Two years ago, the technical challenges faced by EUV lithography seemed insurmountable:
- low exposure energy
- equipment uptime
- mask blank defects
- metrology for mask blank defects (and compensating mask data placement)
- resist sensitivity
- resist outgassing and mask pellicles
- RET mask data processing requirements (e.g, "shadowing")
to name but a few.
Recent updates would suggest that major strides have been made in each of these areas, although likely too late for 10nm process node development.
With light at the end of the tunnel (pun intended!

), it appears the transition to EUV will be driven by a financial tradeoff, not a technical roadblock.
At 7nm, foundries are faced with the question of the extent to which design rules need to be scaled to provide cost-competitive PPA. A "full scale" from 10nm to 7nm would definitely require that additional multi-patterning be applied to several layers currently using 193i exposure. (One example that comes to mind that has traditionally had conservative rules applied are the "cut" layers.)
In other words, if PPA metrics are sufficient with more restricted design rules and more conservative scaling, the 7nm node may not need EUV (in the 2018 timeframe). If a full scaling is warranted, the cost of EUV for select layers may be advantageous over additional multipatterning in 193i.
-chipguy