Achtergrond

Boxing with tin droplets to generate EUV light

Bauke Vermaas is a freelance science journalist.

Reading time: 5 minutes

The Advanced Research Center for Nanolithography was established to investigate the advanced physics associated with EUV lithography. This summer, it published its first peek into the complex physics of firing lasers at tin droplets to generate EUV light.

ASML’s state-of-the-art nanolithography machines use microscopically small tin droplets to generate EUV light. Firing intense laser pulses at these droplets results in a very hot plasma that emits the desired light. ‘A laser-produced plasma is a good source for EUV light,’ says Oscar Versolato of the Advanced Research Center for Nanolithography (ARCNL). ‘The laser heats the droplet to a million degrees Celsius, to the point where the tin atoms shed off a large fraction of their electrons. Energetic processes, such as collisions, involving these electrons and their parent tin atomic ions lead to the emission of the desired EUV light.’

The light-generating sequence is not at all straightforward, however. ARNCL was established in January 2014 at ASML’s initiative for exactly that reason: to carry out fundamental research that has relevance for key technologies in nanolithography. The centre forms a public-private partnership between the Foundation for Fundamental Research on Matter (FOM), the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), the University of Amsterdam, the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and ASML.

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