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| Posted: November 12, 2009 | |
| SEMATECH Symposia Reveal Continuing Momentum in EUVL and 193 nm Immersion Extensions | |
| (Nanowerk News) SEMATECH engineers and the industry at large continue to make progress in developing the infrastructure that will enable lithography for cost-effective manufacturing, according to papers presented at the 2009 International EUVL (Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography) and 193 nm Immersion Extensions Symposia, held Oct. 18-23, in Prague, Czech Republic. This year’s symposia were co-organized by SEMATECH in cooperation with IMEC, Selete, EUVL, and EUVA. | |
| At the week-long duo of lithography events, an impressive attendance of nearly 400 top experts and researchers gathered to discuss progress on extending current technologies while building the infrastructure for future solutions. A combined set of 83 technical papers and 130 posters reported steady, measured progress in many key areas. At the same time, presenters highlighted various technology, infrastructure, and business challenges that the industry needs to address to successfully insert EUVL into manufacturing at the 22 nm half-pitch node. | |
| “While the economy is down, attendance was up this year and we surpassed last year’s number of registrations,” said Bryan Rice, director of lithography at SEMATECH. “I attribute this to a combination of the industry’s critical need to address the cost and risk of developing EUV technologies and to a recognition that 22 nm solutions must be ready for insertion very soon – in 2013.” | |
| During this year’s EUVL Symposium, steady progress was reported for EUVL including: | |
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| 1. Availability of defect-free masks, throughout a mask lifecycle, and the need to address critical mask infrastructure tool gaps, specifically in the defect inspection and defect review area | |
| 2. Long-term source operation with 100 W at the IF and 5 megajoule per day | |
| 3. Simultaneous resist resolution, sensitivity, and LER | |
| “Good progress has been made toward achieving resist resolution and sensitivity targets, with some improvement in line edge roughness, and now chip manufacturers are demonstrating post-exposure resist processes that lead to significantly reduced line edge roughness,” said Stefan Wurm, EUVL Symposium co-chair and SEMATECH’s associate director of Lithography. “With the world’s leading-edge exposure tool for EUV resists learning, SEMATECH continues to enable the development of high performance resists required to demonstrate EUV manufacturability to our member companies and the industry.” | |
| Key progress indicators outlined at the Immersion Extensions Symposium, include the following: | |
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| The 2009 International EUVL and Immersion Extensions Symposia are central elements of the SEMATECH Knowledge Series – a set of public, single-focused industry meetings designed to increase global knowledge in key areas of semiconductor R&D – and represent a great success in the history of SEMATECH-sponsored conferences as these technologies have evolved from tabletop experiments to fully adopted high volume manufacturing over the past half dozen years. | |
| About SEMATECH | |
| For over 20 years, SEMATECH® has set global direction, enabled flexible collaboration, and bridged strategic R&D to manufacturing. Today, we continue accelerating the next technology revolution with our nanoelectronics and emerging technology partners. |
| Source: SEMATECH (press release) | |
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