Gregor van Baars and Hans Butler, advanced piezo-electric wafer stage project

If Plan B still has to be researched when it鈥檚 needed, you鈥檙e a bit too late.

鈥淭he best thing to do in a relationship such as that of ASML and the university is to start thinking about this at an early stage.鈥

A key innovation of the High Tech Systems Center is its emphasis on the interface between industry and academia. Through demand-driven PhDs, co-location set-ups and a network of multidisciplinary professors, fundamental research can be brought to applications with enormous promise. In this article, Gregor van Baars and Hans Butler discuss the potential of one such project: advanced piezo-electric wafer stage for next generation lithography and metrology applications. This project is a collaboration of 果冻传媒 High Tech Systems Center and ASML, and is co-located at the Eindhoven Engine. 

The ASML connection

Gregor and Hans both have a history with ASML dating back decades, with Hans having joined the company in 1991. Since 2012, he鈥檚 also been a part-time professor in the Control Systems group of TU Eindhoven鈥檚 Department of Electrical Engineering. 鈥淥f course,鈥 he notes, 鈥渢here are many common projects between the university and ASML. After a lot of deliberation, we came up with this proposal, which covers all aspects of a piezo-driven wafer stage. My role now is mostly in the supervision of one of the PhD students, Clarisse Bosman Barros.鈥

Gregor, on the other hand, began his association at Philips Research Laboratories 鈥 then the home of much of ASML鈥檚 developments. Two years ago, having moved to TNO in 2011, he was approached by HTSC management Maarten Steinbuch and Katja Pahnke. Gregor: 鈥淭hey told me that ASML is looking to investigate possibilities for a new wafer stage and asked me if I鈥檇 be interested in supporting HTSC in coordinating the collaborative research. The aim was to have multiple PhDs working together in a system context, but some guidance and supervision was wanted.鈥

The search for new battlefields

At the heart of the project lies the piezo-electric effect: the capacity for certain materials to generate an electric charge when mechanical stress is applied or to generate a force when fed with a charge. Whereas modern lithography and metrology systems use electromagnetic actuators, this research concerns a shift to piezo-electric.

Hans Butler

鈥淏asically,鈥 explains Hans, 鈥渋t鈥檚 about a stage that can move a wafer. One advantage of piezo actuators is that they won鈥檛 generate an electromagnetic field. We could also make more lightweight stages, increasing acceleration and making them faster. The main problem is a very high mechanical stiffness of the piezo actuator. As opposed to existing wafer stages, the part to be positioned is now physically coupled to the long-stroke actuator with its relatively large vibrations. We need to find out how to control this system such that the coupling to the long-stroke is no longer a problem for accurate positioning.鈥

Tackling this issue requires a division into four sub-problems, each dealt with by one PhD student:

  1. What should the machine architecture look like?
  2. What kind of control systems do we need to ensure that vibrations do not enter the accurate positioning part?
  3. What should the piezo actuator itself look like, including the required electronics?
  4. Which signals do we need to accurately measure within the system and what kind of measurement system do we need for this?

鈥淭he electromagnetic concept has great design principles, so it was a very good step more than 20 years ago,鈥 says Gregor. 鈥淎SML has been able to squeeze every bit of performance from this 鈥 but you also wonder, how long can it continue? The effort is growing. A starting point to look for new concepts that might be found when doing things that are completely opposite to these design principles. That might sound silly, but it can lead to new battlefields of academia and engineering. As Hans says, this has benefits but also major concerns. It would be very valuable if we could prove that this Plan B system concept is feasible from a research perspective. But if we find out that it doesn鈥檛 work, that鈥檚 also good to know now rather than by the time a real Plan B is urgently needed.鈥

The university perspective

Since the start of the first PhD in September 2018, the project has slowly been evolving. The formation of Eindhoven Engine, for example, saw the work incorporated as one of its founding projects; the research has also been supplemented by PDEng and master鈥檚 students. Hans: 鈥淥ne of the most difficult things is finding people who can deal with these problems. At the moment, we have two PhD students. Clarisse is working on the control system and the other, Rachel Jones, is working on the measurement system. For one of the other two sub-problems, we鈥檝e found a candidate and we鈥檙e quite confident that he鈥檒l start in the summer this year. For the last, we鈥檙e talking to candidates but haven鈥檛 booked one yet.鈥

"It can lead to new battlefields of academia and engineering."

An additional challenge has been the testing of Plan Bs, Cs and Ds in a research system context as well as a technical one. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of belief in the HTSC way of working and we have to put that into practice,鈥 Gregor points out. 鈥淥f course, we also have to do better than previous attempts to bring multiple PhDs together. We wanted to make it clear from the start that they need to sit together one or two days a week so they can build a common awareness of their shared goal. I like this a lot, but the biggest collaboration is still ahead of us.鈥

鈥淔rom a university perspective,鈥 says Hans, 鈥淚鈥檝e noticed in the past that zero contact with industry typically makes it difficult to focus research on methods that are actually applicable in practice. It鈥檚 important at the start to have input on all the requirements from an industrial perspective and communication on the boundary conditions that the solution has to meet.鈥

As Gregor further notes, industrial-academic relationships bring important benefits to the students themselves. 鈥淚n general, students also like to work on problems that lead to solutions applied in real life. There must be relevance to motivate them to work, and deeper knowledge questions can also receive direction from things that are not possible today. How are we are going to develop theory or technologies that can overcome these hurdles? Lots of students like this.鈥

 

The strength of a community

Gregor van Baars

Hans and Gregor are keen to point out the roles of many other individuals: ASML coordinator Bas Jansen, ASML group lead for mechatronics research Wouter Aangenent and supervisors Erwin Bente (Photonic Integration), Koos van Berkel (ASML), Hans Butler (Control Systems), Jeroen van Duivenbode (Electromechanics and Power Electronics), Roland Toth (Control Systems) and Hans Vermeulen (Controls Systems Technology)From industry to academia and HTSC to ASML, it鈥檚 these networks that allow fundamental knowledge to be transformed into meaningful applications. For this reason, their work was converted into an Eindhoven Engine project for further acceleration through co-location at Eindhoven Engine鈥檚 Multimedia Paviljoen building on the 果冻传媒 campus, surrounded by a broader ecosystem of companies and researchers.

As for the future of piezo actuators, Hans is taking things one step at a time. 鈥淐larisse has been working on new control insights and we鈥檙e now considering using an existing test center at ASML to see if there鈥檚 true potential in these ideas. The question is then: in which machine will they be applied? We鈥檙e in a research phase so it鈥檚 too early to say.鈥

鈥淚鈥檇 really like to see the team in full swing and I hope that we can then accelerate this idea a lot,鈥 adds Gregor. 鈥淚t would be highly motivating to see the initial potential of this new system and build a belief that it will actually work. I look forward to seeing that in the next year.鈥

For more information about this project, please contact Gregor.