"In ten years from now, we’ll have a single platform of low-NA, high-NA and hyper-NA,” according to Martin van den Brink at Imec’s Technology Forum.
ASML is proceeding with the development of a hyper-NA EUV tool. “In ten years from now, we’ll have a single platform of low-NA, high-NA and hyper-NA EUV systems,” emeritus CTO Martin van den Brink said in a presentation at Imec’s Technology Forum (ITF) in Antwerp today. He argued that the availability of such an even higher resolution tool is crucial to reducing the number of process steps, thereby cutting the cost and energy needed to process a wafer. “Hyper-NA allows us to stay away from the dangerous complexity of double patterning,” Van den Brink said.
The announcement arrives at a time when high-NA EUV lithography has barely got going. ASML started shipping high-NA tools last December and will in a matter of weeks officially open the High-NA Lab in Veldhoven, a facility co-run with Imec providing chipmakers with early access to the tool. The system in that lab is already operational, however, and as announced in a post on X last month, it printed the first-ever 10nm line pattern. Van den Brink had an update about that too: an 8nm line pattern was produced, which is near the maximum resolution of the tool.
bits-chips.nl
ASML is proceeding with the development of a hyper-NA EUV tool. “In ten years from now, we’ll have a single platform of low-NA, high-NA and hyper-NA EUV systems,” emeritus CTO Martin van den Brink said in a presentation at Imec’s Technology Forum (ITF) in Antwerp today. He argued that the availability of such an even higher resolution tool is crucial to reducing the number of process steps, thereby cutting the cost and energy needed to process a wafer. “Hyper-NA allows us to stay away from the dangerous complexity of double patterning,” Van den Brink said.

The announcement arrives at a time when high-NA EUV lithography has barely got going. ASML started shipping high-NA tools last December and will in a matter of weeks officially open the High-NA Lab in Veldhoven, a facility co-run with Imec providing chipmakers with early access to the tool. The system in that lab is already operational, however, and as announced in a post on X last month, it printed the first-ever 10nm line pattern. Van den Brink had an update about that too: an 8nm line pattern was produced, which is near the maximum resolution of the tool.

ASML eyes common EUV platform and massive throughput increases - Bits&Chips
Hyper-NA EUV and hyperproductive tools are ASML’s main targets for the upcoming decade.
