Wednesday, September 6, 2023
ASML Remains on Track to Deliver High NA EUV Machines in 2023
Thursday, August 24, 2023
TSMC Marks Major Milestone: First EUV Machine Installed in Arizona Fab, Job Opportunities Open
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) has achieved a significant milestone in its Arizona manufacturing venture by installing its inaugural extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machine. This advanced machine, procured from Dutch semiconductor equipment leader ASML Holding NV, is a pivotal asset for TSMC's future high-end chip production endeavors.
EUV technology is a critical aspect of semiconductor fabrication, facilitating the printing of intricate designs on microchips significantly smaller than a human hair. TSMC's achievement underscores its commitment to innovation and technological leadership.
While the installation of the EUV machine marks a remarkable accomplishment, TSMC acknowledges that the setup of the new fab in Arizona involves numerous additional tasks. The company emphasized the need for approximately 2,000 skilled workers to handle the installation of various equipment pieces and services in the complex. This requirement stems from TSMC's unique tool configurations and specifications.
TSMC, recognized as the world's largest contract chip manufacturer, is channeling substantial investments amounting to $40 billion into constructing two wafer fabs in Phoenix. The first facility will employ the advanced 4-nanometer process, while the second, already under construction, will utilize the more sophisticated 3-nanometer process. This latter technology has already entered mass production in Taiwan.
The presence of skilled workers has been a contentious topic linked to the Arizona project. TSMC Chairman Mark Liu explained that a deficiency in experts capable of properly installing equipment at the Arizona site has led to a delay in mass production, now projected for 2025 rather than late 2024.
However, TSMC's approach to addressing this shortfall has sparked debates. The company's bid to bring in around 500 Taiwanese workers on temporary E-2 visas has faced resistance from local unions, who assert that prioritizing American jobs is paramount, especially considering the significant subsidies TSMC seeks under the CHIPS and Science Act. This legislation, signed by President Joe Biden, encourages semiconductor investments in the United States.
US Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona emphasized that the visa applications will be evaluated in accordance with established laws and procedures. As TSMC navigates these challenges, its progress in Arizona remains a focal point in the semiconductor industry's dynamic landscape.
TSMC installs first EUV machine in U.S.; job opening ads posted - Focus Taiwan
An Update on Directed Self-Assembly (DSA) for Advancing Micro and Nano Fabrication
DSA has emerged as a groundbreaking technique for mass-producing micro to nano devices and materials with precision and efficiency. This method harnesses the inherent properties of materials to assemble them into intricate structures, revolutionizing manufacturing processes across various industries.
DSA leverages block co-polymer morphology to create patterns, enhancing feature control and shape accuracy. This involves guiding the assembly of micro and nano particles to achieve desired structures, made possible by the precise control of surface interactions and polymer thermodynamics. The key advantage of DSA is its ability to create structures at remarkably small scales, enabling advancements in diverse fields.
In the semiconductor industry, DSA offers a new perspective on lithography challenges. Despite initial setbacks, DSA is being revisited to address critical issues such as stochastic defects in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography. These defects, which can contribute significantly to patterning errors, have led semiconductor manufacturers to explore DSA as a solution to rectify these problems. Notably, DSA is not replacing traditional methods but rather enhancing them. It is being integrated with existing manufacturing processes to enable increased resolution and precision, all while reducing costs.
However, challenges persist in integrating DSA into high-volume manufacturing. Defect control remains a primary concern, as the technology strives to meet industry standards of minimal defectivity. Common defects include line bridging, collapse, bubbles, and dislocations. Efforts are ongoing to optimize annealing temperature, etching methods, and film thickness to reduce these defects. Another challenge is the complexity of pattern inspection, which demands accurate metrology methods. Researchers are exploring machine learning-based approaches to automate the inspection process and achieve higher throughput.
Despite these challenges, DSA is being applied to various applications beyond semiconductors. Tissue engineering benefits from the precision of directed assembly, enabling the controlled organization of cells into desired micro-structures. In nanotechnology, DSA facilitates the creation of precise nanostructures, leading to advancements in areas such as graphene nanoribbon arrays and thin-film quantum materials.
Revolutionizing EUV Lithography with Directed Self-Assembly (DSA)
EUV lithography has revolutionized semiconductor manufacturing but comes with its share of challenges, particularly in addressing line roughness and stochastic defects. DSA has now gained attention as a potential game-changer to tackle these issues in EUV lithography.
Recent research from Imec sheds light on the promising synergy between EUV and DSA in overcoming lithography challenges. In the study titled "EUV Lithography Line Space Pattern Rectification Using Block Copolymer Directed Self-Assembly: A Roughness and Defectivity Study," led by Julie Van Bel and team, the researchers explored the combination of DSA with EUV. Their findings indicate that this integration surpasses DSA processes based on Immersion lithography, offering lower line width roughness and freedom from dislocation defects.
Another study, "Mitigating Stochastics in EUV Lithography by Directed Self-Assembly," led by Lander Verstraete and collaborators, delved into the application of DSA to mitigate stochastic defects in EUV processing.
For contact arrays, the combination of EUV and DSA demonstrates improved Local Critical Dimension Uniformity (LCDU) and Pattern Placement Error. This advancement also enables the use of a lower dose, contributing to enhanced precision and efficiency in semiconductor manufacturing.
Imec's research underscores the potential of DSA to revolutionize EUV lithography by addressing line roughness and stochastic defects. The successful integration of EUV and DSA holds the promise of enhancing semiconductor manufacturing processes, achieving higher precision, and enabling the production of advanced devices with improved quality. As researchers continue to refine these methods, the collaboration between EUV and DSA is set to shape the future of lithography and microfabrication.
In conclusion, DSA is revitalizing micro and nano fabrication by offering accurate and efficient methods for mass production. While challenges like defect control and metrology persist, DSA's potential to shape the future of industries such as semiconductors, biomedicine, and nanotechnology is undeniable. As research continues to refine DSA processes and overcome hurdles, its role in advancing technology and innovation is set to expand further.
Directed Self-Assembly Finds Its Footing (semiengineering.com)
Friday, June 30, 2023
U.S. and Netherlands Tighten Restrictions on Chipmaking Equipment Sales to China, Impacting ALD and ASM International
The United States and the Netherlands are set to impose stricter restrictions on the sale of chipmaking equipment to China, aiming to prevent the use of foreign technology for military strengthening. In their efforts to curb China's access to advanced semiconductor technology, the Dutch government plans to restrict equipment from ASML, the leading chip equipment maker in the Netherlands, while the U.S. plans to further withhold Dutch equipment from specific Chinese fabs. These measures will impact atomic layer deposition (ALD) firm ASM International as well.
Besides ASM and Lithography, ASM International and ALD is of national interest to The Netherlands. During the recent Royal State Visit of King Willem-Alexander and Queen Máxima of the Netherlands to imec, ASM, a long-standing partner of imec, was in attendance. With over 30 years of partnership, ASM has made significant investments in research and development and maintains a substantial on-site team at imec known in the industry as ASM B or ASM Belgium. During the visit, ASM had the opportunity to highlight its role in the semiconductor ecosystem of both the Netherlands and Belgium, emphasizing how this collaboration connects Europe to advanced semiconductor manufacturing activities on a global scale. (Source: ASM LinkedIn)
ASML, Europe's largest chip equipment company, dominates in lithography, a crucial step in the chip manufacturing process. The Dutch government intends to announce new regulations, including a licensing requirement, for ASML's deep ultraviolet (DUV) semiconductor equipment. ASML's more sophisticated extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines are already restricted and have never been shipped to China. The U.S. is expected to identify specific Chinese facilities, possibly including those operated by SMIC, China's largest chipmaker, in a new rule that restricts foreign equipment containing any U.S. parts. ASM International, an ALD firm, is also likely to be impacted by the new Dutch regulations.
The U.S. and Dutch measures aim to prevent China from gaining access to advanced chipmaking technology that could be used for military purposes. These actions reflect the ongoing tensions between the U.S. and China regarding national security concerns and technological competition. While the exact details and timing of the restrictions may change, the increasing limitations on chipmaking equipment sales are expected to have significant implications for the global semiconductor industry and the supply chain dynamics in the coming months.
Sources:
US, Dutch set to hit China's chipmakers with one-two punch | Daily Mail Online
State visit to Belgium – programme | News item | Royal House of the Netherlands (royal-house.nl)
Tuesday, June 13, 2023
EUV Lithography Embraces Sustainability with Hydrogen Recycling System
Edwards Vacuum and Imec Develop Reverse Fuel Cell to Recycle Contaminated Hydrogen in Chip Manufacturing
“It’s similar to a fuel cell, in reverse.”—Anthony Keen, Edwards Vacuum
Tuesday, May 2, 2023
TechInsights found Samsung DRAM chips in Samsung Galaxy S23 with Five EUV mask layers
TechInsights found Samsung DRAM chips in Samsung Galaxy S23 with Five EUV mask layers. These are from DRAM wafers produced in the so-called D1a node (or D1α, α as in alpha)
👉https://t.co/oSv4yiHJiB
— TechInsights (@techinsightsinc) May 1, 2023
Get your products to market faster: @TechInsightsinc found next-gen #DRAM found in the #GalaxyS23. @Samsung is the first company to apply five #EUV lithography masks on DRAM D1a, the first node to fully adopt EUVL for #DRAM. Learn more. #semiconductor pic.twitter.com/2Pqg7gKuE9
This is in line with a previous press release from Samsung (2020) so no real surprise here: Samsung Announces Industry’s First EUV DRAM with Shipment of First Million Modules – Samsung Global Newsroom
"EUV to be fully deployed from 4th-gen 10nm-class DRAM (D1a) next year"
EUV will be fully deployed in Samsung’s future generations of DRAM, starting with its fourth-generation 10nm-class (D1a) or the highly-advanced 14nm-class, DRAM. Samsung expects to begin volume production of D1a-based DDR5 and LPDDR5 next year, which would double manufacturing productivity of the 12-inch D1x wafers.
Friday, March 3, 2023
Applied Materials’ Pattern-Shaping Technology - Centura Sculpta
- Directed ribbon-beam capability for novel etching applications
Tuesday, August 30, 2022
Comparison confirms that SMIC reaches 7nm without access to western equipment & technologies
Similarities with TSMC 7nm have been found
Thursday, July 14, 2022
Lam Research, Entegris, Gelest Team Up to Advance EUV Dry Resist Technology Ecosystem
Collaboration provides robust chemical supply chain for global chipmakers using the breakthrough technology and supports R&D for next-generation EUV applications
Friday, April 30, 2021
The US Patent Office has approved AlixLabs’ patent application for nanofabrication by ALE Pitch Splitting (APS)
Friday, February 26, 2021
Tech Insights Teardown: Samsung’s D1z DRAM with EUV Lithography
Reuters: SK Hynix signs five-year deal worth $4.3 billion with ASML to secure EUV scanners
Thursday, February 11, 2021
Imec Demonstrates 20nm Pitch Line/Space Resist Imaging with High-NA EUV Interference Lithography
Source: LINK
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By Abhishekkumar Thakur
Thursday, January 21, 2021
Master Thesis in Nanotechnology with Alixlabs in Sweden on Atomic Level Fragmentation
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
Imec demonstrates CNT pellicle utilization on EUV scanner
LEUVEN (Belgium, LINK) October 6, 2020 — Imec, a world-leading research and innovation hub in nanoelectronics and digital technologies, announced today promising results in extreme ultraviolet (EUV) reticle protection. Multiple CNT-based pellicles were mounted on reticles and exposed in the NXE:3300 EUV scanner at imec, demonstrating the successful fabrication and scanner handling of full-field CNT-based pellicles. The tested pellicles had a single-pass EUV transmission up to 97%. The impact on imaging was found to be low and correctable based on critical dimension (CD), dose, and transmission measurements.
A pellicle is a membrane used to protect the photomask from contamination during high-volume semiconductor manufacturing. It is mounted a few millimeters above the surface of the photomask so that if particles land on the pellicle, they will be too far out of focus to print. Developing such an EUV pellicle is very challenging, since 13.5nm light is absorbed by most materials. In addition, stringent thermal, chemical, and mechanical requirements must be achieved. Such highly transparent pellicle is critical to enable high yield and throughput in advanced semiconductor manufacturing.
Imec has leveraged partners in the semiconductor industry, materials companies and fundamental research to develop an innovative EUV pellicle design with potential to survive scanner powers beyond 600 Watts
“Imec has leveraged partners in the semiconductor industry, materials companies and fundamental research to develop an innovative EUV pellicle design with potential to survive scanner powers beyond 600 Watts,” said Emily Gallagher, principal member of technical staff at imec. “We have seen tremendous progress in carbon nanotube membrane development in the past year and, based on strong collaborations with our partners, are confident it will result in a high-performance pellicle solution in the near future.”
CNTs are one-atom-thick carbon sheets rolled into tubes. The CNTs can be single-, double- or multi-walled and can vary in diameter and in length. These engineered CNTs can be arranged in different configurations to form membranes of different densities. Since 2015, imec has been working with selected CNT suppliers (Canatu Oy and Lintec of America, Inc., Nano-Science & Technology Center) to develop membranes that meet the EUV pellicle targets for properties like transmittance, thermal durability, permeability, and strength and to enable the imaging results reported today. Future work will focus on achieving acceptable lifetimes for high volume manufacturing of these pellicles in scanners.
Thursday, May 21, 2020
Reuters: Samsung Electronics builds sixth domestic contract chip-making line
Saturday, January 4, 2020
EUV - The Extreme Physics Pushing Moore’s Law to the Next Level
By Abhishekkumar Thakur
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Imec and ASML Enter Next Stage of EUV Lithography Collaboration
Intensified collaboration will advance high-volume production with current EUV lithography and develop future EUV systems
LEUVEN (Belgium) & VELDHOVEN (The Netherlands), OCTOBER 22, 2018 (LINK) —Today, world-leading research and innovation hub in nanoelectronics and digital technologies imec, and ASML Holding N.V. (ASML), the technology and market leader in lithographic equipment, announce the next step in their extensive collaboration. Together, they will accelerate the adoption of EUV lithography for high-volume production, including the current latest available equipment for EUV (0.33 Numerical Aperture, NA). Moreover, they will explore the potential of the next-generation high-NA EUV lithography to enable printing of even smaller nanoscale devices advancing semiconductor scaling towards the post 3 nanometer Logic node. To this end, they will establish a joint high-NA EUV research lab.Imec and ASML have been conducting joint research for almost thirty years. In 2014, they created a joint research center, the Advanced Patterning Center, to optimize lithography technology for advanced CMOS integration and to prepare the ecosystem to support advance patterning requirements. Now, they bring this cooperation to the next stage with the installation of ASML’s most advanced and high-volume production dedicated EUV scanner (NXE:3400B) in imec’s cleanroom. Utilizing imec’s infrastructure and advanced technology platforms, imec and ASML researchers and partner companies can pro-actively analyze and solve technical challenges such as defects, reliability and yield, and as such accelerate the EUV technology’s industrialization.
Friday, April 27, 2018
Intel shifts high volume 10 nm shipments to 2019 due to yield issues from multi-patterning
[Seeking Alpha, LINK] "We continue to make progress on our 10-nanometer process. We are shipping in low volume and yields are improving, but the rate of improvement is slower than we anticipated. As a result, volume production is moving from the second half of 2018 into 2019. We understand the yield issues and have defined improvements for them, but they will take time to implement and qualify. We have leadership products on the roadmap that continue to take advantage of 14-nanometer, with Whiskey Lake for clients and Cascade Lake for the data center coming later this year.
Moore's Law is essential to our strategy and our product leadership. It continues to create significant value for Intel and our customers. While it's taking longer and costing more to deliver and yield advanced process technologies, we are able to optimize our process and products within the node to deliver meaningful performance improvements.
For example, 14-nanometer process optimizations and architectural improvements have resulted in performance gains of more than 70% since the first 14-nanometer products were launched. We combine these advances in manufacturing technology and architecture to produce truly leadership products. And it's that product leadership that ultimately matters most to our customers and end users."
Brian M. Krzanich - Intel Corp.
Media coverage:
AnandTech
Intel Delays Broken 10nm Into 2019, Hires Jim Keller to Fix It
ExtremeTech
In-Depth-Forbes
Monday, January 22, 2018
Imec present roadmap down to 20 Ångström logic devices
Key interconnect technologies named "scaling boosters" to reach down to 2 nm may be :
- Continued scaling of self-aligned contacts
- Cobalt "Super Via" 20 nm wide
- Burried Ruthenium Rails only 10 nm wide, which seems to be a evolution of the tungsten burried Word Lines and Bitlines introduced by Qimonda for DRAM (65nm in 2009) except offcourse these rails are burried in a dielectric which will make it stackable.
Besides the interconnect technologies the presentation showed evolution from FinFETs to nanowire FETs and Imecs latest technology development in 300 mm wafer processing technology:
- Introduction of triple pattering (Much More ALD!)
- EUV Litography and the introduction Carbon Nano Tube CNT Pellicle for EUV mask protection
- Smoothening technology in patterning like Atomic Layer Etching for improving the local critical dimension uniformity (LCDU) down from 2.7 to 1.4 nm
- STTRAM - spin transfer torque magnetoresistive random-access memory
- RRAM - resistive random-access memory
- FeRAM - ferroelectric random-access memory (should be renamed DD-RAM for Dresden)
- SOTRAM - Spin Orbit Torque random-access memory
Luc Van den hove to Receive SEMI Sales and Marketing Excellence Award 👍 https://t.co/ZLjNa1xB21 @SEMIexpos #ISS2018 pic.twitter.com/ula0Oiucdh— imec (@imec_int) January 15, 2018
Saturday, November 25, 2017
The 7nm race by TSMC and Samsung - EUV or not EUV
Sales in ALD and Etch equipment have been boosted by multiple patterning technologies based on Immersion lithography, both for Logic/Foundry and Memory. Maybe as much as 1/3 of the single/multi wafer ALD equipment market is patterning related. The last two years or so analyst have been busy trying to figure out the impact on deposition and etch equipment sales if/when EUV is introduced. Here is a recent take down by Seeking Alpha (LINK). My view is that scaling is based on symbiotic use of the latest technologies and multiple patterning and EUV will co-exist and keeping the scaling path alive. In addition, scaling opens new opportunities for ALD, ALEtch and future use of selective growth technologies with atomic scale precision. According to recent reports the ALEtch market segment is now considerd an actual segment by itself and has entered HVM (LINK).
Qualcomm and Broadcom, according to the report are designing their next generation chips with TSMC’s7-nano PDK. The reason why Qualcomm went with 7nm with TSMC is the fact that the fab uses normal steppers while Samsung wants to make its 7nm with more bold and riskier EUV (Extreme Ultraviolet) photolithography technology.
View of Samsung Electronics’ Hwasung 17 line. It is expected that Samsung Electronics will build a new 7-nano plant on a nearby site according to ETNews.
Full article: Qualcomm 7nm made by TSMC [LINK]
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