back to article Intel goes to ultraviolet extremes

A long-awaited breakthrough in chip-making technology is inching closer towards commercial reality. But progress is slow and remains uncertain. At Thursday's Research@Intel event in Mountain View, California, The Reg and other press folk sat down with Mike Mayberry, Intel's VP of technology and manufacturing, to discuss the …

COMMENTS

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  1. Don Mitchell

    Electron Beams

    Whatever happened to research on electron-beam lithography?

  2. John Smith 19 Gold badge
    Happy

    In the 80s 1 micron was thougth the limit for light

    And everyone would be using X-ray systems with a synchrotron source.

    It's amazing what an incentive a really big bag of cash is.

  3. frank ly

    Extreme Ultra Violet

    Isn't that what they used to call Soft X-Rays? I suppose the word 'extreme' is a marketing thing that appeals to the modern, edgy crowd; whereas soft x-rays would be perceived as producing wussy chips.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Alert

    Thursday

    Why a Thursday?

    I never could get Thursdays.

    Oh look, yellow.

    Besides, time is an illusion; lunchtime doubly so.

  5. Charles 9
    Unhappy

    Re: Electron Beams

    Same problem EUV is experiencing now, only more so. It's just too bloody slow. The electron beam is also a very touchy thing to get right--too weak and its energy could be disperse in the target or the beam is too unstable for high resolutions; too strong and you'll get the electron version of spalling.

  6. A B 3
    Alien

    @Extreme Ultra Violet

    i agree, won't start ironising the air? Or will they just move to vacuum production?

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Alert

    EUV

    Extreme UV sits just this side of soft X-rays, cut-off is at 10nM

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Boffin

    EUV vs X-rays

    The distinction between EUV and x-rays is arbitrary and set at 10nm, they are both generated by electrons changing energy level, as distinct from from gamma rays which are nuclear in origin.

    UV is typically from valence (i.e. outer shell) electrons, whereas X-rays typically originate from inner shell transitions (like when an electron beam removes the inner most electron from a metal atom in a target and the other electrons cascade down to fill the gap).

    @ AB3

    yes UV less than 200nm is only usually used in a vacuum... for this reason this section of the spectrum is also known as the "vacuum ultraviolet" as all wavelengths in this range are strongly absorbed by oxygen in the air.

    Plus I beleive the actual lithographic processes of chip manufacture have been performed in the absence of air for donkeys years...

  9. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    At last, something I know about!

    One thing to watch out for is that Intel doesn't use standard descriptors for the technology nodes. The aim is to introduce EUVL at the 32 nm technology node, which equates to 2013 Year of Introduction in the international technology roadmap for semiconductors. Intel's 32 nm design size equates to the 50 nm technology node. The 32 nm technology node equates to Intel's 16 nm design size (which is also slated for 2013 same as everyone else). Intel have being slated EUV's introduction for 2013 since at least 2006.

    @Don Mitchell - Still a couple of companies working on that, Mapper Lithography (parallel beam system) and KLA Tencor (Reflective multibeam system (REBL)).

    @ Frank Ly - Yes soft xrays - I'm told the name change was because the public doesn't like things that sound like radiation (ie why the NMR machine in your hospital is called an MRI)

    @Charles 9 - Mainly the speed for ebeam - it's not particularly difficult to use (ie to get a good beam) if you don't mind it slow - all the masks for the other techniques are made with ebeam. EUV is a lot faster than ebeam, but still has a way to go to meet the wafer throughput of optical. Being addressed via strong light sources and faster photoresists.

    @A B 3 - EUV and ebeam are both vacuum techniques

    @ AC - 13.5 nm for EUV lithography

  10. Parax
    Boffin

    Soft X-Rays

    Yes soft xrays - I'm told the name change was because the public doesn't like things that sound like radiation (ie why the NMR machine in your hospital is called an MRI)

    Silly really, I would have thought that a public looking at bleeding edge tech would understand, said tech..(proof from point being raised on tech website!).... I guess the marketing guys did a weekday highstreet survey outside poundstretcher and found people who still refuse to have microwaves in thier houses due to the nucular praticles....

  11. Dave_H
    Coat

    Am I just being cynical?

    In the short term why don’t you use laser interference? Fire one laser, interfere with another one down the same axis and the result is a much smaller spot. Cheap, simple, fast and obvious – i.e. it’s not worth patenting, so nobody is going to persue it!

    Look out for the trolls, I just mentioned patents ;-)

  12. soft electrons
    Gates Horns

    secondary electrons

    EUV like Ebeam and X-rays produces a variable number of secondary electrons. This was part of their explanation for accumulating contamination on their mirrors. I think these extra roaming particles will add some variation to the dose calculation.

  13. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    A title is required

    @ Dave_H

    People do use interference. But unless you want regular arrays of lines, (or regular arrays of dots for 4 beam interference), it's no good (ie you can't produce an arbitrary pattern). Also the aerial image contrast is dreadful.

    @soft electrons

    Energy distribution in resist is reasonably well understood wrt secondary electrons. Also for the most part, (until you get to doses so low that the shot noise limit is a problem) the overall dose deposited is not variable (although where it is deposited within the film varies a bit). Current EUV and EBL resists seem to show a secondary electron thermalisation length of around 5 nm, which is typically less than the acid diffusion length anyway. So at this stage this is not a problem (give it ten more years though).

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