16, or okishkovich@extraction.com.)
David
Ruede is the filter group manager at Extraction Systems. Previously,
he was the company's senior manager of OEM sales. Before joining the
company, he had acquired more than 15 years of semiconductor industry
experience, including in positions at major microlithography and process
equipment firms. He received BS and MS degrees in chemistry from Central
Connecticut State University in New Britain. (Ruede can be reached at
508/553-3900, ext. 12, or druede@extraction.com.)
John
Higley is vp of sales and marketing at Extraction Systems.
With more than 19 years of experience in the field of environmental
products and services, he has focused on molecular contamination control
for the microelectronics industry. Prior to joining Extraction, he was
senior vp of GTI. He was a contributing author of the International
Sematech document, "Forecast of Airborne Molecular Contamination Limits
for the 0.25 Micron High Performance Logic Process." He has also published
many papers and lectured extensively. He is a member of the SEMI Standards
Task Force on Classification of Molecular Contamination and a senior
member of the Institute of Environmental Sciences and Technology. He
received a BA in political science from Denison University in Granville,
OH. (Higley can be reached at 508/553-3900, ext. 23, or
jhigley@extraction.com.)
Vladimir
L. Orkin, PhD, is a research chemist at the National Institute
of Standards and Technology (NIST; Gaithersburg, MD) and a member of
the NASA panel for kinetic and photochemical data evaluation. Since
1987, he has directed a research group at the Institute of Energy Problems
of Chemical Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences (RAS), in the area
of photochemical properties of industrial chemicals. His research interests
are gas kinetics, photochemistry and its technical applications, atmospheric
chemistry, and photochemical contamination of lithography optics. Orkin
has published papers in international scientific journals and is a frequent
presenter at technical conferences. He received an MS from the Moscow
Institute of Physics and Technology and a PhD in chemical physics from
the Institute of Chemical Physics, RAS, also in Moscow. (Orkin can be
reached at vladimir.orkin@nist.gov
or 301/975-4418.)