WO2005094205A2 - Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system - Google Patents

Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2005094205A2
WO2005094205A2 PCT/US2004/024160 US2004024160W WO2005094205A2 WO 2005094205 A2 WO2005094205 A2 WO 2005094205A2 US 2004024160 W US2004024160 W US 2004024160W WO 2005094205 A2 WO2005094205 A2 WO 2005094205A2
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Prior art keywords
ofthe
laser light
light pulse
output laser
single output
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PCT/US2004/024160
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French (fr)
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WO2005094205A3 (en
Inventor
Palash P. Das
Bruce E. Bolliger
Parthiv Patel
Brian C. Klene
Paul C. Melcher
Robert B. Saethre
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Tcz Gmbh
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Priority claimed from US10/631,349 external-priority patent/US7039086B2/en
Priority claimed from US10/781,251 external-priority patent/US7167499B2/en
Application filed by Tcz Gmbh filed Critical Tcz Gmbh
Priority to EP04821542A priority Critical patent/EP1743405A4/en
Priority to JP2006521997A priority patent/JP2007515774A/en
Priority to KR1020067001963A priority patent/KR101123820B1/en
Publication of WO2005094205A2 publication Critical patent/WO2005094205A2/en
Publication of WO2005094205A3 publication Critical patent/WO2005094205A3/en

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    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/13Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K26/00Working by laser beam, e.g. welding, cutting or boring
    • B23K26/02Positioning or observing the workpiece, e.g. with respect to the point of impact; Aligning, aiming or focusing the laser beam
    • B23K26/06Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing
    • B23K26/0604Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing by a combination of beams
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K26/00Working by laser beam, e.g. welding, cutting or boring
    • B23K26/02Positioning or observing the workpiece, e.g. with respect to the point of impact; Aligning, aiming or focusing the laser beam
    • B23K26/06Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing
    • B23K26/062Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing by direct control of the laser beam
    • B23K26/0622Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing by direct control of the laser beam by shaping pulses
    • B23K26/0624Shaping the laser beam, e.g. by masks or multi-focusing by direct control of the laser beam by shaping pulses using ultrashort pulses, i.e. pulses of 1ns or less
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C30CRYSTAL GROWTH
    • C30BSINGLE-CRYSTAL GROWTH; UNIDIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION OF EUTECTIC MATERIAL OR UNIDIRECTIONAL DEMIXING OF EUTECTOID MATERIAL; REFINING BY ZONE-MELTING OF MATERIAL; PRODUCTION OF A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; SINGLE CRYSTALS OR HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; AFTER-TREATMENT OF SINGLE CRYSTALS OR A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C30B33/00After-treatment of single crystals or homogeneous polycrystalline material with defined structure
    • C30B33/02Heat treatment
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C30CRYSTAL GROWTH
    • C30BSINGLE-CRYSTAL GROWTH; UNIDIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION OF EUTECTIC MATERIAL OR UNIDIRECTIONAL DEMIXING OF EUTECTOID MATERIAL; REFINING BY ZONE-MELTING OF MATERIAL; PRODUCTION OF A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; SINGLE CRYSTALS OR HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; AFTER-TREATMENT OF SINGLE CRYSTALS OR A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C30B35/00Apparatus not otherwise provided for, specially adapted for the growth, production or after-treatment of single crystals or of a homogeneous polycrystalline material with defined structure
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/09Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping
    • H01S3/097Processes or apparatus for excitation, e.g. pumping by gas discharge of a gas laser
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K2101/00Articles made by soldering, welding or cutting
    • B23K2101/36Electric or electronic devices
    • B23K2101/40Semiconductor devices
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C30CRYSTAL GROWTH
    • C30BSINGLE-CRYSTAL GROWTH; UNIDIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION OF EUTECTIC MATERIAL OR UNIDIRECTIONAL DEMIXING OF EUTECTOID MATERIAL; REFINING BY ZONE-MELTING OF MATERIAL; PRODUCTION OF A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; SINGLE CRYSTALS OR HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; AFTER-TREATMENT OF SINGLE CRYSTALS OR A HOMOGENEOUS POLYCRYSTALLINE MATERIAL WITH DEFINED STRUCTURE; APPARATUS THEREFOR
    • C30B29/00Single crystals or homogeneous polycrystalline material with defined structure characterised by the material or by their shape
    • C30B29/02Elements
    • C30B29/06Silicon
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/005Optical devices external to the laser cavity, specially adapted for lasers, e.g. for homogenisation of the beam or for manipulating laser pulses, e.g. pulse shaping
    • H01S3/0057Temporal shaping, e.g. pulse compression, frequency chirping
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/14Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range characterised by the material used as the active medium
    • H01S3/22Gases
    • H01S3/223Gases the active gas being polyatomic, i.e. containing two or more atoms
    • H01S3/225Gases the active gas being polyatomic, i.e. containing two or more atoms comprising an excimer or exciplex
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/14Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range characterised by the material used as the active medium
    • H01S3/22Gases
    • H01S3/223Gases the active gas being polyatomic, i.e. containing two or more atoms
    • H01S3/225Gases the active gas being polyatomic, i.e. containing two or more atoms comprising an excimer or exciplex
    • H01S3/2253XeCl, i.e. xenon chloride is comprised for lasing around 308 nm
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/23Arrangements of two or more lasers not provided for in groups H01S3/02 - H01S3/22, e.g. tandem arrangements of separate active media
    • H01S3/2308Amplifier arrangements, e.g. MOPA
    • H01S3/2325Multi-pass amplifiers, e.g. regenerative amplifiers
    • H01S3/2333Double-pass amplifiers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01SDEVICES USING THE PROCESS OF LIGHT AMPLIFICATION BY STIMULATED EMISSION OF RADIATION [LASER] TO AMPLIFY OR GENERATE LIGHT; DEVICES USING STIMULATED EMISSION OF ELECTROMAGNETIC RADIATION IN WAVE RANGES OTHER THAN OPTICAL
    • H01S3/00Lasers, i.e. devices using stimulated emission of electromagnetic radiation in the infrared, visible or ultraviolet wave range
    • H01S3/23Arrangements of two or more lasers not provided for in groups H01S3/02 - H01S3/22, e.g. tandem arrangements of separate active media
    • H01S3/2366Arrangements of two or more lasers not provided for in groups H01S3/02 - H01S3/22, e.g. tandem arrangements of separate active media comprising a gas as the active medium

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to high power and high stability gas discharge lasers for use in manufacturing processes involving treatment of surfaces and/or substrates with laser light over large areas and at high repetition rates.
  • Thin-film transistors is a well known technology for building, e.g., liquid crystal diode (“LCD”) screens that are commonly found, e.g., on laptop computers.
  • LCD liquid crystal diode
  • Poly-Si Polycrystaline silicon
  • aSi amorphous silicon
  • Annealing of the outer surfaces of the aSi LCD substrates is currently a critical process, both from a panel display performance perspective and in relation to attainable manufacturing yields. It is well known to use TFT-annealing, e.g., for the production of high resolution flat panel displays. It is also well known to utilize lasers, e.g., excimer or molecular gas discharge lasers, e.g., to cause laser-induced crystallization of amorphous silicon (A-Si) to produce, e.g., polycrystalline silicon (Poly-Si). This process, and its very accurate control and operation is a pivotal technology for the next generation of TFT devices.
  • lasers e.g., excimer or molecular gas discharge lasers, e.g., to cause laser-induced crystallization of amorphous silicon (A-Si) to produce, e.g., polycrystalline silicon (Poly-Si).
  • A-Si amorphous silicon
  • Poly-Si polycrystalline
  • Gas discharge lasers known in the art are not available for providing an infinite spectrum of center wavelengths due to the physical and chemical reactions taking place in the within any particular lasing chamber being dictated by the gas(es) being used in the gas discharge. It is currently also well known that excimer or other gas discharge lasers, particularly Xenon Chloride (XeCl) halogen gas discharge lasers are useful for the type of annealing processes noted above. Companies such as Lambda-Physik of Germany supply products such as the Lambda-Physik "STEEL 2000" having operating parameters of: Wavelength 308 nm
  • Pulse Duration (typ., FWHM) 29 ⁇ 5 ns Pulse to Pulse Energy Stability (3 sigma) ⁇ 5.4%
  • Such a laser e.g., with about 1 J and 300Hz performance, is just about at the edge of the performance requirements for current generation glass substrates.
  • the next generation (the 5th) of such glass substrates of 1250mm x 1100mm will require much better performance, e.g., higher laser energies higher repetition rates, while maintaining such parameters as pulse stability, beam properties, etc.
  • the laser energies required will increase at least by a factor of two, to 2J/pulse.
  • Lambda Physik An approach suggested by some, e.g., Lambda Physik is to combine 2 lasers, e.g., with a beam homogenizer to combine the two beams from the two lasers.
  • 2 lasers e.g., due to the addition of the homogenizer alone, increases costs, also adding to costs of consumables and to increased maintenance downtime.
  • the associated delivery optics, in addition to the homogenizer also becomes more complex.
  • Use of POPA configurations for certain applications is well known, as discussed, e.g., in B. Wexler, et al, "Use of XeCl amplifiers for degenerate four-wave mixing", American Institute of Physics, Excimer Lasers - 1983, C.
  • a gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus and method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece may comprise, a multichamber laser system comprising, a first laser unit comprising, a first and second gas discharge chamber; each with a pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the chamber, forming an elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply module comprising, a DC power source; a first and a second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the respective electrodes, comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control module operative
  • a POPA laser system relay optics may be operative to direct a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and control module operates to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns and as a POPO, combining optics combine the output beams, and timing creates pulse separation in the combined output a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.
  • a beam delivery unit and a pulse stretcher may be included, and timing and control may be processor controlled based on signals representing charging voltage and component temperatures in the pulse compression and voltage step up circuits.
  • FIG.' s 1 A and IB shows a side view and a top view of a block diagram partially schematic view of a multi-chambered laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2A shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 3 shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 4 shows a schematic view of a solid state pulse power system according to an embodiment ofthe present invention
  • FIG. 5 shows a more detailed schematic view of a commutator module shown in FIG. 4 according to an embodiment ofthe present invention
  • FIG. 6 shows a timing diagram of the charging a peaking capacitor in a chamber module shown in FIG. 4 from a compression head module shown in FIG. 4, according to an embodiment ofthe present invention
  • FIG. 7 shows a more detailed view of the compression head and chamber modules shown in FIG. 4
  • FIG. 8 shows a block diagram schematic view of a timing and control module according to an embodiment ofthe present invention
  • FIG. 9 shows a timing diagram used in an embodiment ofthe present invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS The present invention contemplates extending Applicants assignee's existing fluoride-based excimer technology to, e.g., XeCl lasers, e.g., for surface and material treatment applications.
  • such a laser can be used to advance the capabilities of existing systems for large area annealing, e.g., of flat panel displays (TFT annealing), e.g., the Lambda-Physik XeCl laser (1 J, 300Hz) noted above.
  • TFT annealing flat panel displays
  • a high power, high energy XeCl laser is disclosed that can be optimized, e.g., for large area annealing, e.g., of 5 th generation glass panels, e.g., for flat panel displays.
  • a high efficiency beam delivery unit that can, e.g., deliver constant fluence, e.g., in the form of an elongated slit, several hundred millimeters long and a fraction of a millimeter wide, e.g. 370 mm x 0.4 mm.
  • the substrate sizes would increase to 1250 mm X 1 lOOmm.This would drive up the laser energy and power requirements by a factor of two, to 2J/pulse.
  • the approach suggested by Lambda Physik is to combine 2 lasers as shown below. However, use of 2 lasers increases costs of consumables and downtime. The associated delivery optics also becomes more complex.
  • the 1.4 meter length is not feasible for at least two reasons (1) the need for an impractically long chamber length that would, e.g., cause problems with chamber structure at high pressures and probably lead to tangential blower requirements and performance issues and (2) for the estimated small signal gain of 0.06/cm, this length is very close to the maximum of 1.7m beyond which the laser is super-radiant, i.e., the amplified spontaneous emissions ("ASE") would be high enough to cause problems, e.g., loss of efficiency due to very broadband ASE outside of the natural, e.g., XeCl bandwidth around the center wavelength of about 308nm.
  • ASE amplified spontaneous emissions
  • the present invention contemplates a multi-chambered laser system configured to deliver the laser output of one chamber as a seed beam to the second chamber.
  • a product line called the "XL” platform with the first chamber operating as a very highly line narrowed master oscillator, which sacrifices a great deal of output power to achieve the very narrow line narrowing, e.g., for delivery of essentially monochromatic light, e.g., for integrated circuit lithography uses.
  • This low power line narrowed laser output of the oscillator referred to as the maser oscillator (“MO) is then highly amplified in the second gas discharge laser chamber operating as a power oscillator ("PA").
  • MO maser oscillator
  • the present invention contemplates the two chambered laser system being configured in a power oscillator power amplifier configuration (POPA).
  • POPA power oscillator power amplifier configuration
  • the two chambers may each have a 3.5cm electrode gap between elongated electrodes of about 1 m in length.
  • Such a power oscillator could produce 0.5J to 0.7J. This can, e.g., then be enough to saturate the amplifier (typical saturation intensities are around 100 mJ/cm2 for a 100ns pulse).
  • the PO efficiency would be around 2%, which is typical.
  • the limiting factor for efficiency, according to an embodiment of the present invention is the conversion efficiency of the excimer molecules or, e.g., molecular fluorine molecules, to laser photons.
  • the PA extraction efficiency can be much higher than 2% if operated as a stand-alone oscillator, i.e., as a POPO system. Applicants believe also that the efficiency of the PA could be up to and above about 4%.
  • a 35 J of electrical input to the PO, and a 35 J laser light output of the PO to the PA can be expected to deliver an output of the laser system as a whole at around 2J, which translates to an efficiency requirement of only 2.9%.
  • a comparable 2J single oscillator system would need 100J of energy per electrical pulse to the gas discharge electrodes.
  • This output of 2J per pulse can now be efficiently coupled into a beam delivery unit without the associated losses and complexity of a beam mixer as proposed by others.
  • the same POPA concept can be applied, e.g., to lower energy pulse systems.
  • the input energy to the PO and P"A could be 4J/pulse.
  • the output could be at or near 250 mJ per pulse at a much higher repetition rate, e.g., 4KHz, which would still result in a lkW laser suitable, e.g., for the above noted applications.
  • the ability according to embodiments of the present invention to control very precisely the timing etween the pulses in the separate chambers also raises the possibility according to an embodiment ofthe present invention to operate the laser in a double pulse mode at around 8KHz.
  • the PA can be a PO also and the staggered pulses from each PO optically combined in a single output path as described more fully below.
  • Two pulses separated, by, e.g., 850ns and with long duration pulses can be used to advantageously create, e.g., p-Si crystal growth advanced mobility and uniformity, as discussed in T.
  • a XeCl POPA based on applicants' assignee's MOPA architecture as implemented in applicant's assignee's XL product line.
  • This XeCl laser would be a broadband (i.e., the natural spectrum of a XeCl excimer laser with no line narrowing). Therefore, according to an embodiment of the present invention, the line-narrowing module and the wavelength and linewidth measuring equipment in, e.g., in applicants' assignee's XLA product line, would not be required, with consequent savings both in cost and overall efficiency.
  • the MO in XLA would be replaced by a PO 10, which, as shown in FIG.' s 1A and IB consists of the PO 10 including a chamber 12, a total reflecting optic 14, e.g., a total reflecting mirror 18, instead of a line narrowing module, and an output coupler 16, all together forming a resonance cavity for the PO 10.
  • the laser output light beam from the PO can then be double passed through the chamber 22 of the PA 20 to extract all the energy from the PA 20.
  • the output of the PO 10 is reflected by totally reflecting mirror 14 to an offset mirror 24 which reflects the beam into the PA along a path misaligned with the elongated electrodes (not shown) in the PA 20 to a pair of totally reflecting mirrors 25a and 26b (or a total internal reflection prism, not shown) to create the second pass of the beam through the PA 20 along the centerline axis ofthe electrodes (not shown) in the chamber 22, which is also the optical axis of the output of the PA 20, through the output coupler 28 ofthe PA 20.
  • Energy sensors 30, 32, respectively, at the output of PO 10 and PA 20, according to an embodiment of the present invention can monitor, e.g., the POPA output energy.
  • the applicants' assignee's XLA product line has all of the technology necessary support, e.g., the operation, e.g., of such a XeCl laser at high repetition rates, including well above 300Hz. This supports the ability to deliver the high output energies required in the form of very high energy laser system light output pulses as very high repetition rates.
  • These support technologies include a very efficient solid state pulse power system module ("SSPPM"); a very jitter free operation due to jitter-control technology to maintain, e.g., the critical relative timing between the firing ofthe electrical pulses to the elongated gas discharge electrodes, respectively, in the PO and PA, water-cooled modules and a very high-speed controller.
  • SSPPM solid state pulse power system module
  • the proposed POPA would be high power light source, e.g., at 2 J per pulse
  • the rep-rate according to an embodiment ofthe present invention can be around 500Hz, or a 0.25J per pulse, at 4Khz, i.e., in either event a 1000 W laser.
  • FIG. 2 there is shown a block diagramatic schematic view of a surface/substrate treatment system according to an
  • the output of the POPA 40 could, e.g., then be pulse stretched in a pulse stretcher 50, if required, either within or prior to delivery of the laser system output light beam to a beam delivery unit ("BDU") 60.
  • BDU beam delivery unit
  • the BDU may also have a beam analysis module ("BAM") 62 at its terminus closest to the delivery of the laser output light beam to the manufacturing apparatus, e.g., one performing TFT annealing.
  • BAM beam analysis module
  • the beam could in some cases need homogenization, in a beam homogenizer 70, and then be delivered to illuminate a slit 80, e.g., using a cylindrical focusing lens 90.
  • the magnified image of the slit 80 could then be projected onto the substrate, eg., at a workstation 92.
  • the active stabilization technology e.g., employed in the BDU 60, e.g., utilizing laser control information and information provided from the BAM 62 can be key to delivering the required energy stability.
  • the present invention utilizes in the proposed POPA SSPPM technology, including, e.g., active jitter/timing control, which, among other things are keys in making the proposed POPA laser into an efficient, scalable and high power XeCl laser in the 1000W range.
  • the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could also be configured in a POPO configuration, as shown in FIG. 2A, including a first PO 100 and a second PO 100,' each having a respective totally reflective optic 102, 102', such as a totally reflective minor and an output coupler 104,104'.
  • the output ofthe first PO 100 may be reflected by a totally reflective minor 106 to an minor set at brewster's angle with respect to the polorization of the output of the first PO 100, so as to totally reflect that beam, and the output of the second O 100' may be passed through a quarter wwave plate 108 to rotate its polarity to be orthogonal to that of the output of the first PO 100, so that the minor 1 lo at Brewster's angle wo;; not reflect any of that beam and the two output beams will follow the same output path from the minor 110, the pulses of which being temporally spaced from each other.
  • the acronyms and definitions listed in Table I shall have the meanings also there listed. Table I
  • the SSPPM 200 may include a TEM 202, the need for which is primarily driven by the dual- channel configuration of the SSPPM 200. This dual channel configuration requires much more precise trigger timing than previous systems, e.g., utilizing only a single laser gas discharge chamber.
  • the TEM 202 is the source certain monitoring and control signals, e.g., "Sync Out", which can be used, e.g., for a workstation control unit (not shown) and the TEM 202 can also provide a "Wavelength Conection Trigger" to the Optical Subsystem (not shown) according to an embodiment ofthe present invention.
  • an HVPS 204 which can receive AC power from an AC Distribution Module (not shown) and charge and maintain a constant voltage on a storage capacitor bank C-l 210 in a Resonant Charger 212.
  • the HVPS 204 receives an ON command from and sends faults to an LCP 220 in a Laser controller 222.
  • the SSPPM 200 also can include an RC 230 which can receive a constant voltage from the HVPS 204 (and also 204') and provide pulse charges to a capacitor bank 232 (Co) in a commutator portion 234 of the SSPPM 200, when a trigger is sent from the laser controller 222.
  • the RC 230 receives a trigger signal and a HV set point from the FCP and sends certain signals, e.g., identifying faults to the LCP 220.
  • the commutator 234 can receive a pulsed charge from the resonant charger 230 and transform it by compressing the pulse rise time and stepping up the voltage through a transformer 240.
  • the commutator 234 receives a trigger signal from and sends certain signals, e.g., identifying faults to the LCP 220.
  • the SSPPM 200 can also include a compression head ("CH") 250 that can receive a pulsed charge from the commutator 234 and compress the pulse rise time and deliver it received pulse that has been further compressed to a peaking capacitor bank 260 on the respective chamber 12, 22 for the PO 10 and PA (or PO) 20.
  • CH compression head
  • the commutator module 234 of the SSPPM 200 receives a charge voltage from the RC 230 onto the capacitor bank C 0 210 and a trigger signal from the FCP 252 within the laser controller 222.
  • a trigger signal is sensed the commutator 234 closes a solid state switch 254 discharging the Co capacitor bank 210 into a Ci capacitor bank 256 through a charging inductance 258.
  • the voltage is held on Ci 256 until the magnetic switch in the first stage reactor 270 saturates and discharges d 256 into a capacitor bank C p-1 272 in the compression head 250 through the first stage reactor 270 and the step up transformer 240.
  • This discharge has the dual function of compressing the pulse in transfer time and increasing the output voltage through the step up ratio ofthe transformer 240.
  • a secondary low voltage protection and control function of the commutator module 234 of the SSPPM 200 is carried out by the commutator 234 sensing a limited number of faults within the module and transmitting signals representative of such faults to the LCP 220 for handling via a CAN bus 280 interface.
  • the SSPPM 200 can protect itself by disabling the triggering of the solid state switches 254 and 254' when a fault is detected.
  • a voltage can, however, be applied to the Co capacitor bank 210 if the LCP 220 does not receive or fails to interpret a fault signal transmitted by the commutator module 234.
  • FIG. 5 shows a more detailed schematic diagram ofthe commutator module 234, and FIG. 6 shows a simplified schematic.
  • the solid state switch 254 and charging inductance 258 is actually two parallel circuits containing solid state switches 254, 254' and charging inductance 258, 258' in order to provide for operations at up to and above 4000Hz gas discharges in the respective chambers due to the time required for each switch 254, 254' to recover after firing and be ready to fire again.
  • circuitry including a diode anangement respectively including, for solid state switch 254, diodes D ⁇ D.
  • the respective solid state switches 254 and 254' are protected by the series diodes and their snubber networks.
  • the diodes prevent reflected energy from the discharge electrodes from flowing through the solid state switches 254 and 254'.
  • the switches 254 and 254' are protected because when reflected energy reaches these series diodes, the diodes turn off and prevent cunent flow through the diodes and solid state switches.
  • the resistors and capacitors in the snubber networks help to limit how quickly the diodes turn off, thus improving the protection and reliability the circuit.
  • biasing networks 290, 290' for the respective solid state switches 254, 254' include biased saturable inductors LSA1, LSA2, in series with diodes D ⁇ and D 2 and biased in opposite directions from a bias power source PS2, through a biasing capacitor C b i as in parallel with the power source PS2, and an RLC network consisting of an Rbi as and an L i as in series with the capacitor Cyas and one of two charging inductors 258A, 258B, with an additional C b ; as connected between the node between the R b i as and L b i as and ground, and non-saturating inductors LSA1 and LSA 2 in series with diodes D 3 and D 4 and charging inductor 25 SB, and respecting solid state switch 254', biased saturable inductors LSA1', LSA2', in series with diodes D and D 8 and biased in opposite directions from a bias power source PS2,' through a biasing capacitor C b
  • LSA1 and LSA2 can be saturable, i.e., the four sets of conductors and four sets of cores can mechanically be achieved by a single set of cores with all four conductors passing through them.
  • the bias circuit would then resets all four lines and not just two. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the biasing arrangement(s) serve to properly bias the magnetic material, which allows for predictably maximizing the available flux swing of the material. Predictable reset of magnetic material is important to precise timing control during laser operation. Additionally, the routing of the bias network through the circuit is important to ensuring that the solid state switches and series diodes have sufficient time to turn off and on, respectively. This improves performance and reliability.
  • the commutator 234 pulse compression network 300 consists of capacitor Q 256, in parallel with diodes D 9 and D 10 , which are connected through respective resistors . ⁇ and R 2 to the two ends of saturable reactor LSI 270, the output of which is connected in series to the primary windings, single turn, on each of a plurality of transformer cores 1-N in the transformer 240, having a single secondary winding passing through each of the cores 1-N.
  • the windings 1-N of the transformer 240 are connected through an inductor 302 across the high voltage and ground portions of a module interconnect output 304.
  • the requirements for the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention in terms of pulsed power provide for, e.g., 3.5 J of electrical energy per gas discharge electrical pulse to the electrodes in the respective chamber, at a rate of 4 KHz, to be delivered to Co for each chamber, i.e., 7.0 J per pulse for the entire pulsed power system according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • the pulsed power subsystem 200 is required to deliver high voltage pulses to each of the two respective chambers.
  • the discharge time of each chamber must synchronized pulse to pulse to an accuracy of less than +1-2 ns, in order, e.g., to time the delivery of the gas discharge pulse to the PA (PO) when the seed beam from the preceding PO chamber is transiting the PA (PO) chamber.
  • a single HVPS 204, or for higher power two HVPSs 204, 204' can supply the resonant charger 212 to drive two parallel commutator 234/compression head 250/Chamber 242 circuits.
  • the resonant charger 212 can charge each of the two CO capacitor banks as shown in FIG. 4.
  • the first stage reactor 270 contributes the most to timing variations. As the reactor 270 heats up the saturation flux density decreases, e.g., causing the reactor 270 to switch earlier. This can cause a switching time that varies with temperature. The switch time can also vary with voltage.
  • the reactor 270 core (not shown) has a fixed amount of material, and, therefore, the volt-second product is fixed. Effects of temperature can be mitigate or even eliminated, even at very high repetition rates, which ordinarily induce high temperature flux to inductive elements such as used in the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention through the use of the cooling mechanism disclosed in United States Patent Application Ser. No. 10,607,407, entitled Method and Apparatus for Cooling Magnetic Circuit Elements, Attorney Docket No. 2003-0051-01, filed on June 25, 2003, and assigned to the common assignee of Applicants.
  • the C to C p-1 transfer can be analyzed as follows:
  • M is less than 10 for this case, it would require the IGBT to operate at a higher voltage to achieve the required 20-kV output.
  • the output of the transformer 240 results in N > Vc P - ⁇ Vci •
  • the circuit 200 may need to accommodate up to 50K volts, so, assuming an IGBT that can withstand 2K, the transformer ration would need to be 25.
  • Ci 0.94C 2
  • the peak cunent is calculated by:
  • the first stage reactor 270 is required to hold off the voltage on Ci until Ci is fully charged. This is accomplished with the first stage reactor 270 being a saturable reactor 270.
  • the reactor core material can be, e.g., a 0.5 mil. 50%-50% Ni-Fe (Orthonol) tape with, e.g., a ⁇ B of 3.0 T.
  • a m V ⁇ /2 ⁇ BN
  • a m h(R o -Ri)(pf)
  • h height ofthe core
  • R 0 outer radius
  • j inner radius
  • the total inductance required for the transfer from C ⁇ to C p -i was calculated earlier to be Lsi. Stray inductance can play a role in the total inductance unless minimized by design.
  • Lstray L x finr + + L pc b + L ca le + L lea d
  • Lstray is a component ofthe required lump inductance Lsl . This is inductance that is derived from the mechanical layoui: and is inherent to the design and therefore difficult to predict and control, but may be measured and estimated.
  • Lsl is the total inductance required for the Cl to Cp-1 transfer.
  • Lxfrnr is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent in the transformer primary and secondary windings.
  • Lcl is a component ofthe stray inductance,, Lstray inherent to the Cl capacitor geometry.
  • Lpcb is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent to the layout ofthe C 1 printed circuit board.
  • Lcable is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent to the high voltage cable (not shown) connecting the commutator and compression head.
  • Llead a component ofthe stray inoLuctance, Lstray, inherent to the layout of t ie high voltage cable connection inside the compression head.
  • L sat L sl - L stray
  • the capacitors may be connected in series. This results in a series parallel anay.
  • the capacitor Co design is similar to the Q design just discussed.
  • Table IV gives delay characteristic in a cold state, which is measured from trigger in to Commutator to falling edge of VCp-1, with limits to the delay characteristic set by statistical analysis of historical data, and with the module being operated with components are room temperature (25 deg C nominal) and assumed to be a thermal equilibrium.
  • Table V gives delay characteristics in a hot state, defined by a module that is being operated at full voltage and rep-rate for a time sufficient to allow the components to reach thermal equilibrium.
  • Co capacitor bank 232 receives a pulsed charge from the resonant charger 230. Voltage is held on this capacitor bank Co 232 until one of the solid state switches 254, 254' is closed. in response to a trigger signal from the FCP 252 in the LC 222. Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, and peak cunent capability.
  • the solid state switch 254, 254' hold the voltage on Co until the trigger command from FCP 252, and when the trigger signal is received, the respective switch 254, 254'closes and connects Co 232 to Ci 256, through the respective charging inductors L C H A and L CH B, and L CH A' and L CH B'.
  • Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, turn on rise time, turn on delay, turn on jitter, and peak cunent.
  • the respective blocking diodes Di-D 4 and D 5 -D 8 stops any voltage from ringing back onto Ci, e.g., during reversal after the electrodes are fired.
  • Ci has a positive voltage the blocking diodes Di-D 4 and D 5 -D 8 will conduct and the voltage will transfer to Co through the respective charging inductor(s) L CH A and L CH B, and L C H A' and L CH B'.
  • a voltage sensing circuit (not shown) provides a signal to the LCP 220 in the LC 222, which indicated the amount of charge on C 0; and the LCP can calculate the needed charge for the next firing and provide a signal to the RC 230 accordingly.
  • Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, reverse recovery time, and peak cunent.
  • the biasing networks provide for saturable assist. There are (2) sets of saturable assist.
  • the first, comprising LS A2 holds off cunent flow until the respective solid state switch 254,254', which may be an IGBT, e.g., a CM800HA-34H, made by Powerex is fully closed.
  • the second, comprising LSAl is there to hold off cunent until the respective diodes Di-D 4 and D 5 -D 8 are fully recovered during reversal.
  • Critical parameters are the saturation time and drift with temperature.
  • the respective charging inductors L CH A and L CH B 258 A,B, and L CH A' and L CH B' 258 A', B' set the transfer time and limit the peak cunent in the solid state switches 254, 254' and diodes Di-D 4 and D 5 -D 8 .
  • This inductance L CH A and L C H B, and L C H A' and L CH B' includes all stray inductance and winding inductance.
  • Volts per turn For the first stage saturable reactor 270, critical parameters are volt-second holdoff, Volts per turn, delta B.
  • critical parameters For the pulse transformer 240, critical parameters are the volt-seconds, Volts per turn, delta B.
  • critical parameters are the power, voltage and cunent rating.
  • critical parameters are the power, voltage and cunent rating.
  • Some ofthe signals employed by the SSPPM 200 include: 1. VCo Voltage Monitor Signal (Jl), which comprises a buffered analog signal representing the VCo voltage waveform. This signal can be derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) connected directly to C 0 (400 k ⁇ ⁇ 1% top leg x 4.01 k ⁇ ⁇ 1% bottom leg).
  • the scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the laser controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown). If the equivalent terminating impedance is greater than 400 k ⁇ then the scale factor will be 1 V per 100 V. 2.
  • VCi Voltage Monitor Signal (J2) which can be a buffered analog signal representing the VCi voltage waveform for monitoring by the laser controller 222. This signal can be derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) directly connected to Ci (5 k ⁇ ⁇ 1% top leg x 49.9 ⁇ ⁇ 1% bottom leg).
  • the scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the laser controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown).
  • BDOT Signal (J3) which can be a buffered analog signal representing the time derivative of the cunent flowing between Ci and C 2 (dl/dt), which can be used by the laser controller 222, e.g., to generate a Sync Out signal.
  • This Sync Out signal can be derived from a magnetic field pickup loop (not shown) located next to the primary side of the pulse transformer 240. The amplitude of this signal can be a function of the terminating impedance in the controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown).
  • VC 2 Voltage Monitor Signal J4
  • J4 can be a buffered analog signal representing the VC 2 voltage waveform for monitoring by the laser controller.
  • This signal is derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) connected on the primary side ofthe pulse transformer 240, which can couple to C 2 (5 k ⁇ ⁇ 1% top leg x 49.9 ⁇ ⁇ 1% bottom leg).
  • the scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the control module and/or attached oscilloscopes.
  • Commutator Trigger (J5), which can be a buffered signal representing the commutator trigger.
  • the CAN bus 280 interface can connect the commutator control portion of the laser controller 222 to the commutator and to the RC's internal controller, e.g., by a 68 pin interconnection, with the indicated conditions when each ofthe pins is at high, i.e., is set, shown in Table VII: Table VII
  • the compression head 250 can receive a pulsed charge from the commutator 234 and compress the pulse rise time and deliver it to a peaking capacitor bank 320 at the respective chamber 10, 20.
  • the compression head 250 can receive a pulsed charge on the C p -i capacitor bank 272 from the Ci capacitor bank 256.
  • the voltage is held on Cp_ ⁇ until the magnetic switch in the output reactor SR2 310 saturates and discharges C p- ⁇ into C p . This discharge compresses the pulse rise time as shown in FIG. 7.
  • FIG. 7 shows that C p -i charges in roughly 4.0 x 10 "7 seconds and discharges onto C p in roughly 1 x 10 "7 seconds.
  • FIG. 8 shows a schematic diagram ofthe compression head 250 module.
  • the compression head 250 reactor SR2 310 can be required to hold off the voltage on C p-1 until C p-1 is fully charged. This is accomplished with a saturable reactor 310 having a core material which can be a 0.5 mil. 80%-20% Ni-Fe (Supermalloy) tape with a ⁇ B of 1.5 T.
  • the build ofthe core can be calculated from: The total inductance required for the transfer from C p-1 to C p can be calculated to be Ls p .
  • the compression head 250 also includes a biasing network 312, comprising a biasing poser source 314, similar to those described above and a pair of bias inductors LI and L2, which biases saturable reactor SR2 310, in order to ensure the user of the full flux swing of the magnetic material. It also allows for a predictable way to bias the cores and ensure predictable operation and timing control.
  • a circuit 316 including a pair of inductors L3 and L4 connected to ground through a resistor Rl, which functions to complete the bias circuit for the reactor. It has the additional function of allowing a path for water cooling directly to the reactor. Table VIII gives ventilation flow requirements and Table IX gives water cooling requirements. Table VIII
  • Table X gives some performance specifications: Table X
  • the HVPS receives AC power during a 10-second countdown from Laser Off to Standby; receives a HV Enable command from resonant charger 230; and provides DC high voltage to input of resonant charger 230.
  • the HVPS can be water cooled, and housed in a closed chassis with internal air circulation fans.
  • the resonant charger 230 can receives a program voltage through a high speed HV data serial link to the laser controller 222 over the CAN 280.
  • the RC 212 can issue an FTV Enable command to the HVPS 204 and receive input high power DC voltage from the HVPS 204 or modules 204, 204'.
  • the RC 230 can also contains compression head bias power supplies for the respective MO 10 and PO 20 compression heads 250 and 250'.
  • the RC 230 can also charge the Co capacitor bank 210 (two channels, diode isolated) in the respective commutators 234, 234 'precisely to a program voltage level, determined by the LCP 220 as noted above.
  • the RC 230 cam also store reflected energy as cunent until next charge cycle.
  • the RC can be water and air cooled, e.g., with externally located fans.
  • the commutators 234, 234' one for the MO and one for the PA, can receive HV charge from a single resonant charger 230, deliver fast HV pulse to compression heads 250, 250' and can be water and air cooled, e.g., with externally located fans.
  • the compression heads 250, 250', one for the MO and one for PA can be mounted to top of the respective chamber 10, 20 and can receives fast HV pulses from the respective commutator 234, 234', and provide final pulse compression, and deliver a fast rise time HV pulse to the respective peaking capacitor 320, 320' on the respective chamber 10, 20 for laser discharge.
  • the HVPS 204 power module can function as a cunent source to a load capacitance C-l 210 in the RC 230.
  • Multiple HVPS 204 outputs and/or multiple HVPS 204 modules could be employed, e.g., connected in parallel, e.g., to provide the same charge voltage at a higher average power, with equal cunent sharing.
  • the HVPS 204 power modules can be enabled by a signal from the Resonant Charger 230.
  • the Resonant Charger 230 can receive a LaserON command from the laser controller 222 and enable the HVPS 204 output at the beginning of the ten second countdown from Standby to LaserON.
  • the HVPS 204 can employ, e.g., power factor conection ("PFC"), as is well known in the power supply field, e.g., to achieve relative immunity to fluctuations in input AC voltage, achieve unity power factor, and eliminate higher harmonics conducted on the input AC lines.
  • PFC power factor conection
  • the internal DC bus voltage of the HVPS 204 can be roughly regulated by the PFC. Cunent from the DC bus can alternately be switched through the primary of a step-up transformer (not shown) within the HVPS 204 via an H-bridge inverter (not shown). The AC output of the transformer (not shown) in the HVPS 204 can be rectified to DC.
  • the output cunent can be monitored by the local control loop (not shown) to maintain controlled output cunent from the HVPS 204 as long as the output voltage is below some predetermined desired preset output voltage level.
  • Table XI gives some performance specifications for the HVPS 204: Table XI
  • a maximum of 8.3J of energy can be withdrawn from the load capacitor (not shown), with a capacitance of, e.g., 1033 ⁇ F, every 250 ⁇ s.
  • the voltage on the load capacitor can be allowed to sag beyond regulation during the discharge pulse to the electrodes, however, the voltage must be restored to within the specified regulation as noted above in Table _, prior to the next discharge pulse.
  • the specified 8.3J or less may be extracted from the load capacitor in no more than 95 ⁇ S. Discharge pulses will occur no less than 250 ⁇ S apart.
  • the regulation specification (8.1.17) applies to all operation conditions, 8.3J or less per pulse, during steady state operation and during initial transient response between first and second pulses, second and third pulses, etc.
  • the Power Oscillator 10 shown in FIGS. 1A and 4 is in many ways similar to prior art ArF lasers such as described in the United States Patent No. 5,023,884, entitled COMPACT EXCIMER LASER, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference and in the above referenced U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,323, and is substantially equivalent to the ArF laser described in the above referenced U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 09/854,097.
  • the power oscillator 10 can, e.g., comprise a discharge chamber 12 in which are located a pair of elongated electrodes (not shown), each of which may be, e.g., about 50 cm long and spaced apart by about 0.5 inch, a fan (not shown) and heat exchanger units (not shown) circulate the laser gas to present fresh, unionized, gas between the electrodes for each gas discharge pulse and remove heat from the chamber.
  • a discharge chamber 12 in which are located a pair of elongated electrodes (not shown), each of which may be, e.g., about 50 cm long and spaced apart by about 0.5 inch
  • a fan not shown
  • heat exchanger units not shown
  • the chamber 12 can include, e.g., window units (not shown), made, e.g., with a high fluence damage tolerant material, e.g., CaF 2 .
  • the chamber can contain, e.g., a laser gas, e.g., a mixture of 1% xenon, 0.1% of a halogen, e.g., chlorine and the rest neon.
  • the halogen may be inserted in the form of hydrogen chloride, e.g., in the range of 0.03 - 0.1%, e.g., 0.05%.
  • Xenon may be inserted in the range of, e.g., 0/2% - 1%, e.g., 0.3% with the balance made up of neon.
  • Total pressure may be kept, e.g., within the range of 300 - 500 kPa, e.g., at about 420 kPa.
  • H 2 may sometimes be used, e.g., as a catalyst to reverse the loss of HC1, e.g., in amounts in the range of 0.2% to 0.5%.
  • a resonant cavity can be created, e.g., by an output coupler 16 which can also be comprised, e.g., of CaF 2 and comprise a minor, e.g., mounted perpendicular to an output laser pulse beam path direction and be coated to reflect about, e.g., 30% of light at, e.g., 308nm and to pass about 70% of the 308nm light.
  • the opposite boundary of the resonant cavity can be formed, e.g., by a totally reflecting minor 18, which can also be made, e.g., from CaF 2 .
  • the main charging capacitor C 0 banks 232 for both the power oscillator 10 and the power amplifier 20 may be charged in parallel so as to reduce jitter problems.
  • This can be desirable because the time for pulse compression in the pulse compression circuits 234, 250 of the two pulse power systems 200, respectively for the PO and PA, can be dependent on the level ofthe charge of the charging capacitor Co banks 232.
  • Pulse energy output must be controlled on a pulse-to-pulse basis, e.g., by adjustment of the initial charging voltage on the charging capacitor Co banks 232.
  • Laser gas pressure and Cl 2 concentration can also be controlled to achieve desirable beam parameters over a wide range pulse energy increases and laser gas pressure.
  • the time between discharge and light-out is a function of Cl 2 concentration (0.5 to Ins/kPa) so CI 2 concenfration may be changed to vary the timing.
  • This can be accounted for by changing fluorine content to maintain a desired concenfration as chlorine is depleted as is known in the art, or by using information from preceding pulses to continually update the timing requirement changes due to the slowly depleting chlorine content, as is also well known in the art, similarly to fluorine based lasers.
  • Power Amplifier The power amplifier 20 may be comprised, e.g., of a laser chamber 22, which is essentially identical the conesponding power oscillator 10 discharge chamber 12.
  • the two separate chambers also facilitates pulse energy and integrated energy in a series of pulses (refened to as dose) confrol, to a large extent, separately from wavelength and/or bandwidth. This can help to enable, e.g., better dose stability and/or pulse to pulse stability.
  • the two chambers can be operated with substantially the same gas mixture and at substantially the same pressures to optimize oscillation output power in the PO 10 and amplification of the PO 10 output in the Pa 20. All of the components ofthe chamber are the same and are interchangeable during the manufacturing process.
  • capacitor C p-1 banks 272 of the compression head 250 may be more widely positioned for the PO 10 than the PA 20, inorder, e.g., to produce a substantially higher inductance as compared to the PA 20.
  • the close identity of the chambers 12, 22 and the electrical components of the pulse power systems 200 can, e.g., help assure that the timing characteristics ofthe pulse forming circuits are the same or substantially the same so that jitter problems are minimized.
  • the power amplifier 20 can be, e.g., configured for at least two beam passages through the discharge region between the electrodes of the PA 20.
  • the PO being an oscillator with a resonance cavity has a beam that can oscillate several times through the chamber 10 and the rest ofthe resonant cavity ofthe PO 10 before emerging as an output laser beam pulse.
  • This beam can then, e.g., be reflected by minor 14 to the PA 20.
  • the minor 24 is slightly off of the centerline axis ofthe chamber 20 and reflects the output laser light pulse beam from the PO through the chamber 20 of the PA at an angle , which may intersect the electrodes (not shown) at generally the mid-point longitudinally ofthe anode/cathode pair of electrodes (one may be longer than the other, so this mid-point may be determined by the shorter ofthe two).
  • the beam then exists the rear window of the chamber 20 and enters a beam return unit comprising, e.g., two totally reflecting minors 26a and 26b, which can, e.g., reflect the beam back through the chamber 20 ofthe PA along the longitudinal centerline axis ofthe discharge, which may conesponds to the longitudinal centerline axis or a discharge region formed by the elongated electrodes and may conespond to the longitudinal centerline axis of the elecfrodes themselves according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • a beam return unit comprising, e.g., two totally reflecting minors 26a and 26b, which can, e.g., reflect the beam back through the chamber 20 ofthe PA along the longitudinal centerline axis ofthe discharge, which may conesponds to the longitudinal centerline axis or a discharge region formed by the elongated electrodes and may conespond to the longitudinal centerline axis of the elecfrodes themselves according to an embodiment of the present invention.
  • the longitudinal centerline axis ofthe discharge between the electrodes can form the optical axis of the output laser light pulse beam from the PA, through its output coupler 28 and, e.g., a beam monitoring unit 30.
  • Charging voltages according to an embodiment of the present invention can preferably be selected on a pulse-to-pulse basis to maintain desired pulse and dose energy and stability.
  • Cl 2 concentration, e.g., along with other laser operating parameters, e.g., total gas pressure, may be, e.g., monitored and adjusted periodically, in order, e.g., to maintain a desired operating range of charging voltage.
  • This desired range can, e.g., be selected to produce a desired value of dE/dV since the change in energy with voltage can be a function of among other factors, Cl 2 concenfration and laser gas pressure.
  • the timing of injections according to an embodiment of the present invention can be, e.g., based on charging voltage.
  • the frequency of injections can be, e.g., preferably be high to keep conditions relatively constant and can be, e.g., essentially continuous or nearly continuous, with appropriate adjustments if continuous injection needs to be halted temporarily to maintain desired conditions.
  • DischargeTiming The electric discharge between the electrodes in the PO and PA can, e.g., last about 50 ns, resulting from an electrical discharge between the electrodes also of about 50 ns.
  • an important requirement for an injection seeded POPA laser system assure that the seed beam from the from the PO 10 passes through discharge region of the PA during the approximately 50ns of a second when the population is inverted in the laser gas so that amplification of the seed beam can occur.
  • a solution to this problem can be, e.g., to charge the charging capacitor Co of both the PO and the PA in parallel from the single resonant charger 230 as indicated in FIG.' s 3, 4 and 8 and as described above, so that they are both charged to the same exact voltage and each share the same enor from a desired voltage, if any.
  • the two pulse compression/amplification circuits 234, 250, 242 for the PO 10 and PA 20 are designed so that time delay versus charging voltage curves match as shown in FIG. 9. This can be enabled, e.g., by using to the extent possible the same components in each circuit.
  • the pulse power components for both discharge chambers can have essentially identical components so that the time delay versus voltage curves in fact closely track each other as indicated in FIG. 9.
  • the pulse power components for both discharge chambers can have essentially identical components so that the time delay versus voltage curves in fact closely track each other as indicated in FIG. 9.
  • the pulse power systems are constructed as they are, using magnetic switching that can be carefully biased and predicted in terms of timing, even in the face of other changes than charging voltage, e.g., temperature also can serve to enable enhanced timing control and identity of timing control in the parallel circuits .
  • the influence changes in charging voltage, e.g., to maintain output power change slowly enough that the maintenance of the same relative time delays in each of the parallel pulse power circuits for the PO 10 and PA 20 respectively can also enable maintenance ofthe same timing of discharges between the chambers over the short term, e.g., pulse to pulse in a burst of pulses and burst to burst over some series of bursts.
  • Temperature confrol of electrical components in the pulse power circuit 200 is also important since temperature variations can affect pulse compression timing (especially temperature changes in the saturable inductors). Therefore according to an aspect ofthe present invention temperature variations in the first instance are minimized, which can be facilitated by the cooling apparatus and techniques discussed in the above referenced application Ser. No. 10/607,407. Additionally, according to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention the temperature of, e.g., the temperature sensitive components can be monitored and using a feedback control adjustment made to the trigger timing to compensate. Controls can be provided with a processor programmed with a learning algorithm to make adjustments based on historical data relating to past timing variations with known operating histories. This historical data is then applied to anticipate timing changes based on the cunent operation ofthe laser system.
  • Trigger Control According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention the triggering of the electrical discharge (and, therefore also the gas discharge) for each of the two chambers 12, 22, e.g., can be accomplished separately, e.g., utilizing for each circuit a trigger circuit such as one of those described in the above referenced U.S. Pat. No. 6,016,325, part of which is repeated here for completeness.
  • These circuits e.g., can add timing delays to conect for variations, e.g., in charging voltage and temperature changes in the electrical components of the pulse power system 200, e.g., so that the time between trigger and discharge is held as constant as feasible.
  • separate trigger signals can be provided to the separate trigger switches 254 for each ofthe charging circuits for the respective PO and PA chambers 12, 22.
  • the actual delay can be chosen to achieve a desired beam quality based on actual performance curves such as those shown in FIGS. 6C, D and E.
  • a particular mode of laser operation e.g., very high power over a very large duty cycle (the ration of the time the laser system is pulsing to the total time when it is pulsing and not pulsing) may result in wide swings in charging voltage and/or wide swings in, e.g., inductor temperature, which could complicate discharge timing control.
  • the timing ofthe discharges can be monitored, e.g., on a pulse-to-pulse basis and the time difference, e.g., t amp - t osc can, e.g., be used in a feedback control system to adjust timing ofthe respective trigger signals closing the respective switches 254.
  • a parameter of, e.g., the PA 20 chamber discharge could be monitored, e.g., using a photocell, e.g., to observe a discharge fluorescence (from, e.g., ASE) rather than the laser pulse, since very poor PO 10, PA 20 timing could result in little or no laser beam being produced in the PA 20.
  • a photocell e.g., to observe a discharge fluorescence (from, e.g., ASE) rather than the laser pulse, since very poor PO 10
  • PA 20 timing could result in little or no laser beam being produced in the PA 20.
  • the MO either the ASE or the seed laser pulse could be used to indicate that the MO has provided the necessary energy for the PA to indicate, e.g., that the MO has provided the necessary energy for the Pa. If the MO energy is conect, and the PO energy is low and the ASE is high, one could infer that the time t amp - t osc is not optimum.
  • pulse timing can, e.g., be increased or decreased by adjusting the bias cunents through the saturable inductors LSAl and LSA2 in FIG. 5 and/or LI and L2 or L3 and L4 in FIG. 7, which, e.g., provide bias for inductors LCH in FIG. 4 and 310 in FIG. 7.
  • Other techniques could be used to increase the time needed to saturate these inductors.
  • the core material can be mechanically separated with a very fast responding PZT element which can be feedback controlled based on a feedback signal from a pulse timing monitor.
  • an adjustable parasitic load could be added to either or both of the pulse power circuits, e.g., downstream of the Co capacitor banks 210.
  • Charging voltage and inductor temperature signals in addition to the pulse timing monitor signals, can, e.g., be used in feedback controls to adjust, e.g., the bias cunents and/or core mechanical separation as indicated above in addition to the adjustment of the trigger timing as described above.
  • the length of down times during bursts or between bursts of laser system output light pulses can also affect, e.g., the relative timing between the pulse power systems of the PO 10 and the PA 20 and adjustments may have to be made, e.g., in the trigger control to assure that the discharge in the PA 20 occurs when the seed beam from the MO 10 is at the desired location.
  • the laser operator can adjust the trigger timing (accurate to within about 2 ns) to achieve best performance, according to an embodiment of the present invention this can preferably be done by a laser controller 252 having a processor 220 that can be programmed to monitor the timing and beam quality and adjust the timing automatically for best performance, among other things according to the indications of the laser operating parameter signals noted above and the data, e.g., from the empirically derived graphs suoh as noted above. More specifically timing algorithms which develop sets of bin values applicable to various sets of operating modes and parameters can be utilized according to aspects of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • Another pulse power circuit 200 may be considered. This circuit 200 is similar to the one described above, except, e.g., that it can use a higher voltage power supply for charging Co to a higher value.
  • a high voltage pulse power supply unit 200 e.g., operating from factory power at, e.g., 230 or 460 volts AC, can be a power source for a fast charging resonant charger 230, as described above and designed for precisely charging two 2.17 ⁇ F charging capacitor Co banks 210, e.g., at frequencies of 4000 Hz and above, to voltages in the range o>f about 1100 V to 2250 V.
  • the electrical components in the commutator 234 and compression head 250 for the PO 10 can be as identical as feasible to the conesponding compo ents in the PA 20, n order to, e.g., keep time responses in the two circuits as identical as feasible.
  • Switches 254 can be, e.g., banks of two IGBT switches, as shown in FIG. 5 each rated, e.g., at 3300 V and ananged in parallel.
  • the Co capacitor banks 210 can, e.g., be comprised of 128 0.068 ⁇ F 1600 V capacitors, e.g., ananged in 64 parallel legs to provide the 2.17 F Co bank 210.
  • the Ci capacitor banks 256 can, e.g., be comprised of 136 O.068 ⁇ F 1600 V capacitors arranged, e.g., in 68 parallel legs, e.g., to provide a bank capacitance of 2.33 ⁇ F.
  • the C p- i and C p capacitor banks 272, 320 can, e.g., be same as those described above with reference to FIG.' s 4 and 5.
  • the saturable inductors 254 can, e.g., be single turn inductors providing saturated inductance of about 3.3 nH, e.g., with five cores, e.g., comprised of 0.5 inch thick 50%-50% Ni-Fe with 4.9 inch OD and 3.8 inch ID.
  • the saturable inductors 270 can, e.g., be two turn inductors providing saturated inductance of about 38 nH each comprised of, e.g., 5 cores, 0.5 inch thick made with 80%-20% Ni-Fe with an OD of 5 inches and an ID of 2.28 inches.
  • Trigger circuits (not shown) can be provided for closing the IGBT's 254 with a timing accuracy of two nanoseconds.
  • the PO 10 can be triggered about 40 ns prior to the triggering ofthe IGBT 254 for the power amplifier 20. However, the precise timing is preferably determined by feedback signals from sensors which measure the timing of the output of the master oscillator and the power amplifier discharge.
  • the throughput timing ofthe magnetic pulse compression in the Pulsed Power system is dependent upon the magnetic material properties that can be a function of the material temperature, etc. In order to maintain precise timing, it is therefore extremely important to either directly or indirectly monitor and/or predict these material properties.
  • One method described previously could utilize temperature monitors along with previously collected data (delay time as a function of temperature) to predict the timing.
  • An alternate approach could utilize the magnetic switch bias circuits to actually measure the magnetic properties (the saturation time) as the magnetics were reverse biased, e.g., in between pulses (or, e.g., prior to the first pulse). The bias circuits could apply sufficient voltage to the magnetic switch to reverse bias the material and at the same time measure the saturation time so that the laser timing could be accurately controlled.
  • the throughput delay time ofthe pulsed power system e.g., could be calculated knowing, e.g., the operating voltage ofthe upcoming pulse.
  • FIG. 5D of the above referenced '191 patent A schematic diagram ofthe proposed approach is shown in FIG. 5D ofthe above referenced '191 patent. Initial operation could, e.g., assume that, e.g., a particular magnetic switch is already saturated in the forward direction, provided by the respective bias power supply, e.g., through the two bias isolation inductors.
  • This cunent e.g., could then be interrupted, e.g., by applying, e.g., aboutlOOV to the magnetic switch which then saturates after about 30 ⁇ s.
  • a timer could be triggered, e.g., when the voltage is applied and, e.g., stop counting when a cunent probe detects saturation of the respective saturable reactor, thus calculating the saturation time for the 100V applied voltage.
  • the respective saturable reactor would be reverse biased and ready for the main pulse discharge sequence, e.g., once residual voltage has been drained froi ⁇ the circuit. As indicated in the above referenced FIG.
  • an output pulse length can be in the range of about 20 ns and is to some extent a function of the relative timing of the two electrical discharges.
  • a longer pulse length (other things being equal) can increase the lifetime of optical components of entire manufacturing system including the laser light source system.
  • several techniques can be used, e.g., to increase pulse length.
  • the relative time between discharges can be optimized for pulse length. Tbxe pulse power circuits of both the PO 10 and the PA 20 could be optimized for longer pulses using techniques, e.g., as described in the above referenced U.S. Patent Application Ser. No.
  • jitter control can be provides, e.g., with technique called a jitter compensation device (JCD), which can, e.g., assures that the pulse timing is accurate within not less than about 10-20 ns.
  • JCD jitter compensation device
  • the natural pulse-to-pulse variation of the light pulse with ttie input trigger is small, about +/-5 ns.
  • a trigger is sent, e.g., by the FCP 252 or the LCP 220, e.g., in response to a trigger command from a user of the light source, e.g., a manufacturing tool, e.g., the LCP, e.g., implementing jitter control
  • the controller 252 can, e.g., adjust the timing of the electrical pulse for variations in charging voltage based on the specified charging voltage for the upcoming pulse, with no direct conection for temperature variation.
  • a conection can be made to the tiining based on a timing enor measured from the previous pulse or series of pulses, e.g., within a buurst of pulses. Since temperature of the magnetic components usually can be observed to vary slowly, this pulse timing feedback technique, e.g., can, in effect, compensate for slowly varying temperature effects and at the same time provide compensation for other presently more time varying effects.
  • feedback conection can, e.g., be made using a technique, e.g., which applies a full 100% conection for different types of detected timing enors, e.g., for large timing enors such as greater than 20 ns, than for other detected timing enors, e.g., less than the full conection for smaller timing enors, such as, less than 20 ns, e.g., applying a conection of only 25%, or some other smaller conection, which may, e.g., be indexed "to the percent of 20ns represented by the detected timing enor factored by some selected conection coefficient is applied.
  • a technique e.g., which applies a full 100% conection for different types of detected timing enors, e.g., for large timing enors such as greater than 20 ns, than for other detected timing enors, e.g., less than the full conection for smaller timing enors, such as, less than
  • This smaller percentage conection can be u_sed to avoid oscillations about a zero enor condition in the timing signal.
  • a particularly small resolution e.g., a 1 ns resolution
  • a particularly small resolution e.g., a 1 ns resolution
  • the 40 MHz oscillator can., e.g., provide clock signals, e.g., at 25 ns intervals but these signals can, e.g., be utilised to charge an approximately linear analog capacitive charging circuit.
  • the voltage on the capacitor can then be read to determine time accurate to about 1.0 ns.
  • the present invention provides for an XeCl laser particularly well adapted for, e.g., laser crystallization applications.
  • the XeCl laser can be based on existing multi-chambered laser technology having the output of one chamber provide an input to the other, as, e.g., in applicant's assignee's existing products, e. g., the XLA product line.
  • the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention can be in a POPA configuration or POPO configuration.
  • a laser system In a POPA configuration, a laser system is provided that can operate at very high ;power and energy ( ⁇ near 500 to 1000 W average power). By operating the laser system in a POPA configuration, the overall efficiency could be increased by as much as 50%, which would also improve reliability, because the overall efficiency of use, including cost of consumables is directly related to the length of, at least one of the component consumables, i.e., chamber life.
  • Such a POPA configuration can also improve energy stability, similarly to applicants' assignee's XLA MOPA lasers, because, e.g., the Pa is operated in a saturation regime mode.
  • the laser systems according to embodiments of the present invention are very well suited for, e.g., super lateral growth (SL ⁇ 3) laser crystallization processes where the energy requirements are relatively very high and the stability requirements are relatively very demanding.
  • the laser system according to embodiments ofthe present invention particularly in a POPO configuration, laser can be used to provide two pulses, the timing of which could be separated.
  • the energy of each laser PO chamber could be in the 20 to 30 mJ per pulse range and the rep-rate of each could be up to 4 kHz.
  • the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could be used for advanced SLG ("aSLG”), e.g., as is being proposed by Sumitomo, as discussed in the above referenced Kudo et al. paper.
  • aSLG advanced SLG
  • the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention can operates at 8 kHz and, therefore, could be used also for controlled SLG (“cSLG”) being developed by numerous labs, as discussed, e.g., in the above referenced Kudo et al. paper and in the above referenced Voutsas paper.
  • both aSLG and cSLG are being considered to be done with high rep-rate green lasers, e.g., diode pumped Nd:YAG frequency doubled lasers, which are not powerful enough and require frequency multiplication.
  • high rep-rate green lasers e.g., diode pumped Nd:YAG frequency doubled lasers, which are not powerful enough and require frequency multiplication.
  • the output ofthe laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could appear as 2 pulses with a very long pulse width. Such a long pulse, e.g., reduces the solidification time and improves crystal quality.
  • a pulse stretcher could also be used which could improve results for both cSLG and aSLG, because longer pulses are better for., e.g., the crystallization process, e.g., by delaying solidification time in the annealing pro cess, and also protect optics down stream ofthe laser system.
  • the pulse sfretcher could be part of the laser system itself or incorporated into a beam delivery unit external to the laser system.
  • a BDU could also be useful for controlling output laser pulse beam pointing and positioning in delivering the beam to the work station, e.g., for performing SLG, e.g., maintaining these parameters on a pulse to pulse basis.
  • the laser system could be operated up to 6 kHz for cSLG. Energy would be reduced, but the power would be >200 W.
  • the output laser light pulse beam can be stretched in one dimension and focused in the other. Such a stretched beam can be sized according to an embodiment of the present invention to, e.g., a slit used in directing the laser light to the work piece and the focused beam's profile can conespond to a Gaussian shape that would be ideal for, e.g., aSLG.
  • An important aspect of the prefened embodiments of the present invention disclosed in the present application is the utilization of the capabilities of applicants multi-chambered POPA and/or POPOI lasers and the ability to precisely control the timing of two lasers chambers acting in a specified manner with each other to solve manufacturing process deficiencies resulting from the use of prior laser systems.
  • Such laser systems deliver to a manufacturing work piece very high power (up to 1000 W), very high repetition rate, compared to prior laser systems (500 Hz to 8KHz depending on the configuration), stretched pulses with energy/power stabilized pulse to pulse and precise pulse timing, including for providing staggered POPO pulses for pulse repetition rate doubling.
  • embodiments of the present invention can be configured in a variety of beneficial ways, e.g., in a POPA configuration, e.g., for delivering at or above 4KHz pulse repetition rate 150mJ and above pulses that are also, e. g, optically stretched, and can also advantageously be improved through delivery in a BDU, or in a double pulsed configuration also employing a POPO with precise ( ⁇ 3ns) timing and energy confrol of two pulses (one each from each POPO), or in a POPO configuration also delivering precise ( ⁇ 3ns) timing and pulse energy for doubled pulses at rates of e.g., 8KHz, and with pulse stretching and BDU delivery.
  • a POPA configuration e.g., for delivering at or above 4KHz pulse repetition rate 150mJ and above pulses that are also, e. g, optically stretched
  • a POPO with precise ( ⁇ 3ns) timing and energy confrol of two pulses one each from each POPO
  • the pulses may be relatively closely spaced, e.g., with a separation of, e.g., ⁇ 1 ⁇ s and a separation of, e.g., 250 ⁇ s between the start of each first output laser light pulse in the two closely spaced pulses, for an overall pulse repetition rate of 8KHz.
  • the second pulse of each pair of closely spaced pulses may be separated by anything less than 125 ⁇ s and may also be of a different power level, e.g., a lower power level, e.g., if the processing on the workpiece requires a two step treatment with different power levels spaced more closely together than 125 ⁇ s at, e.g., the 8KHz repetition rate.
  • the pulses can be separated by the uniform 125 ⁇ s spacing uniformly for an 8KHz pulse repetition rate.
  • Systems according to the present invention utilizing, e.g., XeCl can provide, e.g., a 308 nm center wavelength 150mJ per pulse, 4KHz pulse repetition rate, i.e., 600 W, 1% sigma, 60-70 ns FWHM pulse duration, without stretching, and 120ns FWHM with a 4X Tis stretcher, and having a chamber life on the order of 20B pulses.
  • the SSPPM according to embodiments ofthe present invention can enable lower maintenance due to longer life, high rep-rate at higher power, longer chamber life and very low inter- chamber jitter.
  • the BDU according to embodiments of the present invention advantageously can provide for improved laser beam shape and reduced divergence at the delivery point to the manufacturing equipment and pointing and positioning actively and dynamically monitored and stabilized in the BDU, independently of laser pointing enors in the light generation, enabling such things as constancy of energy delivery to the manufacturing tool and, thus, also to the work piece.
  • a gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus and method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece may comprise, a multichamber laser system comprising, a first laser unit comprising, a first and second gas discharge chamber; each with a pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the chamber, forming an elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply module comprising, a DC power source; a first and a second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the respective electrodes, comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control module operative to time the closing of the
  • a POPA laser system relay optics may be operative to direct a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and control module operates to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns and as a POPO, combining optics combine the output beams, and timing creates pulse separation in the combined output a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.
  • a beam delivery unit and a pulse stretcher may be included, and timing and control may be processor controlled based on signals representing charging voltage and component temperatures in the pulse compression and voltage step up circuits.

Abstract

A gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus and method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece is disclosed with may comprise, a multichambers laser system comprising, a first laser unit, and laser timing and control module, the timing and control module operates to create a gas discharge transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns and as a POPO, combining optics combine the out beams, and time creates pulse separation in the combined output a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.

Description

TITLE Very High Energy, High Stability Gas Discharge Laser Surface Treatment System
FIELD OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to high power and high stability gas discharge lasers for use in manufacturing processes involving treatment of surfaces and/or substrates with laser light over large areas and at high repetition rates.
RELATED APPLICATIONS This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. Applications Ser. No.
10/722,992 entitled VERY HIGH ENERGY, HIGH STABILITY GAS DISCHAREGE LASER SURFACE TREATMENT SYSTEM, filed November 26, 2003; of 10/631,349, entitled CONTROL SYSTEM FOR TWO CHAMBER GAS DISCHARGE LASER, filed July 30, 2003; of Ser. No. 10/233,253, entitled LITHOGRAPHY LASER WITH BEAM DELIVERY AND BEAM POINTING CONTROL, filed on August 30, 2002; of Ser. No. 10/012,002, now U.S. Patent No. 6,625,191, filed on November 30, 2001, entitled VERY NARROW BAND, TWO CHAMBER, HIGH REP RATE GAS DISCHARGE LASER SYSTEM, with inventors Knowles, et al., published on October 24, 2002, Pub. No. US20020154668 Al; Ser. No. 09/943,343, now U.S. Patent No. 6,567,450, filed on August 29, 2001, entitled VERY NARROW BAND, TWO CHAMBER, HIGH REP RATE GAS DISCHARGE LASER SYSTEM, with inventors Myers et al, published on April 18, 2002, Pub. No. US20020044586A1; U.S. Application Ser. No. 09/837,035, now U.S. Patent No. 6,618,421, filed on July 30, 2001, entitled HIGH REPETITION RATE GAS DISCHARGE LASER WITH PRECISE PULSE TIMING CONTROL, with inventors Das et al., published on January 31, 2002, Publication No. US/20020012376A1; and the disclosures of all of which are hereby incorporated by reference. The present application is related to an Application Ser. No., 10/607,407, METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR COOLING MAGNETIC CIRCUIT ELEMENTS, Attorney Docket No. 2003-0051-01, filed on June 25, 2003, and to an Application Ser. No., 10/606,412, entitled METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR ELECTRICALLY INTERCONNECTING HIGH VOLTAGE MODULES POSITIONED IN RELATIVELY CLOSE PROXIMITY, Attorney Docket No. 2002-0042-01, also filed on June 25, 2003, Application Ser. No. 10/036,727, entitled TIMING CONTROL FOR TWO-CHAMBER GAS DISCHARGE LASER SYSTEM, filed on December 21, 2001, and to Application Ser. No. 10/141,201, entitled GAS DISCHARGE ULTRAVIOLET LASER WITH ENCLOSED BEAM PATH WITH ADDED OXIDIZER, filed on May 7, 2002, and to Application Ser. No. 10/356,168, entitled AUTOMATIC GAS CONTROL SYSTEM FOR A GAS DISCHARGE LASER, filed on January 31, 2003, and to Ser. No. 09/848,043, filed on May 3, 2001, entitled INJECTION SEEDED LASER WITH PRECISE TIMING CONTROL, with inventors Ness, et al., published on July 4, 2002, Pub. No. 20020085606, and to Ser. No. 10/141,201, entitled GAS DISCHARGE ULTRAVIOLET LASER WITH ENCLOSED BEAM PATH WITH ADDED OXIDIZER, filed on May 7, 2002, with inventors Pan, et al., published on November 14, 2002, Pub. No. US20020167986A1, and to Ser. No. 10/036,727, filed on December 21, 2001, entitled TIMING CONTROL FOR TWO-CHAMBER GAS DISCHARGE LASER SYSTEM, with inventors Ershov, et al., published on May 29, 2003, Pub. No. US20020099269A1, and to Ser. No. 10/012,002, entitled VERY NARROW BAND, TWO CHAMBER, HIGH REP RATE GAS DISCHARGE LASER SYSTEM, filed on November 30, 2001, now United States Patent No. 6,625,191, and to Application Ser. No. 09/837,035, entitled HIGH REPETITION RATE GAS DISCHARGE LASER WITH PRECISE PULSE TIMING CONTROL, filed on April 18, 2001, now U.S. Patent No. 6,619,421, and United States Patent No. 6,016,325, entitled MAGNETIC MODULATOR VOLTAGE AND TEMPERATURE TIMING COMPENSATION CIRCUIT, and U.S. Patent No. 6,067,306, entitled LASER-ILLUMINATED STEPPER OR SCANNER WITH ENERGY SENSOR FEEDBACK, issued to Sandstrom et al. on May 23, 2000, and to U.S. Application Ser. No. 09/451,995, entitled LONG-PULSE PULSE POWER SYSTEM FOR GAS DISCHARGE LASER, filed on November 30, 1999. U.S. Application entitled LONG DELAY AND HIGH TIS PULSE STRETCHER, filed on November 13, 2003, Attorney Docket No. 2003-0109-01, and to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 09/854,097, entitled FOUR KHZ GAS DISCHARGE LASER, filed on May 11, 2001, and to U.S. Patent No. 6,128,323, entitled, RELIABLE, MODULAR PRODUCTION QUALITY NARROW-BAND HIGH REP RATE EXCIMER LASER, and to U.S. Patent No. 6,067,311, entitled EXCIMER LASER WITH PULSE MULTIPLEXER, the disclosures of all of which are hereby incorporated by reference. BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION Thin-film transistors ("TFTs") is a well known technology for building, e.g., liquid crystal diode ("LCD") screens that are commonly found, e.g., on laptop computers. Polycrystaline silicon (Poly-Si) TFT screens are brighter and more readable than, e.g., amorphous silicon (aSi) TFT LCD screens, but can consume more power and can be generally more expensive, in part due to currently available manufacturing techniques, an in particular, e.g., impacts on manufacturing yields due to certain limitations in the currently available manufacturing technologies. Annealing of the outer surfaces of the aSi LCD substrates is currently a critical process, both from a panel display performance perspective and in relation to attainable manufacturing yields. It is well known to use TFT-annealing, e.g., for the production of high resolution flat panel displays. It is also well known to utilize lasers, e.g., excimer or molecular gas discharge lasers, e.g., to cause laser-induced crystallization of amorphous silicon (A-Si) to produce, e.g., polycrystalline silicon (Poly-Si). This process, and its very accurate control and operation is a pivotal technology for the next generation of TFT devices. Without such technology apparatus, e.g., flat panel displays, will be prevented from offering such things as the required excellent resolution and brightness, large angle of view and high pixel refresh rates that the display technology is demanding as the technology moves forward. Poly-Si TFT technology represents an important route for the future development of flat panel displays by enabling the integration of addressing and clocking circuitry onto the active plate. Two technologies have emerged to do this: either by local laser annealing in the circuit areas or by a monolithic approach using Poly-Si for the array and the circuit TFTS. J. Yres et al., "Low Temperature Poly-Si For Liquid Crystal Display Addressing" Philips Research Laboratories, Surrey, England, ASIAN TECHNOLOGY INFORMATION PROGRAM (ATIP) 11 May 1993
(^t1p://www.atip.org/ATIP/public/atip.reports.93/mita-lcd.93.html). It is also well known to select laser light output from currently available light source systems that has a center wavelength that is optimized to the process involved, e.g., in the case of annealing, to maximize the penetration ofthe light into the surface of the material being treated, e.g., annealed, and at sufficiently high power incident on the surface to, e.g., effect annealing as deeply as necessary into the material. In other cases, the particular material being treated may also respond to the treatment, e.g., annealing, differently at different center wavelengths influencing the selection of the particular center wavelength. Gas discharge lasers known in the art are not available for providing an infinite spectrum of center wavelengths due to the physical and chemical reactions taking place in the within any particular lasing chamber being dictated by the gas(es) being used in the gas discharge. It is currently also well known that excimer or other gas discharge lasers, particularly Xenon Chloride (XeCl) halogen gas discharge lasers are useful for the type of annealing processes noted above. Companies such as Lambda-Physik of Germany supply products such as the Lambda-Physik "STEEL 2000" having operating parameters of: Wavelength 308 nm
Stabilized Energy 1030 mJ
Stabilized Average Power 310 W (at 308nm)
Max. Repetition Rate 300 Hz
Pulse Duration (typ., FWHM) 29 ± 5 ns Pulse to Pulse Energy Stability (3 sigma) <5.4%
Max. Pulse Energy Deviation Above Average — (Max. Energy minus Avg. Energy) <8.5%
Beam Dimensions (typ., FWHM)(lm from beam exit) (40 ± 3)x(13 ± 2) mm2
Beam Divergence (typ., FWHM) (at 10 Hz) <4.5 x <1.5 mrad Angular Pointing Stability (typ. FWHM)
(1 m from beam exit) <0.45 x < 0.15 mrad
Gas Lifetime > 40 x 106 pulses
Expected Laser Tube Lifetime 1 x 109 pulses
Beam Height 1235 ± 20 mm Such a laser, e.g., with about 1 J and 300Hz performance, is just about at the edge of the performance requirements for current generation glass substrates. The next generation (the 5th) of such glass substrates of 1250mm x 1100mm will require much better performance, e.g., higher laser energies higher repetition rates, while maintaining such parameters as pulse stability, beam properties, etc. As the requirements become more stringent due, e.g., to advancing flat panel display technology, e.g., glass substrates increasing in size to, e.g., 1250 mm X 1100mm, e.g., the laser energies required will increase at least by a factor of two, to 2J/pulse. An approach suggested by some, e.g., Lambda Physik is to combine 2 lasers, e.g., with a beam homogenizer to combine the two beams from the two lasers. However, the use of 2 lasers, e.g., due to the addition of the homogenizer alone, increases costs, also adding to costs of consumables and to increased maintenance downtime. The associated delivery optics, in addition to the homogenizer also becomes more complex. Use of POPA configurations for certain applications is well known, as discussed, e.g., in B. Wexler, et al, "Use of XeCl amplifiers for degenerate four-wave mixing", American Institute of Physics, Excimer Lasers - 1983, C. Rhodes et al. Eds., pp 172- 176. In 1986, an excimer laser company, Questek, based in Billerica, MA, introduced a 100W KrF laser based on POPA technology. However, the product was immediately withdrawn from the market due to lack of jitter/timing control technology, due in part to the fact that the PO and PA were thyratron switched. There is, therefore a need for a better solution to the increasing demands of surface and materials treatment technology using laser light, e.g., for TFT annealing and/or creation of, e.g., poly-si on large scales from an A-Si coating.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION A gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus and method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece is disclosed which may comprise, a multichamber laser system comprising, a first laser unit comprising, a first and second gas discharge chamber; each with a pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the chamber, forming an elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply module comprising, a DC power source; a first and a second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the respective electrodes, comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control module operative to time the closing of the respective solid state switch based upon operating parameters of the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit to effect operation of the first and second laser units as either a POPA configured laser system or a POPO configured laser system to produce a single output laser light pulse beam. As a POPA laser system relay optics may be operative to direct a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and control module operates to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns and as a POPO, combining optics combine the output beams, and timing creates pulse separation in the combined output a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns. A beam delivery unit and a pulse stretcher may be included, and timing and control may be processor controlled based on signals representing charging voltage and component temperatures in the pulse compression and voltage step up circuits.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG.' s 1 A and IB shows a side view and a top view of a block diagram partially schematic view of a multi-chambered laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 2 shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 2A shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 3 shows a block diagrammatic schematic view of an embodiment of the present invention; FIG. 4 shows a schematic view of a solid state pulse power system according to an embodiment ofthe present invention; FIG. 5 shows a more detailed schematic view of a commutator module shown in FIG. 4 according to an embodiment ofthe present invention; FIG. 6 shows a timing diagram of the charging a peaking capacitor in a chamber module shown in FIG. 4 from a compression head module shown in FIG. 4, according to an embodiment ofthe present invention; FIG. 7 shows a more detailed view of the compression head and chamber modules shown in FIG. 4; FIG. 8 shows a block diagram schematic view of a timing and control module according to an embodiment ofthe present invention; and, FIG. 9 shows a timing diagram used in an embodiment ofthe present invention. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS The present invention contemplates extending Applicants assignee's existing fluoride-based excimer technology to, e.g., XeCl lasers, e.g., for surface and material treatment applications. In particular, e.g., such a laser can be used to advance the capabilities of existing systems for large area annealing, e.g., of flat panel displays (TFT annealing), e.g., the Lambda-Physik XeCl laser (1 J, 300Hz) noted above. As contemplated by the present invention a high power, high energy XeCl laser is disclosed that can be optimized, e.g., for large area annealing, e.g., of 5th generation glass panels, e.g., for flat panel displays. Also provides according to the present invention is a high efficiency beam delivery unit that can, e.g., deliver constant fluence, e.g., in the form of an elongated slit, several hundred millimeters long and a fraction of a millimeter wide, e.g. 370 mm x 0.4 mm. Based on roadmaps for glass substrates, the substrate sizes would increase to 1250 mm X 1 lOOmm.This would drive up the laser energy and power requirements by a factor of two, to 2J/pulse. The approach suggested by Lambda Physik is to combine 2 lasers as shown below. However, use of 2 lasers increases costs of consumables and downtime. The associated delivery optics also becomes more complex. According to an embodiment of the present invention applicants contemplate utilization of embodiments of the present invention, e.g., at this node - a 2J/pulse 300 Hz laser, i.e., about 600w. According to Applicants' evaluations and discovery, a single commercially practical laser oscillator based design cannot produce 2 J/pulse due to the requirements for a very large discharge volume between the electrodes ofthe gas discharge type laser. For example, the Energy/Pressure ("E/P") ratio for XeCl lasers is approximately 1 kV/cm- atm. Even with very high voltages that Applicants assignee's pulse power systems are capable of delivering today, e.g., around 30kV, one may only consider a discharge gap of around 3.5 cm at 4 atmosphere total pressure. Such a discharge gap, with a typical discharge width of 2cm, would require the chamber electrodes to be about 1.4m long, as opposed to electrodes of a little less that one meter long currently commonly used. The 1.4 meter length is not feasible for at least two reasons (1) the need for an impractically long chamber length that would, e.g., cause problems with chamber structure at high pressures and probably lead to tangential blower requirements and performance issues and (2) for the estimated small signal gain of 0.06/cm, this length is very close to the maximum of 1.7m beyond which the laser is super-radiant, i.e., the amplified spontaneous emissions ("ASE") would be high enough to cause problems, e.g., loss of efficiency due to very broadband ASE outside of the natural, e.g., XeCl bandwidth around the center wavelength of about 308nm. The present invention contemplates a multi-chambered laser system configured to deliver the laser output of one chamber as a seed beam to the second chamber. Currently applicants' assignee provides a product line called the "XL" platform with the first chamber operating as a very highly line narrowed master oscillator, which sacrifices a great deal of output power to achieve the very narrow line narrowing, e.g., for delivery of essentially monochromatic light, e.g., for integrated circuit lithography uses. This low power line narrowed laser output of the oscillator, referred to as the maser oscillator ("MO") is then highly amplified in the second gas discharge laser chamber operating as a power oscillator ("PA"). The present invention contemplates the two chambered laser system being configured in a power oscillator power amplifier configuration (POPA). According to an embodiment of the present invention the two chambers may each have a 3.5cm electrode gap between elongated electrodes of about 1 m in length. Such a power oscillator could produce 0.5J to 0.7J. This can, e.g., then be enough to saturate the amplifier (typical saturation intensities are around 100 mJ/cm2 for a 100ns pulse). The PO efficiency would be around 2%, which is typical. The limiting factor for efficiency, according to an embodiment of the present invention is the conversion efficiency of the excimer molecules or, e.g., molecular fluorine molecules, to laser photons. Approximately 50% of the excited dimmers are lost to fluorescence before energy is extracted out ofthe laser. However, according to an embodiment of the present invention in the proposed POPA scheme, the PA extraction efficiency can be much higher than 2% if operated as a stand-alone oscillator, i.e., as a POPO system. Applicants believe also that the efficiency of the PA could be up to and above about 4%. Thus, a 35 J of electrical input to the PO, and a 35 J laser light output of the PO to the PA, can be expected to deliver an output of the laser system as a whole at around 2J, which translates to an efficiency requirement of only 2.9%. A comparable 2J single oscillator system would need 100J of energy per electrical pulse to the gas discharge electrodes. This output of 2J per pulse can now be efficiently coupled into a beam delivery unit without the associated losses and complexity of a beam mixer as proposed by others. The same POPA concept can be applied, e.g., to lower energy pulse systems. In another configuration, the input energy to the PO and P"A could be 4J/pulse. At, e.g., a 2.9% overall efficiency, the output could be at or near 250 mJ per pulse at a much higher repetition rate, e.g., 4KHz, which would still result in a lkW laser suitable, e.g., for the above noted applications. The ability according to embodiments of the present invention to control very precisely the timing etween the pulses in the separate chambers also raises the possibility according to an embodiment ofthe present invention to operate the laser in a double pulse mode at around 8KHz. On such a mode, the PA can be a PO also and the staggered pulses from each PO optically combined in a single output path as described more fully below. Two pulses separated, by, e.g., 850ns and with long duration pulses can be used to advantageously create, e.g., p-Si crystal growth advanced mobility and uniformity, as discussed in T. Kudo, et al., "Advanced Lateral Crystal Growth of a-Si Thin Film by Double Pulsed Irradiation of all Solid-State Lasers," Mat. Res. Soc. Symp. Proceedings, Vol. 762, Spring 2003, pp 1-6. Others have stated that prior excimer lasers lacked certain performance characteristics to be effectively or efficiently used in such processes, e.g., TFT annealing, due, e.g., to low energy density and/or pulse repetition rate and/or pulse stability, e.g., as discussed in A. Voutsas, "a New Era of Crystallization: Advances in Polysilicon Crystalization and Crystal Engineering," Applied Surface Science (2003), and R. Dassow, Nd:YVO4 Laser Crystallization for Thin Film Transistors with a High Mobility," Mat. Res. soc. Symp. Proceedings, Vol 762, Spring 2000. Contemplated approaches suggested by the above, e.g., include double pulsed diode pumped solid state lasers, e.g., frequency doubled from a green laser at 532mn. such solutions, however, are not likely to be able to meet the requirements going forward. Excimer lasers according to embodiments of the present invention, however, can be configured to deliver mush higher power and energy, stabilized pulse to pulse and including staggered pulses very precisely timed and separated and also pulse elongated. Therefore, according to an embodiment of the present invention it is proposed by Applicants to provide, e.g., a XeCl POPA based on applicants' assignee's MOPA architecture as implemented in applicant's assignee's XL product line. This XeCl laser, according to an embodiment of the present invention would be a broadband (i.e., the natural spectrum of a XeCl excimer laser with no line narrowing). Therefore, according to an embodiment of the present invention, the line-narrowing module and the wavelength and linewidth measuring equipment in, e.g., in applicants' assignee's XLA product line, would not be required, with consequent savings both in cost and overall efficiency. The MO in XLA would be replaced by a PO 10, which, as shown in FIG.' s 1A and IB consists of the PO 10 including a chamber 12, a total reflecting optic 14, e.g., a total reflecting mirror 18, instead of a line narrowing module, and an output coupler 16, all together forming a resonance cavity for the PO 10. The laser output light beam from the PO, according to an embodiment of the present invention, can then be double passed through the chamber 22 of the PA 20 to extract all the energy from the PA 20. The output of the PO 10 is reflected by totally reflecting mirror 14 to an offset mirror 24 which reflects the beam into the PA along a path misaligned with the elongated electrodes (not shown) in the PA 20 to a pair of totally reflecting mirrors 25a and 26b (or a total internal reflection prism, not shown) to create the second pass of the beam through the PA 20 along the centerline axis ofthe electrodes (not shown) in the chamber 22, which is also the optical axis of the output of the PA 20, through the output coupler 28 ofthe PA 20. Energy sensors 30, 32, respectively, at the output of PO 10 and PA 20, according to an embodiment of the present invention can monitor, e.g., the POPA output energy. The applicants' assignee's XLA product line has all of the technology necessary support, e.g., the operation, e.g., of such a XeCl laser at high repetition rates, including well above 300Hz. This supports the ability to deliver the high output energies required in the form of very high energy laser system light output pulses as very high repetition rates. These support technologies include a very efficient solid state pulse power system module ("SSPPM"); a very jitter free operation due to jitter-control technology to maintain, e.g., the critical relative timing between the firing ofthe electrical pulses to the elongated gas discharge electrodes, respectively, in the PO and PA, water-cooled modules and a very high-speed controller. Hence the proposed POPA would be high power light source, e.g., at 2 J per pulse, the rep-rate, according to an embodiment ofthe present invention can be around 500Hz, or a 0.25J per pulse, at 4Khz, i.e., in either event a 1000 W laser. Turning now to FIG. 2, there is shown a block diagramatic schematic view of a surface/substrate treatment system according to an The output of the POPA 40 could, e.g., then be pulse stretched in a pulse stretcher 50, if required, either within or prior to delivery of the laser system output light beam to a beam delivery unit ("BDU") 60. The BDU may also have a beam analysis module ("BAM") 62 at its terminus closest to the delivery of the laser output light beam to the manufacturing apparatus, e.g., one performing TFT annealing. Details ofthe BDU 60, according to various embodiments of the present invention, depends upon the application. For example, for TFT annealing, the beam could in some cases need homogenization, in a beam homogenizer 70, and then be delivered to illuminate a slit 80, e.g., using a cylindrical focusing lens 90. The magnified image of the slit 80, according to an embodiment of the present invention could then be projected onto the substrate, eg., at a workstation 92. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, it is very important that the beam illuminates the slit 80 correctly on every pulse. Otherwise intensity variations at the substrate will result with resulting ineffective surface/substrate processing. Thus, the active stabilization technology, e.g., employed in the BDU 60, e.g., utilizing laser control information and information provided from the BAM 62 can be key to delivering the required energy stability. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention the present invention utilizes in the proposed POPA SSPPM technology, including, e.g., active jitter/timing control, which, among other things are keys in making the proposed POPA laser into an efficient, scalable and high power XeCl laser in the 1000W range. The laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could also be configured in a POPO configuration, as shown in FIG. 2A, including a first PO 100 and a second PO 100,' each having a respective totally reflective optic 102, 102', such as a totally reflective minor and an output coupler 104,104'. The output ofthe first PO 100 may be reflected by a totally reflective minor 106 to an minor set at brewster's angle with respect to the polorization of the output of the first PO 100, so as to totally reflect that beam, and the output of the second O 100' may be passed through a quarter wwave plate 108 to rotate its polarity to be orthogonal to that of the output of the first PO 100, so that the minor 1 lo at Brewster's angle wo;; not reflect any of that beam and the two output beams will follow the same output path from the minor 110, the pulses of which being temporally spaced from each other. As used on this specification, the acronyms and definitions listed in Table I shall have the meanings also there listed. Table I
Figure imgf000014_0001
Turning now to FIG.' s 3 and 4 there is shown a solid state pulse power module ("SSPPM") 200 is provided according to an embodiment of the present invention. The SSPPM 200 may include a TEM 202, the need for which is primarily driven by the dual- channel configuration of the SSPPM 200. This dual channel configuration requires much more precise trigger timing than previous systems, e.g., utilizing only a single laser gas discharge chamber. In addition to providing trigger signals internal to the SSPPM 200, the TEM 202 is the source certain monitoring and control signals, e.g., "Sync Out", which can be used, e.g., for a workstation control unit (not shown) and the TEM 202 can also provide a "Wavelength Conection Trigger" to the Optical Subsystem (not shown) according to an embodiment ofthe present invention. Also incorporated in the SSPPM 20O may be an HVPS 204, which can receive AC power from an AC Distribution Module (not shown) and charge and maintain a constant voltage on a storage capacitor bank C-l 210 in a Resonant Charger 212. The HVPS 204 receives an ON command from and sends faults to an LCP 220 in a Laser controller 222. The SSPPM 200 also can include an RC 230 which can receive a constant voltage from the HVPS 204 (and also 204') and provide pulse charges to a capacitor bank 232 (Co) in a commutator portion 234 of the SSPPM 200, when a trigger is sent from the laser controller 222. The RC 230 receives a trigger signal and a HV set point from the FCP and sends certain signals, e.g., identifying faults to the LCP 220. The commutator 234 can receive a pulsed charge from the resonant charger 230 and transform it by compressing the pulse rise time and stepping up the voltage through a transformer 240. The commutator 234 receives a trigger signal from and sends certain signals, e.g., identifying faults to the LCP 220. The SSPPM 200 can also include a compression head ("CH") 250 that can receive a pulsed charge from the commutator 234 and compress the pulse rise time and deliver it received pulse that has been further compressed to a peaking capacitor bank 260 on the respective chamber 12, 22 for the PO 10 and PA (or PO) 20. In carrying out its primary high voltage function the commutator module 234 of the SSPPM 200 receives a charge voltage from the RC 230 onto the capacitor bank C0 210 and a trigger signal from the FCP 252 within the laser controller 222. When a trigger signal is sensed the commutator 234 closes a solid state switch 254 discharging the Co capacitor bank 210 into a Ci capacitor bank 256 through a charging inductance 258. The voltage is held on Ci 256 until the magnetic switch in the first stage reactor 270 saturates and discharges d 256 into a capacitor bank Cp-1 272 in the compression head 250 through the first stage reactor 270 and the step up transformer 240. This discharge has the dual function of compressing the pulse in transfer time and increasing the output voltage through the step up ratio ofthe transformer 240. A secondary low voltage protection and control function of the commutator module 234 of the SSPPM 200 is carried out by the commutator 234 sensing a limited number of faults within the module and transmitting signals representative of such faults to the LCP 220 for handling via a CAN bus 280 interface. The SSPPM 200 can protect itself by disabling the triggering of the solid state switches 254 and 254' when a fault is detected. A voltage can, however, be applied to the Co capacitor bank 210 if the LCP 220 does not receive or fails to interpret a fault signal transmitted by the commutator module 234. FIG. 5 shows a more detailed schematic diagram ofthe commutator module 234, and FIG. 6 shows a simplified schematic. It can be seen in FIG. 5 that the solid state switch 254 and charging inductance 258 is actually two parallel circuits containing solid state switches 254, 254' and charging inductance 258, 258' in order to provide for operations at up to and above 4000Hz gas discharges in the respective chambers due to the time required for each switch 254, 254' to recover after firing and be ready to fire again. Also shown in FIG. 5 is circuitry, including a diode anangement respectively including, for solid state switch 254, diodes D^D. , with respective parallel RC networks, including, respectively for each of the diodes D1-D4, Rsl, Rs3, Rs5, and Rs7, Rs2, Rs , Rsδ, and Rs8, and Csl-C3 , and for solid state switch 254', diodes D5-D8, with respective parallel RC networks, including, respectively for each of the diodes D5-D8, Rs9, Rsll, Rsl3, and Rsl5, , Rsιo, R_i2, Rsi4 and Rsl6, and Cs5-C38, which serve to protect the respective solid state switches 254 and 254'. The respective solid state switches 254 and 254' are protected by the series diodes and their snubber networks. The diodes prevent reflected energy from the discharge electrodes from flowing through the solid state switches 254 and 254'. The switches 254 and 254' are protected because when reflected energy reaches these series diodes, the diodes turn off and prevent cunent flow through the diodes and solid state switches. The resistors and capacitors in the snubber networks help to limit how quickly the diodes turn off, thus improving the protection and reliability the circuit. In addition, biasing networks 290, 290' for the respective solid state switches 254, 254' include biased saturable inductors LSA1, LSA2, in series with diodes D\ and D2 and biased in opposite directions from a bias power source PS2, through a biasing capacitor Cbias in parallel with the power source PS2, and an RLC network consisting of an Rbias and an L ias in series with the capacitor Cyas and one of two charging inductors 258A, 258B, with an additional Cb;as connected between the node between the Rbias and Lbias and ground, and non-saturating inductors LSA1 and LSA 2 in series with diodes D3 and D4 and charging inductor 25 SB, and respecting solid state switch 254', biased saturable inductors LSA1', LSA2', in series with diodes D and D8 and biased in opposite directions from a bias power source PS2,' through a biasing capacitor Cbias' in parallel with the power source PS2', and an RLC network consisting of an Rbias' and an Lbias' in series with the capacitor Cbias' and one of two charging inductors 258A', 258B', with an additional C ias' connected between the node between the Rbias' and Lbias' and ground, and non-saturating inductors LSA1' and LSA2' in series with diodes D5 and D6 and charging inductor 258B. Alternatively all parts of LSA1 and LSA2 can be saturable, i.e., the four sets of conductors and four sets of cores can mechanically be achieved by a single set of cores with all four conductors passing through them. The bias circuit would then resets all four lines and not just two. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the biasing arrangement(s) serve to properly bias the magnetic material, which allows for predictably maximizing the available flux swing of the material. Predictable reset of magnetic material is important to precise timing control during laser operation. Additionally, the routing of the bias network through the circuit is important to ensuring that the solid state switches and series diodes have sufficient time to turn off and on, respectively. This improves performance and reliability. In addition, the commutator 234 pulse compression network 300, consists of capacitor Q 256, in parallel with diodes D9 and D10, which are connected through respective resistors .\ and R2 to the two ends of saturable reactor LSI 270, the output of which is connected in series to the primary windings, single turn, on each of a plurality of transformer cores 1-N in the transformer 240, having a single secondary winding passing through each of the cores 1-N. The windings 1-N of the transformer 240 are connected through an inductor 302 across the high voltage and ground portions of a module interconnect output 304. The requirements for the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention in terms of pulsed power provide for, e.g., 3.5 J of electrical energy per gas discharge electrical pulse to the electrodes in the respective chamber, at a rate of 4 KHz, to be delivered to Co for each chamber, i.e., 7.0 J per pulse for the entire pulsed power system according to an embodiment of the present invention. The pulsed power subsystem 200 is required to deliver high voltage pulses to each of the two respective chambers. The discharge time of each chamber must synchronized pulse to pulse to an accuracy of less than +1-2 ns, in order, e.g., to time the delivery of the gas discharge pulse to the PA (PO) when the seed beam from the preceding PO chamber is transiting the PA (PO) chamber. This requires, among other things, that the pulsed power timing to be compensated over the long term to account for such things as thermal drift and short term jitter. A single HVPS 204, or for higher power two HVPSs 204, 204' can supply the resonant charger 212 to drive two parallel commutator 234/compression head 250/Chamber 242 circuits. The resonant charger 212 can charge each of the two CO capacitor banks as shown in FIG. 4. The first stage reactor 270 contributes the most to timing variations. As the reactor 270 heats up the saturation flux density decreases, e.g., causing the reactor 270 to switch earlier. This can cause a switching time that varies with temperature. The switch time can also vary with voltage. The reactor 270 core (not shown) has a fixed amount of material, and, therefore, the volt-second product is fixed. Effects of temperature can be mitigate or even eliminated, even at very high repetition rates, which ordinarily induce high temperature flux to inductive elements such as used in the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention through the use of the cooling mechanism disclosed in United States Patent Application Ser. No. 10,607,407, entitled Method and Apparatus for Cooling Magnetic Circuit Elements, Attorney Docket No. 2003-0051-01, filed on June 25, 2003, and assigned to the common assignee of Applicants. In the compression head 250 the Cp-1 to Cp transfer can be analyzed as follows: Vcp is calculated from Ecp = Vz CV and assuming Ecp = η Ec0, where η = . The transfer time from Cp-1 to Cp is: τ3 = πLs2 Ca) ' , where Ca = CP-1CP/(CP-1+CP) and Ls2 is the inductance between Cp-1 to Cp, mostly accounted for by the inductance of saturable reactor SR2 310. The inductance ofthe transfer from Cp-1 to Cp is calculated from: Ls2 = (τ3/π) /Ca The peak cunent is calculated by: Ip = Vcp-1(Ca/Ls2) 2 In the commutator module 234, the C to Cp-1 transfer can be analyzed as follows: The transformer ratio is limiting by the IGBT 254, 254' withstand voltage, i.e., if the commutator is required to produce 20-kV and the IGBTs have a maximum operating voltage of 2-kV, the minimum transformer ratio would have to be N = 10. If M is less than 10 for this case, it would require the IGBT to operate at a higher voltage to achieve the required 20-kV output. The output of the transformer 240 results in N > VcP-ι Vci • The circuit 200 may need to accommodate up to 50K volts, so, assuming an IGBT that can withstand 2K, the transformer ration would need to be 25. The effective capacitance, C2 of Cp-1 as seen through the transformer 240 can be calculated from: C2 = Cp.ιN2 Using Cn-i < Cn for magnetic compression to occur according to an embodiment ofthe present invention Ci = 0.94C2 The transfer from Ci to Cp-1 is, therefore: τ2 = πLsl Cb) Vl , where , = C1C2/(C1+C2) and Lsl is the inductance between Cp-1 to Cp, mostly accounted for by the inductance of SRI 270. The inductance of the transfer from Ci to Cp-1 is calculated from: Lsl = (τ2 /π)2/Cb The peak cunent is calculated by:
Figure imgf000019_0001
The first stage reactor 270 is required to hold off the voltage on Ci until Ci is fully charged. This is accomplished with the first stage reactor 270 being a saturable reactor 270. The reactor core material can be, e.g., a 0.5 mil. 50%-50% Ni-Fe (Orthonol) tape with, e.g., a ΔB of 3.0 T. ΔB = V τ/(2NAm), where V= Voltage applied, ;c= hold off time before saturation, N = number of turns, Am = cross sectional area of core. Based on the ΔB equation, solving for Am = Vτ /2ΔBN The cross sectional area ofthe core is: Am = h(Ro-Ri)(pf), where h = height ofthe core, R0 = outer radius, j = inner radius, pf = packing factor = 0.7 The build ofthe core is calculated from: w = Ro-Ri = Am/h/pf The total inductance required for the transfer from C\ to Cp-i was calculated earlier to be Lsi. Stray inductance can play a role in the total inductance unless minimized by design. Lstray = Lxfinr + + Lpcb + Lca le + Llead Lstray is a component ofthe required lump inductance Lsl . This is inductance that is derived from the mechanical layoui: and is inherent to the design and therefore difficult to predict and control, but may be measured and estimated. Lsl is the total inductance required for the Cl to Cp-1 transfer. Lxfrnr is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent in the transformer primary and secondary windings. Lcl is a component ofthe stray inductance,, Lstray inherent to the Cl capacitor geometry. Lpcb is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent to the layout ofthe C 1 printed circuit board. Lcable is a component ofthe stray inductance, Lstray, inherent to the high voltage cable (not shown) connecting the commutator and compression head. Llead a component ofthe stray inoLuctance, Lstray, inherent to the layout of t ie high voltage cable connection inside the compression head. Lsat = Lsl - Lstray The saturated inductance for the core is calculated from: Lsat = μoN Ac/<1>, where μ,o = 4πl0" , N = number of turns, Ac= cross sectional area of core based on Ls equatiom,<l> = mean path length. Solving for Ac/<1> = Lsat0N2 <1> - 2π<R> = 2π(Ri+(R0-Ri)/2) = π( Ro+Ri) Setting Ac = Am , <1> can be calculated. ( Ro+Ri) = <l>/π Core losses are calculated from: Loss/Pulse = Vol. (HCΔB + (wtΔB)2/4pτ), where Vol = Hπ((Ro)2-(Ri)2), Hc = 19.9 A/m, wt = tape thickness, p = material resistivity, τ = charge time. The capacitor C\ design requires "that the dc voltage withstand capability for the charge voltage and the dV/dt rating ofthe capacitor Ci be met. Ideally the design would be a single capacitor with low packaging inductance. This ideal capacitor cunently does not exist. To achieve the desired capacitance, a parallel anay of small value caps can be used. To achieve the desired voltage withstand, the capacitors may be connected in series. This results in a series parallel anay. The dV/dt of the capacitor Ci can be calculated by two methods. The first is to divide the Vci voltage by the transfer time from Ci to Cp-1. The second method is to use the peak cunent, knowing that I = Cb(dV/dt). The capacitor Co design is similar to the Q design just discussed. Using Cn-1 < Cn for magnetic compression and then applying the ratio Co = 0.933Q, the transfer from Co to Ci can be analyzed as follows: τ.i = T (LCH Cc) Yz , where Cc = CoCι/(Co+Cι) and LCH is the inductance between Co to d. The inductance of the transfer from C0 to Q is calculated from: LCH = (τι/π)2 /Cc The peak cunent is calculated by:
Figure imgf000021_0001
Table II gives the SSPPM 200 module design parameters: Table II
Figure imgf000021_0002
Table III gives Table III
Figure imgf000021_0003
Figure imgf000022_0001
Figure imgf000023_0001
Table IV gives delay characteristic in a cold state, which is measured from trigger in to Commutator to falling edge of VCp-1, with limits to the delay characteristic set by statistical analysis of historical data, and with the module being operated with components are room temperature (25 deg C nominal) and assumed to be a thermal equilibrium. Table IV
Figure imgf000023_0002
Table V gives delay characteristics in a hot state, defined by a module that is being operated at full voltage and rep-rate for a time sufficient to allow the components to reach thermal equilibrium. Table V
Figure imgf000023_0003
It will further be understood that Co capacitor bank 232 receives a pulsed charge from the resonant charger 230. Voltage is held on this capacitor bank Co 232 until one of the solid state switches 254, 254' is closed. in response to a trigger signal from the FCP 252 in the LC 222. Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, and peak cunent capability. The solid state switch 254, 254' hold the voltage on Co until the trigger command from FCP 252, and when the trigger signal is received, the respective switch 254, 254'closes and connects Co 232 to Ci 256, through the respective charging inductors LCH A and LCH B, and LCH A' and LCH B'. Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, turn on rise time, turn on delay, turn on jitter, and peak cunent. The respective blocking diodes Di-D4 and D5-D8 stops any voltage from ringing back onto Ci, e.g., during reversal after the electrodes are fired. When Ci has a positive voltage the blocking diodes Di-D4 and D5-D8 will conduct and the voltage will transfer to Co through the respective charging inductor(s) LCH A and LCH B, and LCH A' and LCH B'. When the voltage starts to reverse and ring back the diodes Di-D4 and D5-D8 turn off, holding the voltage on Co, and reducing the amount that the RC has to charge the respective Co for the next firing, also conserving time and improving efficiency. A voltage sensing circuit (not shown) provides a signal to the LCP 220 in the LC 222, which indicated the amount of charge on C0; and the LCP can calculate the needed charge for the next firing and provide a signal to the RC 230 accordingly. Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, reverse recovery time, and peak cunent. The biasing networks provide for saturable assist. There are (2) sets of saturable assist. The first, comprising LS A2 holds off cunent flow until the respective solid state switch 254,254', which may be an IGBT, e.g., a CM800HA-34H, made by Powerex is fully closed. The second, comprising LSAl is there to hold off cunent until the respective diodes Di-D4 and D5-D8 are fully recovered during reversal. Critical parameters are the saturation time and drift with temperature. The respective charging inductors LCH A and LCH B 258 A,B, and LCH A' and LCH B' 258 A', B'set the transfer time and limit the peak cunent in the solid state switches 254, 254' and diodes Di-D4 and D5-D8. This inductance LCH A and LCH B, and LCH A' and LCH B' includes all stray inductance and winding inductance. In the Ci capacitor bank 256 voltage is held on this capacitor bank Ci 256 until the respective solid state switch 254, 254' is closed. Critical parameters are the dc voltage withstand, dV/dt, and peak cunent capability. For the first stage saturable reactor 270, critical parameters are volt-second holdoff, Volts per turn, delta B. For the pulse transformer 240, critical parameters are the volt-seconds, Volts per turn, delta B. For the diode snubber circuit, comprising RS2,CS1, and RSI or the equivalent attached across D2, 3, 4, 5, 6,7, or 8, critical parameters are the power, voltage and cunent rating. For the and C blip snubber circuits, comprising Rl, D9 for Cl and R2, D10 for C2, critical parameters are the power, voltage and cunent rating. Some ofthe signals employed by the SSPPM 200 include: 1. VCo Voltage Monitor Signal (Jl), which comprises a buffered analog signal representing the VCo voltage waveform. This signal can be derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) connected directly to C0 (400 kΩ ± 1% top leg x 4.01 kΩ ± 1% bottom leg). The scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the laser controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown). If the equivalent terminating impedance is greater than 400 kΩ then the scale factor will be 1 V per 100 V. 2. VCi Voltage Monitor Signal (J2), which can be a buffered analog signal representing the VCi voltage waveform for monitoring by the laser controller 222. This signal can be derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) directly connected to Ci (5 kΩ ± 1% top leg x 49.9 Ω ± 1% bottom leg). The scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the laser controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown). If the equivalent terrnination impedance is equal to 50 Ω then the scale factor will be 1 V per 201 V. 3. BDOT Signal (J3), which can be a buffered analog signal representing the time derivative of the cunent flowing between Ci and C2 (dl/dt), which can be used by the laser controller 222, e.g., to generate a Sync Out signal. This Sync Out signal can be derived from a magnetic field pickup loop (not shown) located next to the primary side of the pulse transformer 240. The amplitude of this signal can be a function of the terminating impedance in the controller 222 and/or attached oscilloscopes (not shown). If the equivalent terminating impedance is equal to 50 Ω then the full-scale amplitude will be ~1.5 - 5 V depending on charge voltage. This signal may be used solely for reference. 4. VC2 Voltage Monitor Signal (J4), which can be a buffered analog signal representing the VC2 voltage waveform for monitoring by the laser controller. This signal is derived from a resistive voltage divider (not shown) connected on the primary side ofthe pulse transformer 240, which can couple to C2 (5 kΩ ± 1% top leg x 49.9 Ω ± 1% bottom leg). The scale factor can be a function of the terminating impedance in the control module and/or attached oscilloscopes. If the equivalent terminating impedance is equal to 50 Ω then the scale factor will be 1 V per 201 V. 5. Commutator Trigger (J5), which can be a buffered signal representing the commutator trigger. The CAN bus 280 interface can connect the commutator control portion of the laser controller 222 to the commutator and to the RC's internal controller, e.g., by a 68 pin interconnection, with the indicated conditions when each ofthe pins is at high, i.e., is set, shown in Table VII: Table VII
Figure imgf000026_0001
Figure imgf000027_0001
Figure imgf000028_0001
With regard to the SSPPM 200 compression head 250, operation at at least 4 kHz, and 28.750 kV is contemplated according to an embodiment of the present invention. The compression head 250 can receive a pulsed charge from the commutator 234 and compress the pulse rise time and deliver it to a peaking capacitor bank 320 at the respective chamber 10, 20. The compression head 250 can receive a pulsed charge on the Cp-i capacitor bank 272 from the Ci capacitor bank 256. The voltage is held on Cp_ι until the magnetic switch in the output reactor SR2 310 saturates and discharges Cp-ι into Cp. This discharge compresses the pulse rise time as shown in FIG. 7. FIG. 7 shows that Cp-i charges in roughly 4.0 x 10"7 seconds and discharges onto Cp in roughly 1 x 10"7 seconds. FIG. 8 shows a schematic diagram ofthe compression head 250 module. The compression head 250 reactor SR2 310 can be required to hold off the voltage on Cp-1 until Cp-1 is fully charged. This is accomplished with a saturable reactor 310 having a core material which can be a 0.5 mil. 80%-20% Ni-Fe (Supermalloy) tape with a ΔB of 1.5 T. ΔB = V τ/(2NAm), where V= Voltage applied, τ= hold off time before saturation,
N = number of turns, Am = cross sectional area of core based on the ΔB equation. Solving for Am = Vτ /2ΔBN, the cross sectional area ofthe core is: Am = h(R0-Ri)(ρf), where h = height of the core, Ro = outer radius, Ri = inner radius, pf= packing factor = 0.7. The build ofthe core can be calculated from:
Figure imgf000029_0001
The total inductance required for the transfer from Cp-1 to Cp can be calculated to be Lsp. Stray inductance can be a significant factor, and is accommodated by: ■L'stray = Lcp-1 and Lsat = Lsl - Lstray The saturated inductance for the core can be calculated from: LSat = μoN2Ac/<l>, where μo = 4πl0"7, N = number of turns, Ac = Cross sectional area of core based on the Ls equation, and <1> = mean path length. Solving for Ac/<1> = Lsat0N2, <1> = 2π<R> = 2π(Ri+(R0-Ri)/2) = π( Ro+Ri) Setting Ac = Am , <1> can be calculated. ( Ro+Ri) = <l>/π Core losses can be calculated from: Loss/Pulse = Vol. HCΔB + (wtΔB)2/4D D, where Vol = Hπ((Ro)2-(Ri)2), Hc = .22 A/m from, wt = tape thickness, p = material resistivity, τ = charge time. The compression head 250 also includes a biasing network 312, comprising a biasing poser source 314, similar to those described above and a pair of bias inductors LI and L2, which biases saturable reactor SR2 310, in order to ensure the user of the full flux swing of the magnetic material. It also allows for a predictable way to bias the cores and ensure predictable operation and timing control. There is also included a circuit 316 including a pair of inductors L3 and L4 connected to ground through a resistor Rl, which functions to complete the bias circuit for the reactor. It has the additional function of allowing a path for water cooling directly to the reactor. Table VIII gives ventilation flow requirements and Table IX gives water cooling requirements. Table VIII
Figure imgf000030_0001
Table LX 10
Figure imgf000030_0002
Table X gives some performance specifications: Table X
Figure imgf000030_0003
Figure imgf000031_0001
Regarding the HVPS 204 and its interaction with the rest of the SSPPM, the HVPS receives AC power during a 10-second countdown from Laser Off to Standby; receives a HV Enable command from resonant charger 230; and provides DC high voltage to input of resonant charger 230. The HVPS can be water cooled, and housed in a closed chassis with internal air circulation fans. The resonant charger 230 can receives a program voltage through a high speed HV data serial link to the laser controller 222 over the CAN 280. The RC 212 can issue an FTV Enable command to the HVPS 204 and receive input high power DC voltage from the HVPS 204 or modules 204, 204'. The RC 230 can also contains compression head bias power supplies for the respective MO 10 and PO 20 compression heads 250 and 250'. The RC 230 can also charge the Co capacitor bank 210 (two channels, diode isolated) in the respective commutators 234, 234 'precisely to a program voltage level, determined by the LCP 220 as noted above. The RC 230 cam also store reflected energy as cunent until next charge cycle. The RC can be water and air cooled, e.g., with externally located fans. The commutators 234, 234', one for the MO and one for the PA, can receive HV charge from a single resonant charger 230, deliver fast HV pulse to compression heads 250, 250' and can be water and air cooled, e.g., with externally located fans. The compression heads 250, 250', one for the MO and one for PA, can be mounted to top of the respective chamber 10, 20 and can receives fast HV pulses from the respective commutator 234, 234', and provide final pulse compression, and deliver a fast rise time HV pulse to the respective peaking capacitor 320, 320' on the respective chamber 10, 20 for laser discharge. The HVPS 204 power module can function as a cunent source to a load capacitance C-l 210 in the RC 230. Multiple HVPS 204 outputs and/or multiple HVPS 204 modules could be employed, e.g., connected in parallel, e.g., to provide the same charge voltage at a higher average power, with equal cunent sharing. The HVPS 204 power modules can be enabled by a signal from the Resonant Charger 230. The Resonant Charger 230 can receive a LaserON command from the laser controller 222 and enable the HVPS 204 output at the beginning of the ten second countdown from Standby to LaserON. The HVPS 204 can employ, e.g., power factor conection ("PFC"), as is well known in the power supply field, e.g., to achieve relative immunity to fluctuations in input AC voltage, achieve unity power factor, and eliminate higher harmonics conducted on the input AC lines. The internal DC bus voltage of the HVPS 204 can be roughly regulated by the PFC. Cunent from the DC bus can alternately be switched through the primary of a step-up transformer (not shown) within the HVPS 204 via an H-bridge inverter (not shown). The AC output of the transformer (not shown) in the HVPS 204 can be rectified to DC. The output cunent can be monitored by the local control loop (not shown) to maintain controlled output cunent from the HVPS 204 as long as the output voltage is below some predetermined desired preset output voltage level. Table XI gives some performance specifications for the HVPS 204: Table XI
Figure imgf000032_0001
Figure imgf000033_0001
At maximum operating voltage of the HVPS 204, 800V, a maximum of 8.3J of energy can be withdrawn from the load capacitor (not shown), with a capacitance of, e.g., 1033 μF, every 250μs. The voltage on the load capacitor can be allowed to sag beyond regulation during the discharge pulse to the electrodes, however, the voltage must be restored to within the specified regulation as noted above in Table _, prior to the next discharge pulse. The specified 8.3J or less may be extracted from the load capacitor in no more than 95μS. Discharge pulses will occur no less than 250μS apart. The regulation specification (8.1.17) applies to all operation conditions, 8.3J or less per pulse, during steady state operation and during initial transient response between first and second pulses, second and third pulses, etc. The Power Oscillator The power oscillator 10 shown in FIGS. 1A and 4 is in many ways similar to prior art ArF lasers such as described in the United States Patent No. 5,023,884, entitled COMPACT EXCIMER LASER, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated by reference and in the above referenced U.S. Pat. No. 6,128,323, and is substantially equivalent to the ArF laser described in the above referenced U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 09/854,097. However, improvements over these prior art lasers enable operation at 4000 Hz and greater, as disclosed in United States Patent No. 6,625,191, referenced above, and portions of which are repeated herein for completeness. The power oscillator 10 can, e.g., comprise a discharge chamber 12 in which are located a pair of elongated electrodes (not shown), each of which may be, e.g., about 50 cm long and spaced apart by about 0.5 inch, a fan (not shown) and heat exchanger units (not shown) circulate the laser gas to present fresh, unionized, gas between the electrodes for each gas discharge pulse and remove heat from the chamber. The chamber 12 can include, e.g., window units (not shown), made, e.g., with a high fluence damage tolerant material, e.g., CaF2. The chamber can contain, e.g., a laser gas, e.g., a mixture of 1% xenon, 0.1% of a halogen, e.g., chlorine and the rest neon. The halogen may be inserted in the form of hydrogen chloride, e.g., in the range of 0.03 - 0.1%, e.g., 0.05%. Xenon may be inserted in the range of, e.g., 0/2% - 1%, e.g., 0.3% with the balance made up of neon. Total pressure may be kept, e.g., within the range of 300 - 500 kPa, e.g., at about 420 kPa. H2 may sometimes be used, e.g., as a catalyst to reverse the loss of HC1, e.g., in amounts in the range of 0.2% to 0.5%. A resonant cavity can be created, e.g., by an output coupler 16 which can also be comprised, e.g., of CaF2 and comprise a minor, e.g., mounted perpendicular to an output laser pulse beam path direction and be coated to reflect about, e.g., 30% of light at, e.g., 308nm and to pass about 70% of the 308nm light. The opposite boundary of the resonant cavity can be formed, e.g., by a totally reflecting minor 18, which can also be made, e.g., from CaF2.
According to a preferred embodiment of the present invention the main charging capacitor C0 banks 232 for both the power oscillator 10 and the power amplifier 20 may be charged in parallel so as to reduce jitter problems. This can be desirable because the time for pulse compression in the pulse compression circuits 234, 250 of the two pulse power systems 200, respectively for the PO and PA, can be dependent on the level ofthe charge of the charging capacitor Co banks 232. Pulse energy output must be controlled on a pulse-to-pulse basis, e.g., by adjustment of the initial charging voltage on the charging capacitor Co banks 232. Laser gas pressure and Cl2 concentration can also be controlled to achieve desirable beam parameters over a wide range pulse energy increases and laser gas pressure. For a power oscillator 10 according to an embodiment of the present invention, the time between discharge and light-out is a function of Cl2 concentration (0.5 to Ins/kPa) so CI2 concenfration may be changed to vary the timing. This can be accounted for by changing fluorine content to maintain a desired concenfration as chlorine is depleted as is known in the art, or by using information from preceding pulses to continually update the timing requirement changes due to the slowly depleting chlorine content, as is also well known in the art, similarly to fluorine based lasers. Power Amplifier The power amplifier 20 may be comprised, e.g., of a laser chamber 22, which is essentially identical the conesponding power oscillator 10 discharge chamber 12. Having the two separate chambers also facilitates pulse energy and integrated energy in a series of pulses (refened to as dose) confrol, to a large extent, separately from wavelength and/or bandwidth. This can help to enable, e.g., better dose stability and/or pulse to pulse stability. The two chambers can be operated with substantially the same gas mixture and at substantially the same pressures to optimize oscillation output power in the PO 10 and amplification of the PO 10 output in the Pa 20. All of the components ofthe chamber are the same and are interchangeable during the manufacturing process. While the compression heads 250 for the PO and PA are substantially identical, capacitor Cp-1 banks 272 of the compression head 250 may be more widely positioned for the PO 10 than the PA 20, inorder, e.g., to produce a substantially higher inductance as compared to the PA 20. The close identity of the chambers 12, 22 and the electrical components of the pulse power systems 200 can, e.g., help assure that the timing characteristics ofthe pulse forming circuits are the same or substantially the same so that jitter problems are minimized. The power amplifier 20 can be, e.g., configured for at least two beam passages through the discharge region between the electrodes of the PA 20. The PO, being an oscillator with a resonance cavity has a beam that can oscillate several times through the chamber 10 and the rest ofthe resonant cavity ofthe PO 10 before emerging as an output laser beam pulse. This beam can then, e.g., be reflected by minor 14 to the PA 20. as seen in FIG. IB, the minor 24 is slightly off of the centerline axis ofthe chamber 20 and reflects the output laser light pulse beam from the PO through the chamber 20 of the PA at an angle , which may intersect the electrodes (not shown) at generally the mid-point longitudinally ofthe anode/cathode pair of electrodes (one may be longer than the other, so this mid-point may be determined by the shorter ofthe two). The beam then exists the rear window of the chamber 20 and enters a beam return unit comprising, e.g., two totally reflecting minors 26a and 26b, which can, e.g., reflect the beam back through the chamber 20 ofthe PA along the longitudinal centerline axis ofthe discharge, which may conesponds to the longitudinal centerline axis or a discharge region formed by the elongated electrodes and may conespond to the longitudinal centerline axis of the elecfrodes themselves according to an embodiment of the present invention. The longitudinal centerline axis ofthe discharge between the electrodes, whether aligned with the longitudinal centerline axis of the electrodes themselves or not, can form the optical axis of the output laser light pulse beam from the PA, through its output coupler 28 and, e.g., a beam monitoring unit 30. Charging voltages according to an embodiment of the present invention can preferably be selected on a pulse-to-pulse basis to maintain desired pulse and dose energy and stability. Cl2 concentration, e.g., along with other laser operating parameters, e.g., total gas pressure, may be, e.g., monitored and adjusted periodically, in order, e.g., to maintain a desired operating range of charging voltage. This desired range can, e.g., be selected to produce a desired value of dE/dV since the change in energy with voltage can be a function of among other factors, Cl2 concenfration and laser gas pressure. The timing of injections according to an embodiment of the present invention can be, e.g., based on charging voltage. The frequency of injections can be, e.g., preferably be high to keep conditions relatively constant and can be, e.g., essentially continuous or nearly continuous, with appropriate adjustments if continuous injection needs to be halted temporarily to maintain desired conditions. DischargeTiming The electric discharge between the electrodes in the PO and PA can, e.g., last about 50 ns, resulting from an electrical discharge between the electrodes also of about 50 ns. This discharge creates a population inversion necessary for lasing action but the inversion only exists during the time of the electrical discharge. Therefore, an important requirement for an injection seeded POPA laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention assure that the seed beam from the from the PO 10 passes through discharge region of the PA during the approximately 50ns of a second when the population is inverted in the laser gas so that amplification of the seed beam can occur. An important obstacle to precise timing of the discharge is the fact that there is a delay, which can be on the order of about 5 microseconds between the time switch 254 is triggered to close (it does not actually close upon being so triggered) and the beginning of the electric discharge, which lasts about 50ns and causes the gas discharge (resulting in the population inversion) which lasts only about 40-50 ns. It can take this approximately 5 microsecond time interval for the pulse of electrical energy to ring through the circuit between the Co and the electrodes. This time interval can vary substantially, e.g., depending upon the magnitude ofthe charging voltage and, e.g., with the temperature ofthe inductors in the pulse power circuitry 200. Nevertheless according to embodiments of the present invention, circuitry is provided to enable timing control of the gas discharges of the two discharge chambers 12, 22 to within a relative accuracy of less than about 2ns. A block diagram of the two circuits are shown in FIG. 8.
According to an embodiment of the present invention applicants have chosen to base certain aspects of timing on a variation with charging voltage by approximately 5- 10 ns/volt. According to an embodiment of the present invention, therefore, the measurement and control of the accuracy and repeatability of the high voltage power supply as it charges the charging capacitor Co banks 232 can be of critical importance. For example, for a timing confrol of 5 ns, and a shift, e.g., of the sensitivity of 10 ns per volt, resolution accuracy would be required to be 0.5 volts. For a nominal charging voltage of 1000 V, this would require a charging accuracy of 0.05%, which is very difficult to achieve especially when the capacitors must be charged to those specific values 4000 times per second. Alternatively, e.g., a solution to this problem, according to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention can be, e.g., to charge the charging capacitor Co of both the PO and the PA in parallel from the single resonant charger 230 as indicated in FIG.' s 3, 4 and 8 and as described above, so that they are both charged to the same exact voltage and each share the same enor from a desired voltage, if any. Also, according to an embodiment of the present invention, the two pulse compression/amplification circuits 234, 250, 242 for the PO 10 and PA 20 are designed so that time delay versus charging voltage curves match as shown in FIG. 9. This can be enabled, e.g., by using to the extent possible the same components in each circuit. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention mimmizing timing variations (the variations are refened to as jitter) the pulse power components for both discharge chambers, e.g., can have essentially identical components so that the time delay versus voltage curves in fact closely track each other as indicated in FIG. 9. Over the normal operating range of charging voltage, there is a substantial change in time delay with voltage but the change with voltage is virtually the same for both circuits. Thus, with both charging capacitors charged in parallel charging voltages can be varied over a wide operating range without changing the relative timing of the discharges. The fact that the pulse power systems are constructed as they are, using magnetic switching that can be carefully biased and predicted in terms of timing, even in the face of other changes than charging voltage, e.g., temperature also can serve to enable enhanced timing control and identity of timing control in the parallel circuits . Also other operating parameters the influence changes in charging voltage, e.g., to maintain output power, change slowly enough that the maintenance of the same relative time delays in each of the parallel pulse power circuits for the PO 10 and PA 20 respectively can also enable maintenance ofthe same timing of discharges between the chambers over the short term, e.g., pulse to pulse in a burst of pulses and burst to burst over some series of bursts. Temperature confrol of electrical components in the pulse power circuit 200 is also important since temperature variations can affect pulse compression timing (especially temperature changes in the saturable inductors). Therefore according to an aspect ofthe present invention temperature variations in the first instance are minimized, which can be facilitated by the cooling apparatus and techniques discussed in the above referenced application Ser. No. 10/607,407. Additionally, according to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention the temperature of, e.g., the temperature sensitive components can be monitored and using a feedback control adjustment made to the trigger timing to compensate. Controls can be provided with a processor programmed with a learning algorithm to make adjustments based on historical data relating to past timing variations with known operating histories. This historical data is then applied to anticipate timing changes based on the cunent operation ofthe laser system. Trigger Control According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention the triggering of the electrical discharge (and, therefore also the gas discharge) for each of the two chambers 12, 22, e.g., can be accomplished separately, e.g., utilizing for each circuit a trigger circuit such as one of those described in the above referenced U.S. Pat. No. 6,016,325, part of which is repeated here for completeness. These circuits, e.g., can add timing delays to conect for variations, e.g., in charging voltage and temperature changes in the electrical components of the pulse power system 200, e.g., so that the time between trigger and discharge is held as constant as feasible. As indicated above, since the two circuits are basically the same, the variations after conection are almost equal (i.e., within about 2 ns of each other). As indicated in FIGS. 6C, D, and E, in the above referenced United States Patent No. 6,625,191, performance of prefened embodiments of the present invention can be greatly enhanced if the electrical discharge in the power amplifier occurs about 40 to 50 ns after the discharge in the master oscillator. Applicants believe that these same relationships will hold relatively the same for a POPA configuration or a POPO configuration according to embodiments of the present invention and/or that the prefened delay can similarly be determined empirically from the same types of measurements exemplified in those Figures. This is believed to be true, e.g., because can take several nanoseconds for the laser pulse to develop in the power oscillator and another several nanoseconds for the front part ofthe laser beam from the power oscillator to reach the power amplifier. Therefore, according to an aspect of an embodiment ofthe present invention, separate trigger signals can be provided to the separate trigger switches 254 for each ofthe charging circuits for the respective PO and PA chambers 12, 22. The actual delay can be chosen to achieve a desired beam quality based on actual performance curves such as those shown in FIGS. 6C, D and E. Variations are also possible as indicated from the measurements reflected in those figures, e.g., longer pulses can be obtained at the expense of, e.g., pulse energy, e.g., by increasing the delay between PO 10 trigger and the PA 20 trigger. Other Techniques To Control Discharge Timing Since the relative timing of the discharges can have important effects, e.g., on beam quality, e.g., as indicated in the above referenced FIGS. 6C, D and E graphs, e.g., additional steps may be taken to control discharge timing. For example, if a particular mode of laser operation, e.g., very high power over a very large duty cycle (the ration of the time the laser system is pulsing to the total time when it is pulsing and not pulsing) may result in wide swings in charging voltage and/or wide swings in, e.g., inductor temperature, which could complicate discharge timing control. To address such issues, e.g., the timing ofthe discharges can be monitored, e.g., on a pulse-to-pulse basis and the time difference, e.g., tamp - tosc can, e.g., be used in a feedback control system to adjust timing ofthe respective trigger signals closing the respective switches 254. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention a parameter of, e.g., the PA 20 chamber discharge could be monitored, e.g., using a photocell, e.g., to observe a discharge fluorescence (from, e.g., ASE) rather than the laser pulse, since very poor PO 10, PA 20 timing could result in little or no laser beam being produced in the PA 20. For the MO either the ASE or the seed laser pulse could be used to indicate that the MO has provided the necessary energy for the PA to indicate, e.g., that the MO has provided the necessary energy for the Pa. If the MO energy is conect, and the PO energy is low and the ASE is high, one could infer that the time tamp - tosc is not optimum. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, also pulse timing can, e.g., be increased or decreased by adjusting the bias cunents through the saturable inductors LSAl and LSA2 in FIG. 5 and/or LI and L2 or L3 and L4 in FIG. 7, which, e.g., provide bias for inductors LCH in FIG. 4 and 310 in FIG. 7. Other techniques could be used to increase the time needed to saturate these inductors. For example, the core material can be mechanically separated with a very fast responding PZT element which can be feedback controlled based on a feedback signal from a pulse timing monitor. Further, an adjustable parasitic load could be added to either or both of the pulse power circuits, e.g., downstream of the Co capacitor banks 210. Charging voltage and inductor temperature signals, in addition to the pulse timing monitor signals, can, e.g., be used in feedback controls to adjust, e.g., the bias cunents and/or core mechanical separation as indicated above in addition to the adjustment of the trigger timing as described above. The length of down times during bursts or between bursts of laser system output light pulses can also affect, e.g., the relative timing between the pulse power systems of the PO 10 and the PA 20 and adjustments may have to be made, e.g., in the trigger control to assure that the discharge in the PA 20 occurs when the seed beam from the MO 10 is at the desired location. By monitoring, e.g., the trigger signals for the electric discharges and the timing of light out from each chamber the laser operator can adjust the trigger timing (accurate to within about 2 ns) to achieve best performance, according to an embodiment of the present invention this can preferably be done by a laser controller 252 having a processor 220 that can be programmed to monitor the timing and beam quality and adjust the timing automatically for best performance, among other things according to the indications of the laser operating parameter signals noted above and the data, e.g., from the empirically derived graphs suoh as noted above. More specifically timing algorithms which develop sets of bin values applicable to various sets of operating modes and parameters can be utilized according to aspects of an embodiment of the present invention. These algorithms according to aspects of an embodiment of the present invention can be utilized to switch to a feedback control during continuous operation where the timing values for the cxinent pulse is set based on feedback data collected for one or more preceding pulse (such as the immediately preceding pulse), as explained in more detail in the above referenced U.S. Patent No. 6,067,306. Alternate Pulse Power Circuit According to another aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, another pulse power circuit 200 may be considered. This circuit 200 is similar to the one described above, except, e.g., that it can use a higher voltage power supply for charging Co to a higher value. As in the above described embodiments, a high voltage pulse power supply unit 200, e.g., operating from factory power at, e.g., 230 or 460 volts AC, can be a power source for a fast charging resonant charger 230, as described above and designed for precisely charging two 2.17 μF charging capacitor Co banks 210, e.g., at frequencies of 4000 Hz and above, to voltages in the range o>f about 1100 V to 2250 V. The electrical components in the commutator 234 and compression head 250 for the PO 10 can be as identical as feasible to the conesponding compo ents in the PA 20, n order to, e.g., keep time responses in the two circuits as identical as feasible. Switches 254 can be, e.g., banks of two IGBT switches, as shown in FIG. 5 each rated, e.g., at 3300 V and ananged in parallel. The Co capacitor banks 210 can, e.g., be comprised of 128 0.068 μF 1600 V capacitors, e.g., ananged in 64 parallel legs to provide the 2.17 F Co bank 210. The Ci capacitor banks 256 can, e.g., be comprised of 136 O.068 μF 1600 V capacitors arranged, e.g., in 68 parallel legs, e.g., to provide a bank capacitance of 2.33 μF. The Cp- i and Cp capacitor banks 272, 320 can, e.g., be same as those described above with reference to FIG.' s 4 and 5. The saturable inductors 254 can, e.g., be single turn inductors providing saturated inductance of about 3.3 nH, e.g., with five cores, e.g., comprised of 0.5 inch thick 50%-50% Ni-Fe with 4.9 inch OD and 3.8 inch ID. The saturable inductors 270 can, e.g., be two turn inductors providing saturated inductance of about 38 nH each comprised of, e.g., 5 cores, 0.5 inch thick made with 80%-20% Ni-Fe with an OD of 5 inches and an ID of 2.28 inches. Trigger circuits (not shown) can be provided for closing the IGBT's 254 with a timing accuracy of two nanoseconds. The PO 10 can be triggered about 40 ns prior to the triggering ofthe IGBT 254 for the power amplifier 20. However, the precise timing is preferably determined by feedback signals from sensors which measure the timing of the output of the master oscillator and the power amplifier discharge. As described earlier, the throughput timing ofthe magnetic pulse compression in the Pulsed Power system is dependent upon the magnetic material properties that can be a function of the material temperature, etc. In order to maintain precise timing, it is therefore extremely important to either directly or indirectly monitor and/or predict these material properties. One method described previously could utilize temperature monitors along with previously collected data (delay time as a function of temperature) to predict the timing. An alternate approach could utilize the magnetic switch bias circuits to actually measure the magnetic properties (the saturation time) as the magnetics were reverse biased, e.g., in between pulses (or, e.g., prior to the first pulse). The bias circuits could apply sufficient voltage to the magnetic switch to reverse bias the material and at the same time measure the saturation time so that the laser timing could be accurately controlled. Since the volt-second product utilized in reverse biasing the respective switch should be equal to that required during normal discharge operation in the forward direction, the throughput delay time ofthe pulsed power system, e.g., could be calculated knowing, e.g., the operating voltage ofthe upcoming pulse. A schematic diagram ofthe proposed approach is shown in FIG. 5D ofthe above referenced '191 patent. Initial operation could, e.g., assume that, e.g., a particular magnetic switch is already saturated in the forward direction, provided by the respective bias power supply, e.g., through the two bias isolation inductors. This cunent, e.g., could then be interrupted, e.g., by applying, e.g., aboutlOOV to the magnetic switch which then saturates after about 30μs. A timer could be triggered, e.g., when the voltage is applied and, e.g., stop counting when a cunent probe detects saturation of the respective saturable reactor, thus calculating the saturation time for the 100V applied voltage. The respective saturable reactor would be reverse biased and ready for the main pulse discharge sequence, e.g., once residual voltage has been drained froiα the circuit. As indicated in the above referenced FIG. 6E, an output pulse length can be in the range of about 20 ns and is to some extent a function of the relative timing of the two electrical discharges. A longer pulse length (other things being equal) can increase the lifetime of optical components of entire manufacturing system including the laser light source system. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, e.g., several techniques can be used, e.g., to increase pulse length. As indica-ted above, the relative time between discharges can be optimized for pulse length. Tbxe pulse power circuits of both the PO 10 and the PA 20 could be optimized for longer pulses using techniques, e.g., as described in the above referenced U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 09/451,995, or with an optical pulse multiplier system such as one of those described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,067,311, which could be added downstream ofthe PA 20, e.g., to reduce the intensity of individual pulses. The chamber could be made longer and the electrodes could be configured to produce traveling wave discharges designed for longer pulse lengths. According to an aspect of an embodiment of the present invention, jitter control can be provides, e.g., with technique called a jitter compensation device (JCD), which can, e.g., assures that the pulse timing is accurate within not less than about 10-20 ns. The higher the charging voltage the shorter the delay between trigger and laser pulse. The higher the temperature of the magnetic devices in the pulse power system, the shorter the delay between trigger and pulse. But with a known fixed voltage and temperature, the natural pulse-to-pulse variation of the light pulse with ttie input trigger is small, about +/-5 ns. Thus, in a prefened embodiment, after a trigger is sent, e.g., by the FCP 252 or the LCP 220, e.g., in response to a trigger command from a user of the light source, e.g., a manufacturing tool, e.g., the LCP, e.g., implementing jitter control, can e.g., delay sending the trigger to the respective solid state switch 254, 254' in the pulse power 200 ofthe PO 10 and also ofthe PA 20 laser by an amount conesponding to a signal representative of a sensed laser operating charging voltage and signals representative of sensed temperatures of the magnetics, e.g., so that the timing of the resulting pulse is accurate to within about 20 ns. Alternatively the controller 252 can, e.g., adjust the timing of the electrical pulse for variations in charging voltage based on the specified charging voltage for the upcoming pulse, with no direct conection for temperature variation. However, e.g., a conection can be made to the tiining based on a timing enor measured from the previous pulse or series of pulses, e.g., within a buurst of pulses. Since temperature of the magnetic components usually can be observed to vary slowly, this pulse timing feedback technique, e.g., can, in effect, compensate for slowly varying temperature effects and at the same time provide compensation for other presently more time varying effects. According to this aspect of an embodiment of the present invention feedback conection can, e.g., be made using a technique, e.g., which applies a full 100% conection for different types of detected timing enors, e.g., for large timing enors such as greater than 20 ns, than for other detected timing enors, e.g., less than the full conection for smaller timing enors, such as, less than 20 ns, e.g., applying a conection of only 25%, or some other smaller conection, which may, e.g., be indexed "to the percent of 20ns represented by the detected timing enor factored by some selected conection coefficient is applied. This smaller percentage conection, e.g., can be u_sed to avoid oscillations about a zero enor condition in the timing signal. According to another aspect of an embodiment of the present invention a particularly small resolution, e.g., a 1 ns resolution, even within a wide dynamic range may, e.g., be achieved, e.g., using a digital counter with a 40 MHz crystal oscillator. The 40 MHz oscillator can., e.g., provide clock signals, e.g., at 25 ns intervals but these signals can, e.g., be utilised to charge an approximately linear analog capacitive charging circuit. The voltage on the capacitor can then be read to determine time accurate to about 1.0 ns. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the present invention according to the disclosed prefened embodiment(s) provides for an XeCl laser particularly well adapted for, e.g., laser crystallization applications. The XeCl laser can be based on existing multi-chambered laser technology having the output of one chamber provide an input to the other, as, e.g., in applicant's assignee's existing products, e. g., the XLA product line. The laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention can be in a POPA configuration or POPO configuration.
In a POPA configuration, a laser system is provided that can operate at very high ;power and energy (~ near 500 to 1000 W average power). By operating the laser system in a POPA configuration, the overall efficiency could be increased by as much as 50%, which would also improve reliability, because the overall efficiency of use, including cost of consumables is directly related to the length of, at least one of the component consumables, i.e., chamber life. Such a POPA configuration can also improve energy stability, similarly to applicants' assignee's XLA MOPA lasers, because, e.g., the Pa is operated in a saturation regime mode. The laser systems according to embodiments of the present invention are very well suited for, e.g., super lateral growth (SL<3) laser crystallization processes where the energy requirements are relatively very high and the stability requirements are relatively very demanding. The laser system according to embodiments ofthe present invention, particularly in a POPO configuration, laser can be used to provide two pulses, the timing of which could be separated. The energy of each laser PO chamber could be in the 20 to 30 mJ per pulse range and the rep-rate of each could be up to 4 kHz. For time intervals of ~1 to 2 μsec between pulses, the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could be used for advanced SLG ("aSLG"), e.g., as is being proposed by Sumitomo, as discussed in the above referenced Kudo et al. paper. For time intervals between pulses at 125 μsec, the laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention can operates at 8 kHz and, therefore, could be used also for controlled SLG ("cSLG") being developed by numerous labs, as discussed, e.g., in the above referenced Kudo et al. paper and in the above referenced Voutsas paper. Today, both aSLG and cSLG are being considered to be done with high rep-rate green lasers, e.g., diode pumped Nd:YAG frequency doubled lasers, which are not powerful enough and require frequency multiplication. For cSLG for example, using very short pulse intervals, -100 ns, the output ofthe laser system according to an embodiment of the present invention could appear as 2 pulses with a very long pulse width. Such a long pulse, e.g., reduces the solidification time and improves crystal quality. A pulse stretcher could also be used which could improve results for both cSLG and aSLG, because longer pulses are better for., e.g., the crystallization process, e.g., by delaying solidification time in the annealing pro cess, and also protect optics down stream ofthe laser system. The pulse sfretcher could be part of the laser system itself or incorporated into a beam delivery unit external to the laser system. A BDU could also be useful for controlling output laser pulse beam pointing and positioning in delivering the beam to the work station, e.g., for performing SLG, e.g., maintaining these parameters on a pulse to pulse basis. In another configuration according to an embodiment of the present invention, e.g., as a POPA laser system, the laser system could be operated up to 6 kHz for cSLG. Energy would be reduced, but the power would be >200 W. Also, according to an embodiment ofthe present invention the output laser light pulse beam can be stretched in one dimension and focused in the other. Such a stretched beam can be sized according to an embodiment of the present invention to, e.g., a slit used in directing the laser light to the work piece and the focused beam's profile can conespond to a Gaussian shape that would be ideal for, e.g., aSLG. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that similar applications for manufacturing processes involving, e.g., surface or substrate treatment, which for the purposes of this application and the interpretation ofthe claims will be refened to simply as "surface treatment," and will be understood to cover such processed as induced crystal growth, annealing, enabling, stimulating or enhancing chemical or physical reactions on or in the substrate, and particularly where penetration of the substrate is included, other than simply, e.g., photo-exposing, e.g., a photoresist, e.g., on an integrated circuit wafer, with high power and high stability requirements, may be carried out, as with the above described embodiments of the present invention, but also, e.g., at other center wavelengths, e.g., using XeF, KrF, ArF and F2 gas discharge lasers systems configured according to the above described embodiments of the present invention. An important aspect of the prefened embodiments of the present invention disclosed in the present application is the utilization of the capabilities of applicants multi-chambered POPA and/or POPOI lasers and the ability to precisely control the timing of two lasers chambers acting in a specified manner with each other to solve manufacturing process deficiencies resulting from the use of prior laser systems. Before applicant's assignee's XLA gas discharge lasers in a MOP A, configuration, MOPA or POPA or POPO gas discharge lasers were not commonly in use, due, in part, to these critical timing requirements. Now, however, e.g., with applicant's assignee's XLA technologies, significant enhancement of the utilization of gas discharge lasers, e.g., excimer and molecular fluorine lasers is available, making utilizations for such manufacturing processes as the next generation of large scale poly-silicon crystallization possible. Such laser systems according to aspects of the present invention deliver to a manufacturing work piece very high power (up to 1000 W), very high repetition rate, compared to prior laser systems (500 Hz to 8KHz depending on the configuration), stretched pulses with energy/power stabilized pulse to pulse and precise pulse timing, including for providing staggered POPO pulses for pulse repetition rate doubling. It will be understood that embodiments of the present invention can be configured in a variety of beneficial ways, e.g., in a POPA configuration, e.g., for delivering at or above 4KHz pulse repetition rate 150mJ and above pulses that are also, e. g, optically stretched, and can also advantageously be improved through delivery in a BDU, or in a double pulsed configuration also employing a POPO with precise (±3ns) timing and energy confrol of two pulses (one each from each POPO), or in a POPO configuration also delivering precise (±3ns) timing and pulse energy for doubled pulses at rates of e.g., 8KHz, and with pulse stretching and BDU delivery. In the first POPO embodiment, the pulses may be relatively closely spaced, e.g., with a separation of, e.g., < 1 μs and a separation of, e.g., 250 μs between the start of each first output laser light pulse in the two closely spaced pulses, for an overall pulse repetition rate of 8KHz. In this event, the second pulse of each pair of closely spaced pulses may be separated by anything less than 125 μs and may also be of a different power level, e.g., a lower power level, e.g., if the processing on the workpiece requires a two step treatment with different power levels spaced more closely together than 125 μs at, e.g., the 8KHz repetition rate. In the second POPO anangement the pulses, e.g., can be separated by the uniform 125 μs spacing uniformly for an 8KHz pulse repetition rate. Systems according to the present invention utilizing, e.g., XeCl, can provide, e.g., a 308 nm center wavelength 150mJ per pulse, 4KHz pulse repetition rate, i.e., 600 W, 1% sigma, 60-70 ns FWHM pulse duration, without stretching, and 120ns FWHM with a 4X Tis stretcher, and having a chamber life on the order of 20B pulses. SSPPM according to embodiments ofthe present invention can enable lower maintenance due to longer life, high rep-rate at higher power, longer chamber life and very low inter- chamber jitter. The BDU according to embodiments of the present invention advantageously can provide for improved laser beam shape and reduced divergence at the delivery point to the manufacturing equipment and pointing and positioning actively and dynamically monitored and stabilized in the BDU, independently of laser pointing enors in the light generation, enabling such things as constancy of energy delivery to the manufacturing tool and, thus, also to the work piece. In summary a gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus and method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece is disclosed which may comprise, a multichamber laser system comprising, a first laser unit comprising, a first and second gas discharge chamber; each with a pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the chamber, forming an elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply module comprising, a DC power source; a first and a second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the respective electrodes, comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control module operative to time the closing of the respective solid state switch based upon operating parameters of the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit to effect operation of the first and second laser units as either a POPA configured laser system or a POPO configured laser system to produce a single output laser light pulse beam. As a POPA laser system relay optics may be operative to direct a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and control module operates to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns and as a POPO, combining optics combine the output beams, and timing creates pulse separation in the combined output a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns. A beam delivery unit and a pulse stretcher may be included, and timing and control may be processor controlled based on signals representing charging voltage and component temperatures in the pulse compression and voltage step up circuits. The above disclosure refers to presently prefened embodiments ofthe present invention and the invention should not be considered, limited to such embodiments but rather to be in scope commensurate with the appended claims and equivalents of such claims and/r elements recited in such claims.

Claims

CLAIMSI/WE CLAIM:
1. A gas discharge laser crystallization apparatus for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece comprising: a multichamber laser system comprising: a first laser unit comprising: a first gas discharge chamber; a first pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the first chamber, forming a first elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the first chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a second laser unit comprising: a second gas discharge chamber; a second pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the second chamber, forming a second elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the second chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply module comprising: a DC power source; a first pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the first pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit connected to the DC power source and connected to the second pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control module operative to time the closing ofthe respective solid state switch based upon operating parameters ofthe respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit to effect operation ofthe first and second laser units as either a POPA configured laser system or a POPO configured laser system to produce a single output laser light pulse beam.
2. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPA laser system and further comprising: relay optics operative to direct a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and confrol module times the closing ofthe second solid state switch based, in part, upon the time ofthe closing ofthe first solid state switch to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns, to produce a second amplified laser output light pulse beam as the single output laser light pulse beam.
3. The apparatus of claim 1 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPO laser system and further comprising: combining optics operative to combine a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit with a second output laser light pulse beam from the second laser unit to produce the single output laser light pulse beam; and the timing and control module times the closing ofthe second slid state switch based, in part, upon the time ofthe closing ofthe first solid state switch to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes to separate an output laser light pulse in the first output laser light pulse beam from an output laser light pulse in the second output laser light pulse beam in the single output laser light pulse beam by a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: a pulse stretcher in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam operative to stretch the Tjs ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
5. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising: a pulse stretcher in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam operative to stretch the Tis ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
6. The apparatus of claim 3, further comprising: a pulse stretcher in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam operative to stretch the Tls ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
8. The apparatus of claim 2, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
9. The apparatus of claim 3, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
10. The apparatus of claim 4, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
11. The apparatus of claim 5, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
12. The apparatus of claim 6, further comprising: a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam and operative to deliver the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate ofthe workpiece; and, a beam adjustment module within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitor and a beam parameter adjustment mechanism.
13. The apparatus of claim 7 further comprising: the timing and confrol module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
14. The apparatus of claim 8 further comprising: the timing and confrol module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
15. The apparatus of claim 9 further comprising: the timing and control module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing confrol operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
16. The apparatus of claim 10 further comprising: the timing and control module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing confrol operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
17. The apparatus of claim 11 further comprising: the timing and control module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
18. The apparatus of claim 12 further comprising: the timing and control module comprises a processor performing a programmed timing control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
19. A gas discharge laser crystallization means for performing a fransformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of a workpiece comprising: a multichamber laser system comprising: a first laser unit comprising: a first gas discharge chamber; a first pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the first chamber, forming a first elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the first chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a second laser unit comprising: a second gas discharge chamber; a second pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the second chamber, forming a second elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the second chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply means comprising: a DC power source; a first pulse compression and voltage step up means connected to the DC power source and connected to the first pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a second pulse compression and voltage step up means connected to the DC power source and connected to the second pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a laser timing and control means for timing the closing ofthe respective solid state switch based upon operating parameters ofthe respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means for effecting operation ofthe first and second laser units as either a POPA configured laser system or a POPO configured laser system to produce a single output laser light pulse beam.
20. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPA laser system and further comprising: relay optics means for directing a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, the timing and control means including means for timing the closing ofthe second solid state switch based, in part, upon the time ofthe closing ofthe first solid state switch to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns, for producing a second amplified laser output light pulse beam as the single output laser light pulse beam.
21. The apparatus of claim 19 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPO laser system and further comprising: combining optic means for combining a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit with a second output laser light pulse beam from the second laser unit to produce the single output laser light pulse beam; and the timing and control means including means for timing the closing ofthe second slid state switch based, in part, upon the time ofthe closing ofthe first solid state switch for creating a gas discharge between the second pair of elecfrodes to separate an output laser light pulse in the first output laser light pulse beam from an output laser light pulse in the second output laser light pulse beam in the single output laser light pulse beam by a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.
22. The apparatus of claim 19, further comprising: a pulse stretching means in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam for stretching the Tjs ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
23. The apparatus of claim 20, further comprising: a pulse stretching means in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam for sfretching the Tjs ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
24. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising: a pulse stretching means in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam for stretching the Tis ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
25. The apparatus of claim 19, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path of the single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the subsfrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the beam delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
26. The apparatus of claim 20, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path of the single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the beam delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
27. The apparatus of claim 21, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path o the single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the bea delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter momtoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
28. The apparatus of claim 22, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path o the single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the beam delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
29. The apparatus of claim23, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the beam delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter momtoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
30. The apparatus of claim 24, further comprising: a beam delivery unit means in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam for delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, a beam adjustment means within the beam delivery unit means comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means.
31. The apparatus of claim 25 further comprising: the timing and confrol means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
32. The apparatus of claim 26 further comprising: the timing and control means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
33. The apparatus of claim 27 further comprising: the timing and control means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
34. The apparatus of claim 28 further comprising: the timing and control means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
35. The apparatus of claim 29 further comprising: the timing and confrol means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
36. The apparatus of claim 30 further comprising: the timing and control means comprises a processor means for performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative of the charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means.
37. A method for performing a transformation of a crystal makeup or orientation in the subsfrate of a workpiece using a gas discharge laser comprising: using a multichamber laser system comprising: a first laser unit comprising: a first gas discharge chamber; a first pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the first chamber, forming a first elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the first chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a second laser unit comprising: a second gas discharge chamber; a second pair of elongated spaced apart opposing electrodes contained within the second chamber, forming a second elongated gas discharge region; a laser gas contained within the second chamber comprising a halogen and a noble gas selected to produce laser light at a center wavelength optimized to the crystallization process to be carried out on the workpiece; a power supply means comprising: a DC power source; a first pulse compression and voltage step up means connected to the DC power source and connected to the first pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and a second pulse compression and voltage step up means connected to the DC power source and connected to the second pair of electrodes comprising a multistage fractional step up transformer having a plurality of primary windings connected in series and a single secondary winding passing through each ofthe plurality of primary windings, and a solid state trigger switch; and timing the closing ofthe respective solid state switch based upon operating parameters ofthe respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up means for effecting operation ofthe first and second laser units as either a POPA configured laser system or a POPO configured laser system to produce a single output laser light pulse beam.
38. The method of claim 37 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPA laser system and further comprising: directing a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit into the second gas discharge chamber; and, timing the closing ofthe second solid state switch based, in part, upon the time of the closing ofthe first solid state switch to create a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes while the first output laser light pulse beam is transiting the second discharge region, within plus or minus 3 ns, for producing a second amplified laser output light pulse beam as the single output laser light pulse beam.
39. The method of claim 37 wherein the laser system is configured as a POPO laser system and further comprising: combining a first output laser light pulse beam from the first laser unit with a second output laser light pulse beam from the second laser unit to produce the single output laser light pulse beam; and timing the closing ofthe second slid state switch based, in part, upon the time of the closing ofthe first solid state switch for creating a gas discharge between the second pair of electrodes to separate an output laser light pulse in the first output laser light pulse beam from an output laser light pulse in the second output laser light pulse beam in the single output laser light pulse beam by a preselected time plus or minus 3 ns.
40. The method of claim 37, further comprising: sfretching the T;s ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
41. The method of claim 38, further comprising: stretching the T;s ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
42. The method of claim 39, further comprising: stretching the Tls ofthe pulses in the single output laser light pulse beam by at least 2X.
43. The method of claim 37, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
44. The method of claim 38, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
45. The method of claim 39, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
46. The method of claim 40, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the subsfrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
47. The method of claim 41, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe transformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the subsfrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter momtoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
48. The method of claim 42, further comprising: using a beam delivery unit in the path ofthe single output laser light pulse beam delivering the single output laser light pulse beam to a manufacturing tool for the performance ofthe fransformation ofthe crystal makeup or orientation in the substrate of the workpiece; and, using a beam adjustment mechanism within the beam delivery unit comprising a beam parameter monitoring means and a beam parameter adjustment means to monitor and adjust a beam parameter.
49. The method of claim 37 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
50. The method of claim 38 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
51. The method of claim 39 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
52. The method of claim 40 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
53. The method of claim 41 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
54. The method of claim 42 further comprising: performing a programmed timing and control operation based upon received signals representative ofthe charging voltage in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuits and signals representative ofthe temperature of at least one magnetic switching element in the respective first and second pulse compression and voltage step up circuit.
PCT/US2004/024160 2003-07-30 2004-07-26 Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system WO2005094205A2 (en)

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EP04821542A EP1743405A4 (en) 2003-07-30 2004-07-26 Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system
JP2006521997A JP2007515774A (en) 2003-07-30 2004-07-26 Ultra high energy high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system
KR1020067001963A KR101123820B1 (en) 2003-07-30 2004-07-26 Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

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US10/631,349 US7039086B2 (en) 2001-04-09 2003-07-30 Control system for a two chamber gas discharge laser
US10/631,349 2003-07-30
US72299203A 2003-11-26 2003-11-26
US10/722,992 2003-11-26
US10/781,251 2004-02-18
US10/781,251 US7167499B2 (en) 2001-04-18 2004-02-18 Very high energy, high stability gas discharge laser surface treatment system

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KR101123820B1 (en) 2012-03-15
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JP2012191207A (en) 2012-10-04
EP1743405A2 (en) 2007-01-17

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