Sunday, December 21, 2025

Intel Foundry Advances Future Logic Scaling with Manufacturable 2D Transistors and High NA EUV Integration

Intel Foundry has demonstrated concrete momentum in de-risking 2D field-effect transistors as a future scaling path beyond silicon, through long-term collaboration with Imec. Results presented at IEDM show a world-first, 300 mm fab-compatible integration of key 2DFET modules, including source/drain contacts and gate stacks, using transition-metal dichalcogenide channels (WS₂ and MoS₂ for n-type, WSe₂ for p-type devices). The core innovation is a selective oxide etch applied to high-quality Intel-grown 2D layers capped with AlOx/HfO₂/SiO₂, enabling damascene-style top contacts while preserving the integrity of atomically thin channels. 

Fab-compatible 2D FET process integration on 300 mm wafers, demonstrating selectively recessed oxide caps that enable damascene-style top contacts on WS₂, MoS₂, and WSe₂ channels, along with replacement-oxide gate stacks and interlayer-selective removal that scales gate CET from 2.5 nm to 1.5 nm. The work establishes manufacturable contact and gate modules as fundamental building blocks for future 2D transistor integration (IEDM Paper 10.1, Q. Smets et al.).

By validating these processes in production-class integration flows, Intel Foundry is addressing two of the most critical barriers to 2D transistor adoption—contact resistance and gate integration—while enabling realistic benchmarking, modeling, and design pathfinding. This work showcases Intel Foundry’s strategy of emphasizing manufacturability early in research, positioning 2D transistors as a credible, scalable option for future logic nodes and stacked transistor architectures.

Fab-compatible 2D FET process integration demonstrated on 300 mm wafers. An imec-led research team reports new manufacturable process modules enabling scalable integration of 2D field-effect transistors in a 300 mm pilot line. Exploiting the strong chemical selectivity and anisotropic van der Waals structure of transition-metal dichalcogenides, the work demonstrates for the first time a selectively recessed oxide cap that enables damascene-style top contacts on monolayer WS₂, MoS₂, and multilayer WSe₂ channels, resulting in improved contact resistance. A replacement-oxide gate stack with scaled equivalent oxide thickness is also shown. In addition, a novel interlayer-selective removal process based on liquid intercalation reduces the top-gate capacitance-equivalent thickness from 2.5 nm to 1.5 nm. Together, these modules form fundamental building blocks for future 2D integration technologies. Top row: epitaxial TiN growth enabled by a 2D template (left, center) and chemical confirmation of a Ru top contact on a multilayer WSe₂ channel (right). Bottom row: schematic comparison of the baseline top-gate stack comprising interlayer, cap, and top-up oxides; full replacement-oxide process; and selective lateral interlayer removal from contact trenches. Based on Paper 10.1, “Selective Etch Process for Fab-Compatible Top Contacts, Replacement Oxide and Interlayer Removal in 2D FETs,” Q. Smets et al., presented at IEDM.

In parallel with its 2D transistor research, Intel Foundry has made significant progress in High Numerical Aperture EUV lithography as a cornerstone enabler for future device scaling. In close collaboration with ASML, Intel Foundry has completed acceptance testing of the TWINSCAN EXE:5200B, the most advanced High NA EUV scanner currently available. This system builds on the first-generation EXE:5000 platform while extending productivity to 175 wafers per hour and achieving overlay performance of 0.7 nm, metrics that are directly relevant to high-volume manufacturing rather than purely experimental use. Intel’s early access to High NA EUV, beginning with the first commercial installation in its Oregon R&D fab in 2023, positions the company as a lead development partner shaping how High NA lithography is qualified, integrated, and eventually deployed in production logic nodes.


From a technology perspective, the EXE:5200B introduces several enabling innovations that are critical for advanced transistor architectures, including gate-all-around and future stacked devices. A higher-power EUV source supports practical exposure doses and improved resist process windows, helping control line edge and line width roughness at extremely small critical dimensions. A redesigned wafer stocker architecture improves lot logistics and thermal stability, which is especially important for multipass and multiexposure flows anticipated with High NA patterning. Finally, tighter alignment control reflects advances in stage mechanics, sensing, and environmental isolation, all of which become essential as overlay tolerances approach the sub-nanometer regime. For Intel Foundry customers, these capabilities translate into more flexible design rules, reduced reliance on complex multi-patterning schemes, fewer masks and process steps, and faster yield learning. Together, Intel’s High NA EUV progress and its 2D transistor integration work reflect a coherent strategy: pairing next-generation lithography with manufacturable device innovations to ensure that future scaling paths are both technically viable and production-ready.

Sources:

How Collaboration in High NA EUV and Transistor R&D Are Shaping Future Waves of Device Innovation

IEEE IEDM 2025 | 10-1 | Selective Etch Process for Fab-compatible Top Contacts, Replacement Oxide and Interlayer Removal in 2D FETs

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