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ASML Targets Hyper-NA EUV, Shrinking Chip Limits


Thursday, June 27, 2024

ASML has again announced plans for a new lithography tool that will extend design limits for the highest transistor-density chips.

The company’s former president, Martin van den Brink, surprised experts with the announcement of the new “Hyper-NA” EUV technology that is still in the early stages of development, according to global R&D organization imec, which has worked closely with ASML. Hyper-NA would follow the High-NA systems that ASML installed early this year for the first time at an Intel semiconductor facility in the U.S. state of Oregon.

“Moving forward long term, we need to improve our illumination system, and we have to go to Hyper-NA,” van der Brink said in a May presentation at imec’s ITF World in Antwerp. “In parallel, we have to drive the productivity on all of our systems to 400 to 500 wafers per hour.”

High-NA takes numerical aperture (NA) to 0.55 NA from the 0.33 NA of earlier EUV tools. About three years ago, the company said High-NA would help chipmakers reach process nodes well beyond 2 nm for at least 10 years. Now, ASML has said that around 2030, the company will offer Hyper-NA, reaching 0.75 NA, according to an image van den Brink showed at the imec event.

“This is Martin’s vision regarding Hyper-NA, and feasibility studies are currently ongoing,” ASML said in a clarification to EE Times.

It was the first time that ASML added Hyper-NA EUV to their roadmap, according to Imec Advanced Patterning Program Director Kurt Ronse, who has developed lithography in cooperation with ASML for more than 30 years.

“There’s a lot of research on going now,” he told EE Times. “Can we go higher than 0.55 to 0.75, 0.85? Hyper-NA certainly brings some new challenges.”

One of the problems is light polarization starting around 0.55 NA, according to Ronse.

“If you go higher than 0.55, very quickly you see that polarization is killing your contrast, because one of the polarization orientations is basically canceling out the light,” he said. “You would need polarizers in order to avoid that.” The downside is that polarizers block light, reduce power efficiency and increase production cost, he noted.

ASML is the world’s only company that makes the EUV tools that are indispensable for making chips with the highest transistor densities. Chip designers like Nvidia, Apple and AMD count on the EUV tools at leading foundry Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) to make processors used in AI hardware and other high-performance computing equipment.

Two years ago, imec started working on Hyper-NA with computer simulations.

“Gradually you saw that more and more companies started to be interested in Hyper-NA and started their own studies,” Ronse said. “Zeiss were starting to make their lens designs, and gradually also ASML was becoming more open on Hyper-NA, but they never have put it on the roadmap before, as far as I know. It was always ending with 0.55 NA.”

Another challenge of Hyper-NA will be the resist.

“Already at 0.55 NA we will have thin down the resists,” Ronse said. “With Hyper-NA, it even gets worse. This will result in more challenges for etch selectivity”.

High-NA just starting

In April, Intel Foundry installed the industry’s first High-NA lithography system. Intel said the new tool provides the ability to dramatically improve resolution and feature scaling for the next generation of processors, enabling process leadership beyond Intel’s 18A process node that is roughly equivalent to TSMC’s upcoming 2-nm process. TSMC does not plan to install High-NA tools at this point.

“TSMC doesn’t need High-NA yet,” Ronse said. “Toward the end of this decade, they will likely introduce it.”

At present, TSMC can use its expertise in double-patterning together with its existing EUV tools, Ronse added.

“What is really critical in double patterning is the edge-placement error,” he said. “Your two masks have to be perfectly aligned. Intel wants to avoid that. The big difference with Intel is that they have not mastered double patterning as well as TSMC. As a result, they prefer a higher resolution with High-NA EUV.”

Other leading chipmakers that use EUV, such as Samsung, Micron and SK Hynix, are also considering High-NA.

High-NA should last through process nodes going from 2 nm to 14 angstroms, 10 angstroms and perhaps even 7 angstroms, according to Ronse. After that, Hyper-NA will start to take over, he added.

Hyper-NA will reduce the “dangerous trend” of double patterning, van den Brink said in his presentation.

“If you do double patterning, you have to do everything twice. That easily becomes more expensive,” Ronse said.

After High-NA

There are few alternatives to Hyper-NA once High-NA runs out of steam, Ronse says.

People have considered nanoimprint as a substitute, but the throughput is typically far below that of a High-NA scanner. There is also the idea of multi-beam electron-beam lithography, which eliminates the use of expensive photomasks by writing patterns directly to a silicon wafer. The only company that developed e-beam lithography tools, Netherlands-based Mapper, has gone out of business.

Outside of lithography, researchers have tried to shrink the size of transistors to continue scaling downward, but that approach is also reaching physical limits.

“You cannot imagine that there’s going to be devices of only 2 angstroms,” Ronse says. “It’s only two atoms. At some point, it has to stop.”

New materials will likely take the place of silicon, according to Ronse.

“There are new materials which have a higher mobility for electrons,” Ronse said. “These are much more difficult to put on the wafer. Research groups are working on that.”

The wafers will stay silicon, Ronse notes.

“It’s only for a few levels that you will have to deposit a very thin layer where the electrons have to go through. What will be needed is dedicated equipment that can uniformly deposit that over a whole wafer. Right now, it’s in the labs. It’s only on small areas one is working on. There will be new deposition tools. Also, etching these materials may be more difficult, so we need new etching techniques. The basis of the chip will still be silicon.”

By: DocMemory
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