Postek Michael T, Vladár András E
Semiconductor and Dimensional Metrology Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD 20899 USA.
Proc SPIE Int Soc Opt Eng. 2015;9636. doi: 10.1117/12.2195344. Epub 2015 Oct 21.
This is the fourth part of a series of tutorial papers discussing various causes of measurement uncertainty in scanned particle beam instruments, and some of the solutions researched and developed at NIST and other research institutions. Scanned particle beam instruments, especially the scanning electron microscope (SEM), have gone through tremendous evolution to become indispensable tools for many and diverse scientifc and industrial applications. These improvements have significantly enhanced their performance and made them far easier to operate. But, the ease of operation has also fostered operator complacency. In addition, the user-friendliness has reduced the apparent need for extensive operator training. Unfortunately, this has led to the idea that the SEM is just another expensive "digital camera" or another peripheral device connected to a computer and that all of the problems in obtaining good quality images and data have been solved. Hence, one using these instruments may be lulled into thinking that all of the potential pitfalls have been fully eliminated and believing that, everything one sees on the micrograph is always correct. But, as described in this and the earlier papers, this may not be the case. Care must always be taken when reliable quantitative data are being sought. The first paper in this series discussed some of the issues related to signal generation in the SEM, including instrument calibration, electron beam-sample interactions and the need for physics-based modeling to understand the actual image formation mechanisms to properly interpret SEM images. The second paper has discussed another major issue confronting the microscopist: specimen contamination and methods to eliminate it. The third paper discussed mechanical vibration and stage drift and some useful solutions to mitigate the problems caused by them, and here, in this the fourth contribution, the issues related to specimen "charging" and its mitigation are discussed relative to dimensional metrology.
这是一系列教程论文的第四部分,该系列论文讨论了扫描粒子束仪器中测量不确定度的各种成因,以及美国国家标准与技术研究院(NIST)和其他研究机构研究与开发的一些解决方案。扫描粒子束仪器,尤其是扫描电子显微镜(SEM),已经历了巨大的发展,成为许多不同科学和工业应用中不可或缺的工具。这些改进显著提高了它们的性能,使其操作起来容易得多。但是,操作的简便性也助长了操作人员的自满情绪。此外,用户友好性降低了对操作人员进行广泛培训的明显需求。不幸的是,这导致了一种观点,即SEM只是另一台昂贵的“数码相机”,或者是连接到计算机的另一种外围设备,并且获得高质量图像和数据的所有问题都已得到解决。因此,使用这些仪器的人可能会误以为所有潜在的陷阱都已被完全消除,并相信在显微照片上看到的一切总是正确的。但是,正如本文和之前的论文中所描述的,情况可能并非如此。在寻求可靠的定量数据时,必须始终小心谨慎。本系列的第一篇论文讨论了与SEM中信号生成相关的一些问题,包括仪器校准、电子束与样品的相互作用,以及需要基于物理的建模来理解实际的图像形成机制,以便正确解释SEM图像。第二篇论文讨论了显微镜工作者面临的另一个主要问题:样品污染及其消除方法。第三篇论文讨论了机械振动和样品台漂移,以及一些减轻它们所造成问题的有用解决方案,在这第四篇论文中,将相对于尺寸计量学讨论与样品“充电”及其减轻相关的问题。