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.
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