EUV The Focal Point

[040] Deep Dive Topic - Advanced Packaging

20 min · 7 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio [040] Deep Dive Topic - Advanced Packaging

Descripción

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. Episode teaser Advanced packaging has become one of the decisive technologies behind EUV-era semiconductors. This episode explains how modern packages connect chiplets, high-bandwidth memory, substrates, and cooling into one working system. It also maps the key players across foundries, integrated device manufacturers, OSATs, memory suppliers, substrates, materials, and equipment. Key takeaways - Advanced packaging is not EUV lithography itself. It is the system-level integration technology that makes EUV-era chips usable in real products. - A package is no longer just protection. In high-end computing, it is an electrical, thermal, mechanical, and architectural platform. - Fan-out packaging redistributes chip connections beyond the die outline using molded reconstituted wafers or panels and copper redistribution layers. - Two point five D packaging places logic and memory side by side on a high-density interposer or bridge to increase bandwidth. - Three D packaging stacks active dies vertically to shorten connections, but it makes heat removal, power delivery, testing, and yield harder. - Hybrid bonding removes conventional solder bumps and enables much denser die-to-die connections through direct copper and dielectric bonding. - High-bandwidth memory is a central driver of advanced packaging demand for AI accelerators. - TSMC, Samsung, and Intel are central high-end platform players; ASE, Amkor, and JCET are major OSAT players. - SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron matter because advanced memory packaging is tightly linked to AI system performance. - Substrate, material, and equipment suppliers such as Ibiden, Unimicron, Shinko Electric, AT&S, Samsung Electro-Mechanics, Ajinomoto, BESI, EV Group, Applied Materials, Tokyo Electron, and ASMPT form the hidden backbone of the ecosystem. Glossary - EUV: Extreme ultraviolet lithography, a front-end chipmaking method used to print very small features in advanced semiconductor processes. - Advanced packaging: High-density semiconductor assembly and integration methods that connect multiple dies, memory stacks, substrates, and thermal structures. - Chiplet: A smaller functional die designed to be combined with other dies inside one package. - Fan-out packaging: A wafer-level or panel-level method that embeds dies and builds redistribution layers to route connections beyond the original die area. - Interposer: A high-density routing layer between dies and the package substrate, often made from silicon, organic materials, or redistribution-layer structures. - Through-silicon via: A vertical metal connection through silicon that carries signals or power between layers. - Hybrid bonding: A bonding method that joins dielectric surfaces and copper pads directly, enabling very dense vertical interconnects. - HBM: High-bandwidth memory, a stacked memory technology placed close to processors for very wide, fast data movement. - OSAT: Outsourced semiconductor assembly and test provider; a company that packages and tests chips for other semiconductor firms. - ABF substrate: A high-performance build-up substrate technology using Ajinomoto Build-up Film as an insulating material.

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44 episodios

episode [044] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point artwork

[044] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. This week’s episode looks at EUV lithography as a coordination problem rather than a single-tool problem. Korea’s approval reform, TSMC’s High-NA cost caution, SK hynix’s wafer-capacity plan, and Rapidus’s fresh government-backed funding all point to the same theme: the industry is trying to turn scarce exposure capacity into usable output faster. The focus topic connects scanner economics with regulation, memory, bonding, research speed, and system-level workarounds. Key takeaways: - South Korea plans to shorten EUV equipment import inspection and approval from 34 days to as few as nine days. - The Korean reform could cut overseas pressure and leak-test fees by about 5 billion won per EUV tool. - TSMC says it has purchased High-NA EUV tools for R&D but does not currently need them for production because the cost remains high. - SK hynix aims to double wafer capacity over the next five years while still expecting memory bottlenecks to persist into 2030. - Rapidus completed an additional 150 billion yen funding round from Japan’s Information-Technology Promotion Agency. - Intel says its 14A PDK 0.5 is available and that 14A PDK 0.9 is targeted for external customers in October. - Imec and EV Group demonstrated wafer-to-wafer hybrid bonding at a 200-nanometer copper pad pitch with post-bond overlay below 40 nanometers. - The University of Texas at Austin described a tabletop EUV and volumetric 3D patterning approach aimed at speeding research experiments, not replacing production scanners. - No new official ASML scanner shipment or throughput announcement was found this week; the ASML share buyback notice was financial housekeeping rather than a capacity update. Glossary: Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) — lithography using 13.5-nanometer light to pattern critical layers in advanced chips. High Numerical Aperture (High-NA) EUV — next-generation EUV optics with higher resolution but higher cost and integration complexity. Low Numerical Aperture (Low-NA) EUV — today’s production EUV platform used widely for leading-edge logic and advanced memory. Process Design Kit (PDK) — the design-rule and model package customers need to begin designing chips for a foundry process. High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) — stacked DRAM used near AI processors to provide very high memory bandwidth. Dynamic Random-Access Memory (DRAM) — volatile memory technology used in servers, PCs, phones, and HBM stacks. Hybrid bonding — direct wafer or die bonding that creates dense vertical electrical connections for advanced packaging. Post-bond overlay — alignment accuracy after two wafers or dies are bonded. Cost per good die — the economic metric combining process cost, yield, and productivity for shippable chips.

9 de jun de 202619 min
episode [043] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point artwork

[043] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. This week’s episode follows High-NA EUV as it moves from readiness language toward first product evidence. ASML is pointing to memory and logic products exposed within months, while imec’s quantum-dot qubit device shows how High-NA can matter beyond conventional logic and DRAM. The focus is the manufacturing loop around High-NA: masks, inspection, curvilinear data, and qualification. Key takeaways: - ASML’s CEO said first memory and logic products exposed on High-NA EUV systems should appear within months. - imec presented a quantum-dot qubit device fabricated with High-NA EUV, with barely 6-nanometer gaps between control gates. - The episode treats imec’s quantum result as a manufacturability signal, not a near-term revenue driver. - Semiconductor Engineering’s mask discussion points to inspection, repair, curvilinear qualification, and data flow as key High-NA bottlenecks. - Micron started 1-alpha DRAM manufacturing at its Manassas, Virginia fab, adding U.S. long-lifecycle memory capacity outside the EUV-heavy HBM race. - Samsung’s tentative labor deal reduced immediate strike risk, but a later court challenge kept operational uncertainty alive. - No fresh official TSMC or Rapidus update was found this week that changed the EUV outlook. - The practical High-NA question for 2026 is which product layers produce enough yield, cost, and cycle-time evidence to justify insertion. Glossary: Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography — A 13.5-nanometer exposure technology used for the most advanced semiconductor patterning layers. High Numerical Aperture (High-NA) EUV — ASML’s next EUV generation using 0.55 NA optics for finer resolution and potentially fewer patterning steps. Low Numerical Aperture (Low-NA) EUV — Today’s 0.33 NA EUV platform, still the main production workhorse at leading fabs. Dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) — Volatile memory used in servers, personal computers, mobile devices, and high-bandwidth memory stacks. High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) — Stacked DRAM used near AI accelerators to deliver very high bandwidth. Curvilinear mask — A photomask using curved rather than strictly rectangular features to improve imaging on difficult patterns. Inverse lithography technology (ILT) — Computational method that derives mask shapes from desired wafer patterns and process behavior. Actinic inspection — Mask inspection using EUV wavelength light to better determine whether a defect will print. Edge placement error — The deviation between intended and printed feature edges, increasingly important at advanced nodes.

26 de may de 202617 min
episode [042] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point artwork

[042] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. This week’s episode frames EUV through geography, serviceability, and industrial replication rather than a new scanner milestone. Tata Electronics and ASML put India’s first commercial 300-millimeter fab into the lithography conversation, while TSMC’s board authorizations and the MATCH Act dispute show why capacity now depends on facilities, field support, policy, and trusted regional execution. Key takeaways: - Tata Electronics and ASML signed an MoU to support the ramp of Tata’s Dholera 300-millimeter fab in Gujarat. - Tata’s disclosed Dholera portfolio spans 28nm, 40nm, 55nm, 90nm, and 110nm, making the project mainly DUV-centered rather than an EUV-frontier fab. - TSMC approved about US$31.284 billion in capital appropriations for advanced technology capacity and fab/facility systems. - TSMC also approved a capital injection of up to US$20 billion into TSMC Arizona. - Dutch objections to the proposed U.S. MATCH Act make servicing, spares, and extraterritorial export controls a live lithography-capacity issue. - China also criticized the MATCH Act, reinforcing that chip-equipment policy is becoming an operating-risk variable. - TSMC reportedly raised its 2030 global semiconductor market view to about US$1.5 trillion, with AI as the demand engine. - Apple-Intel foundry speculation is treated as background this week because the preliminary deal was already covered and no official node or product scope has changed. - No major new EUV scanner shipment or High-NA insertion datapoint was found this week, so the episode focuses on geographic replication and service infrastructure. Glossary: Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography — 13.5-nanometer wavelength lithography used for critical layers in leading-edge logic and advanced memory. Deep Ultraviolet (DUV) lithography — Earlier-generation optical lithography still essential for mature nodes and many non-critical layers in advanced flows. High Numerical Aperture (High-NA) EUV — Next-generation EUV platform with higher resolution but different economics, field-size constraints, and integration challenges. 300-millimeter fab — Semiconductor wafer fab using 12-inch wafers, the standard format for high-volume modern chip manufacturing. Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) — A formal cooperation framework that may precede detailed contracts or tool orders. Capital appropriation — Board authorization to allocate capital for capacity, construction, facility systems, or related investments. Field service — Maintenance, parts, calibration, and engineering support needed to keep tools productive after installation. MATCH Act — Proposed U.S. legislation aimed at tightening semiconductor manufacturing equipment controls involving China and allied countries. Tool availability — The share of time a manufacturing tool is operational and usable for production work.

19 de may de 20266 min
episode [041] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point artwork

[041] Industry briefing - EUV The Focal Point

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. This week’s episode looks at EUV less as a single-tool story and more as a capacity, customer, and capital-allocation story. Apple’s reported Intel and Samsung outreach, Samsung’s 2nm foundry push, SK Hynix customer-financing talks, and TSMC’s low-NA roadmap strategy all point to the same conclusion: the bottleneck is now economic and geopolitical as much as technical. Key takeaways: - Previous scripts or sources were not available in the workspace, so non-repetition was handled on a best-effort basis. - Reuters relayed a Wall Street Journal report that Apple and Intel reached a preliminary chip-making deal, but Intel and Apple declined comment and the product scope remains unclear. - Reuters also relayed Bloomberg reporting that Apple explored U.S. chipmaking with Intel and Samsung, while Reuters could not independently verify the report. - Samsung reported Q1 2026 consolidated revenue of KRW 133.9 trillion and operating profit of KRW 57.2 trillion. - Samsung said its foundry business plans full utilization of advanced-node lines in Q2 2026, broader 2nm customer engagement, and second-generation 2nm mobile ramp in H2 2026. - Reuters reported that Samsung expects more advanced 2nm logic customers and is reviewing a second Taylor, Texas fab while targeting first Taylor volume production in 2027. - Reuters reported that SK Hynix customers have proposed funding production lines and ASML EUV tools, reflecting extreme tightness in AI-driven memory supply. - TSMC introduced A13, A12, and N2U, with N2U planned for 2028 and A13/A12 planned for 2029, while continuing to extract gains from existing EUV platforms. - ASML reported Q1 2026 net sales of €8.8 billion and updated 2026 net sales guidance to €36 billion–€40 billion. - Apple A20 and C2 modem items remain rumors; they were used only as directional signals for custom-silicon and packaging demand. Glossary: Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) — lithography using 13.5 nm light to pattern the most critical layers in advanced chips. High Numerical Aperture (High-NA) EUV — ASML’s newer 0.55 NA EUV platform designed for finer resolution and future sub-2nm logic and advanced memory. Low numerical aperture (low-NA) EUV — the 0.33 NA EUV platform widely used for current leading-edge logic and memory production. Hyper-NA — a possible future EUV generation above High-NA, still more of a 2030s feasibility topic than a near-term production tool. 2nm — an advanced process-node class using nanosheet or gate-all-around transistor structures, with naming varying by foundry. Wafer-Level Multi-Chip Module (WMCM) — a packaging approach that integrates components at wafer level before singulation. High-Bandwidth Memory (HBM) — stacked DRAM used beside AI accelerators to provide very high data bandwidth. CoWoS — TSMC’s Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate advanced packaging family for large AI and high-performance computing packages. Backside power delivery — a routing approach that moves power delivery to the wafer backside to reduce congestion and improve performance. Foundry — a manufacturer that produces chips designed by external customers.

11 de may de 202617 min
episode [040] Deep Dive Topic - Advanced Packaging artwork

[040] Deep Dive Topic - Advanced Packaging

This post was created using AI. Please check the information if you want to use it as a basis for decision-making. Episode teaser Advanced packaging has become one of the decisive technologies behind EUV-era semiconductors. This episode explains how modern packages connect chiplets, high-bandwidth memory, substrates, and cooling into one working system. It also maps the key players across foundries, integrated device manufacturers, OSATs, memory suppliers, substrates, materials, and equipment. Key takeaways - Advanced packaging is not EUV lithography itself. It is the system-level integration technology that makes EUV-era chips usable in real products. - A package is no longer just protection. In high-end computing, it is an electrical, thermal, mechanical, and architectural platform. - Fan-out packaging redistributes chip connections beyond the die outline using molded reconstituted wafers or panels and copper redistribution layers. - Two point five D packaging places logic and memory side by side on a high-density interposer or bridge to increase bandwidth. - Three D packaging stacks active dies vertically to shorten connections, but it makes heat removal, power delivery, testing, and yield harder. - Hybrid bonding removes conventional solder bumps and enables much denser die-to-die connections through direct copper and dielectric bonding. - High-bandwidth memory is a central driver of advanced packaging demand for AI accelerators. - TSMC, Samsung, and Intel are central high-end platform players; ASE, Amkor, and JCET are major OSAT players. - SK Hynix, Samsung, and Micron matter because advanced memory packaging is tightly linked to AI system performance. - Substrate, material, and equipment suppliers such as Ibiden, Unimicron, Shinko Electric, AT&S, Samsung Electro-Mechanics, Ajinomoto, BESI, EV Group, Applied Materials, Tokyo Electron, and ASMPT form the hidden backbone of the ecosystem. Glossary - EUV: Extreme ultraviolet lithography, a front-end chipmaking method used to print very small features in advanced semiconductor processes. - Advanced packaging: High-density semiconductor assembly and integration methods that connect multiple dies, memory stacks, substrates, and thermal structures. - Chiplet: A smaller functional die designed to be combined with other dies inside one package. - Fan-out packaging: A wafer-level or panel-level method that embeds dies and builds redistribution layers to route connections beyond the original die area. - Interposer: A high-density routing layer between dies and the package substrate, often made from silicon, organic materials, or redistribution-layer structures. - Through-silicon via: A vertical metal connection through silicon that carries signals or power between layers. - Hybrid bonding: A bonding method that joins dielectric surfaces and copper pads directly, enabling very dense vertical interconnects. - HBM: High-bandwidth memory, a stacked memory technology placed close to processors for very wide, fast data movement. - OSAT: Outsourced semiconductor assembly and test provider; a company that packages and tests chips for other semiconductor firms. - ABF substrate: A high-performance build-up substrate technology using Ajinomoto Build-up Film as an insulating material.

7 de may de 202620 min