Argon fluoride laser

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The argon fluoride laser (ArF laser) is a particular type of

integrated circuits, eye surgery, micromachining, and scientific research. "Excimer" is short for "excited dimer", while "exciplex" is short for "excited complex". An excimer laser typically uses a mixture of a noble gas
(argon, krypton, or xenon) and a halogen gas (fluorine or chlorine), which under suitable conditions of electrical stimulation and high pressure, emits coherent stimulated radiation (laser light) in the ultraviolet range.

ArF (and KrF) excimer lasers are widely used in high-resolution

7 nanometers in 2018.[4][5][6] Extreme ultraviolet lithography machines have replaced ArF photolithography machines in some cases as they enable even smaller feature sizes while increasing productivity, as EUV machines can provide sufficient resolution in fewer steps.[7]

The development of excimer laser lithography has been highlighted as one of the major milestones in the 50-year history of the laser.[8][9]

Theory

An argon fluoride laser absorbs energy from a source, causing the

complex
, in an excited energy state:

2 Ar + F
2
→ 2 ArF

The complex can undergo spontaneous or stimulated emission, reducing its energy state to a metastable, but highly repulsive ground state. The ground state complex quickly dissociates into unbound atoms:

2 ArF → 2 Ar + F
2

The result is an

electron volts
between the ground state and the excited state of the complex.

Applications

Photolighography

The most widespread industrial application of ArF excimer lasers has been in deep-ultraviolet

integrated circuits
or "chips"). From the early 1960s through the mid-1980s, Hg-Xe lamps were used for lithography at 436, 405 and 365 nm wavelengths. However, with the semiconductor industry's need for both finer resolution (for denser and faster chips) and higher production throughput (for lower costs), the lamp-based lithography tools were no longer able to meet the industry's requirements.

This challenge was overcome when in a pioneering development in 1982, deep-UV excimer laser lithography was invented and demonstrated at IBM by K. Jain.[2][3][10] With advances made in equipment technology in the following two decades, semiconductor electronic devices fabricated using excimer laser lithography reached $400 billion in annual production. As a result,[5] excimer laser lithography (with both ArF and KrF lasers) has been a crucial factor in the continued advance of the so-called Moore's law.[6]

Eye surgery

The UV light from an ArF laser is well absorbed by biological matter and organic compounds. Rather than burning or cutting material, the ArF laser dissociates the molecular bonds of the surface tissue, which disintegrates into the air in a tightly controlled manner through ablation rather than burning. Thus the ArF and other excimer lasers have the useful property that they can remove exceptionally fine layers of surface material with almost no heating or change to the remainder of the material which is left intact. These properties make such lasers well suited to precision micromachining organic materials (including certain polymers and plastics), and especially delicate surgeries such as eye surgery (e.g., LASIK, LASEK).[11]

Surface micromachining

Recently, through the use of a novel diffractive diffuse system composed of two microlens arrays, surface micromachining by ArF laser on fused silica has been performed with submicrometer accuracy.[12]

Fusion power

In 2021, the United States

energy efficiency.[13]

LaserFusionX is developing a direct drive fusion power prototype using argon fluoride lasers. As of 2024, their focus was on building an implosion facility to design and test lasers capable of sufficiently rapid firing rates, using solid state pulse power.[14]

Safety

The light emitted by the ArF is invisible to the human eye, so additional safety precautions are necessary when working with this laser to avoid stray beams. Gloves are needed to protect flesh from its potentially carcinogenic properties, and UV goggles are needed to protect the eyes.

See also

References