- published: 24 Nov 2015
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Photolithography, also termed optical lithography or UV lithography, is a process used in microfabrication to pattern parts of a thin film or the bulk of a substrate. It uses light to transfer a geometric pattern from a photomask to a light-sensitive chemical "photoresist", or simply "resist," on the substrate. A series of chemical treatments then either engraves the exposure pattern into, or enables deposition of a new material in the desired pattern upon the material underneath the photo resist. For example, in complex integrated circuits, a modern CMOS wafer will go through the photolithographic cycle up to 50 times.
Photolithography shares some fundamental principles with photography in that the pattern in the etching resist is created by exposing it to light, either directly (without using a mask) or with a projected image using an optical mask. This procedure is comparable to a high precision version of the method used to make printed circuit boards. Subsequent stages in the process have more in common with etching than with lithographic printing. It is used because it can create extremely small patterns (down to a few tens of nanometers in size), it affords exact control over the shape and size of the objects it creates, and because it can create patterns over an entire surface cost-effectively. Its main disadvantages are that it requires a flat substrate to start with, it is not very effective at creating shapes that are not flat, and it can require extremely clean operating conditions.
In this video the photo-lithography process is shown in Advanced Radar Research Center (ARRC) at University of Oklahoma PhD student: Robin Irazoqui Undergraduate student: Nick Peccarelli
This is a short overview of the photolithography processes used to fabricate micro-sized devices. This presentation was produced by the Southwest Center for Microsystems Education (SCME). A supporting Photolithography Overview Learning Module can be downloaded from SCME's website (http://scme-nm.org), Educational Materials.
we are VLSI students in section 1, group 5.this is our assignment on photolithography.please comment once seen
Carlos gives you an introduction to Photolithography in the cleanroom of the Integrated Nanosystems Research Facility at UC Irvine. View the SOP documentation for the Laurell Photoresist Spinner http://www.inrf.uci.edu/sop-laurell-spinner/ To skip to any portion of this video, refer to the below chapters: 0:00:12 - Introduction 0:01:21 - Laurel Spinner: Logging in and pre-use examination 0:05:33 - Laurel Spinner: Loading a sample 0:08:59 - Laurel Spinner: Programming the spin speeds and running the tool 0:11:51 - Laurel Spinner: Unloading and baking 0:14:10 - Laurel Spinner: Clean up after processing 0:18:42 - Post spinning procedures 0:19:13 - Development of Su-8 0:22:20 - Disposal of waste
Using a DLP projector to expose photoresist for making ICs at home. http://wiki.zeloof.xyz http://sam.zeloof.xyz
Sam Sivakumar of Intel talks about Lithography and Patterning - Scaling of Wavelength - Double Patterning
How to do ultraviolet photolithography in the clean room. Now at RMIT MicroNanophysics Research Laboratory/MicroNano Research Facility in downtown Melbourne, Australia. For the latest, see www.jamesfriend.net