Open Access Presentation
13 November 2024 Addressing Moore's law challenges to unleash AI opportunities
Christophe Fouquet
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Strong trends drive the semiconductor industry: ubiquitous computing, the energy transformation and artificial intelligence, to name just a few, have the potential to propel the industry towards $1 trillion of sales by 2030. Enabling this trajectory is the extension of Moore’s Law through innovation in semiconductor devices, materials, manufacturing technologies and 3D integration. Moore’s Law, today, is best understood as scaling system energy-efficient performance. To enable chip makers in their pursuit of more powerful, smaller, cheaper, more integrated and more energy-efficient chips, ASML focuses on driving a holistic lithography roadmap with innovation across the entire product and service portfolio. At the core of it is EUV lithography technology. EUV is now mature, and the roadmap offers further improvements in imaging performance, accuracy and productivity, as well as a major reduction in cost per wafer. ASML has shipped the first High NA EUV systems and is enabling customers to run R&D wafers in its High NA lab in Veldhoven, the Netherlands. The new High NA optics, combined with progress on the EUV source, provide the foundation for the future of EUV in the form of a common platform, capable of carrying 0.33 NA, 0.55 NA and 0.75 NA and providing a significant cost reduction opportunity. ASML is committed to push technology to new limits, partnering with all members of our ecosystem, to enable chip makers to realize their ambitions.
Conference Presentation
© (2024) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Christophe Fouquet "Addressing Moore's law challenges to unleash AI opportunities", Proc. SPIE PC13215, International Conference on Extreme Ultraviolet Lithography 2024, PC1321501 (13 November 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3039297
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