High NA EUV at Intel
Intel is industry’s first mover on High NA EUV lithography system.
Intel Foundry has received and assembled the industry’s first High Numerical Aperture (High NA) Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography system. The new tool provides the ability to dramatically improve resolution and feature scaling for the next generation of processors, enabling Intel Foundry to continue process leadership beyond Intel 18A.
High NA EUV is the next-generation lithography system developed by ASML following decades of collaboration with Intel. As the first mover on High NA EUV, Intel Foundry will be able to deliver never-before-seen precision and scalability in chip manufacturing. This in turn will allow Intel to develop chips with the most innovative features and capabilities – processors that are essential for driving advancements in AI and other emerging technologies.
News
- News Byte: With High NA EUV, Intel Foundry Opens New Frontier in Chipmaking
- News: First EUV Light Marks Intel 4 Milestone in Ireland
- News: Intel and ASML Strengthen their Collaboration to Drive High-NA into Manufacturing in 2025
- Video: EUV: The Most Precise, Complex Machine at Intel
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Video
Intel Manufacturing in Kulim, Malaysia, and San Jose, Costa Rica (B-Roll)
Intel Adds ASML’s First High NA EUV Tool to Oregon Factory
ASML’s High Numerical Aperture (High NA) Extreme Ultraviolet (EUV) lithography scanner sits in Intel Oregon’s D1X test manufacturing factory, where it is going through its final calibration. It is as big as a double-decker bus and weighs as much as a blue whale. It will shoot lasers at light speed and heat plasma to nearly 220,000 degrees Celsius, almost 40 times hotter than the surface temperature of the sun. The new TWINSCAN EXE: 5000 has the ability to dramatically improve resolution feature scaling for next-generation processors and will enable the continued pursuit of Moore’s Law. (Credit: Intel Corporation)