IBM drives chipmaking process beyond current limitations

San Jose (CA) - IBM researchers claim to have found a way to use current deep-ultraviolet (DUV) lithography techniques for the production of 32nm chips and smaller. While The limits of DUV have been pushed out several times, the semiconductor industry plans to make a costly switch to an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) process in 2009. IBM's discovery could delay the transition for at least one more product generation.

Moore's Law is considered to be the main innovation driver for the semiconductor industry, and according to Intel, alive and kicking at least until 2015. But Intel's confidence often is met with doubt as the observation by Intel co-founder Gordon Moore that transistor counts in microchips double every 18 to 24 months appears to be increasingly difficult to achieve. Every new product generation requires companies to dedicate more human and financial resources and drives development and production cost to astronomic levels.

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IBM now claims that it may be able to push out the introduction of EUV even further. Researchers of the firm claim to have developed 29.9 nm structures. A "high-index immersion" variant promises to be able to provide a path for extending Moore's Law further, thus buying the industry time before having to make the transition to EUV.

IBM's and JSR Micro's findings are especially important, as it is not just very expensive to implement, but because the industry is still facing serious challenges in making EUV a reality. While Intel said in 2004 that it installed world's first commercial EUV lithography tool and set up an EUV mask pilot line - a milestone in producing smaller circuits with EUV - the technology especially appears to not only lack a stable and powerful EUV source.

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