The eBeam Initiative’s 12th annual Luminaries survey in 2023 reported a range of nodes from >5nm to 14nm as the most advanced non-EUV nodes using 193i lithography. For the 2030 timeline, 5nm or less picked up more support.
In the discussion summarized here https://semiengineering.com/industr...ities-for-advancing-the-non-euv-leading-edge/, panelists cited several factors driving 193i down to smaller nodes starting with the high cost of EUV, the potential of curvilinear 193i masks to replace one or more EUV layers, and the availability of multi-beam mask writers and new laser writers that can write curvilinear 193i masks.
There was a particularly interesting statement from Chris Progler (CTO of Photronics):
We see the opportunity to extend 193i to a couple more layers to make a better chip, even below 7nm. We have several customers saying “if I can get this one layer to look like 5nm using 193i, it carries along the performance for a lot of the other functionality.”
In the discussion summarized here https://semiengineering.com/industr...ities-for-advancing-the-non-euv-leading-edge/, panelists cited several factors driving 193i down to smaller nodes starting with the high cost of EUV, the potential of curvilinear 193i masks to replace one or more EUV layers, and the availability of multi-beam mask writers and new laser writers that can write curvilinear 193i masks.
There was a particularly interesting statement from Chris Progler (CTO of Photronics):
We see the opportunity to extend 193i to a couple more layers to make a better chip, even below 7nm. We have several customers saying “if I can get this one layer to look like 5nm using 193i, it carries along the performance for a lot of the other functionality.”