Integrated circuits (IC) are fabricated on a wafer through stacked layers of circuit patterns. To ensure proper functionality, the overlay of each pattern layer must be within the tolerance. Inspecting each wafer's overlay is unrealistic and impractical. Hence, wafers are selectively inspected at metrology stations through sampling strategies. With virtual metrology (VM), the metrology quality of the uninspected wafers can be estimated. Motivated by a real-world production environment of a 200mm semiconductor manufacturing plant (fab), a VM to estimate the overlay of the photolithography process is envisioned. Past researches on overlay VM leveraged fault detection and classification (FDC) data to estimate the overlay errors. As such, for fabs in the progress of completing their FDC development for photolithography equipment, a different modeling approach is required to realize an overlay VM that sustains the production line until FDC data can be leveraged for VM. With practical gaps that must be addressed in real fabs, this paper focuses on realizing an overlay VM for the photolithography process without leveraging FDC data. Therefore, the objectives of this paper are two folds: First, to identify the research challenges towards realizing the overlay VM. Second, to propose the future research perspectives of the envisioned overlay VM. Based on the future research perspectives, a two-steps overlay VM modeling approach utilizing data mining techniques is proposed toward realizing the envisioned overlay VM system. The proposed approach first classifies the process stability at the wafer lot level, and subsequently, performs overlay error estimations for wafers in the wafer lots classified with stable process. Linear regression models are proposed to perform overlay error estimations in this work to augment the interpretability of the overlay VM.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.