Paper
28 May 2004 Liquid immersion lithography: microscopic polarizabilities and the role of orientation contributions to light scattering
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Abstract
When investigating fluids for liquid immersion lithography scattering of light is more crucial than absorption. The reason is that pure absorption can be compensated by an increase of exposure time or light intensity, while scattered light decreases the imaging contrast on the photoresist. We therefore carefully investigate the scattering of light in a molecular liquid. Light can be scattered due to a number of mechanism. These are inelastic mechanism like Raman scattering, elastic scattering on micro- and nano bubbles but also quasielastic scattering on density fluctuations. In addition to the quasielastic scattering on density fluctuations a molecular fluid shows scattering on orientation degrees of freedom. Based on the known anisotropy of the polarizability of the water molecule, we calculate the scattering components due to orientation fluctuations. Among these the polarization ratio under 90° scattering is calculated and the relation between orientation and center-off-mass contributions for different polarization directions is evaluated. While the amount of scattering due to molecular orientations seems to be still moderate for water it is expected to be larger for most fluids, like fluorinated polymers. For three different fluor--organic molecules, which are in discussion for immersion fluids, the molecular polarizability is calculated using an abinitio method. The resulting polarizabilities are used to estimate the scattering due to orientation motion of these molecules. As a result the scattering due to orientation motions has the potential to increase the scattering level remarkably.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Martin Letz and Konrad Knapp "Liquid immersion lithography: microscopic polarizabilities and the role of orientation contributions to light scattering", Proc. SPIE 5377, Optical Microlithography XVII, (28 May 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.547886
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KEYWORDS
Scattering

Light scattering

Polarizability

Molecules

Raman scattering

Liquids

Microfluidics

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