Photolithography Since the 1960s the most widespread industrial application of excimer lasers has been in deep-ultraviolet
photolithography, a critical technology used in the manufacturing of
microelectronic devices. Historically, from the early 1960s through the mid-1980s, mercury-xenon lamps were used in lithography for their spectral lines at 436, 405 and 365 nm wavelengths. However, with the semiconductor industry's need for both higher resolution (to produce denser and faster chips) and higher throughput (for lower costs), the lamp-based lithography tools were no longer able to meet the industry's requirements. This challenge was overcome when in a pioneering development in 1982, deep-UV excimer laser lithography was proposed and demonstrated at IBM by
Kanti Jain. From an even broader scientific and technological perspective, since the invention of the laser in 1960, the development of excimer laser lithography has been highlighted as one of the major milestones in the history of the laser. Current lithography tools (as of 2021) mostly use deep ultraviolet (DUV) light from the KrF and ArF excimer lasers with wavelengths of 248 and 193 nanometers (called "excimer laser lithography"), which has enabled transistor feature sizes to shrink to 7 nanometers (see below). Excimer laser lithography has thus played a critical role in the continued advance of the so-called
Moore's law for the last 25 years. By around 2020,
extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) has started to replace excimer laser lithography to further improve the resolution of the semiconductor circuits lithography process.
Fusion The
Naval Research Laboratory built two systems, the
Krypton fluoride laser (248 nm) and the
Argon fluoride laser (193 nm) to test approaches to prove out
Inertial Confinement Fusion approaches. These were the Electra and
Nike laser systems. Because the excimer laser is a gas-based system, the laser does not heat up like solid-state systems such as
National Ignition Facility and the
Omega Laser. Electra demonstrated 90,000 shots in 10 hours; ideal for an
Inertial fusion power plant.
Medical uses The ultraviolet light from an excimer laser is well absorbed by
biological matter and
organic compounds. Rather than burning or cutting material, the excimer laser adds enough energy to disrupt the molecular bonds of the surface tissue, which effectively
disintegrates into the air in a tightly controlled manner through
ablation rather than burning. Thus excimer lasers have the useful property that they can remove exceptionally fine layers of surface material with almost no heating or change to the remainder of the material which is left intact. These properties make excimer lasers well suited to precision micromachining organic material (including certain
polymers and plastics), or delicate
surgeries such as
LASIK eye surgery. In 1980–1983,
Rangaswamy Srinivasan,
Samuel Blum and
James J. Wynne at
IBM's
T. J. Watson Research Center observed the effect of the ultraviolet excimer laser on biological materials. Intrigued, they investigated further, finding that the laser made clean, precise cuts that would be ideal for delicate surgeries. This resulted in a fundamental patent and Srinivasan, Blum and Wynne were elected to the
National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2002. In 2012, the team members were honored with
National Medal of Technology and Innovation by
US President Barack Obama for their work related to the excimer laser. Subsequent work introduced the excimer laser for use in
angioplasty. Xenon chloride (308 nm) excimer lasers are also used to treat a variety of dermatological conditions including
psoriasis,
vitiligo,
atopic dermatitis,
alopecia areata and leukoderma. As light sources, excimer lasers are generally large in size, which is a disadvantage in their medical applications, although their sizes are rapidly decreasing with ongoing development. Research is being conducted to compare differences in safety and effectiveness outcomes between conventional excimer laser
refractive surgery and wavefront-guided or wavefront-optimized refractive surgery, as wavefront methods may better correct for
higher-order aberrations.
Scientific research Excimer lasers are also widely used in numerous fields of scientific research, both as primary sources and, particularly the XeCl laser, as pump sources for tunable
dye lasers, mainly to excite laser dyes emitting in the blue-green region of the spectrum. These lasers are also commonly used in
pulsed laser deposition systems, where their large
fluence, short wavelength and non-continuous beam properties make them ideal for the ablation of a wide range of materials. == See also ==