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The Extreme Physics Pushing Moore鈥檚 Law to the Next Level - YouTube
Channel: Seeker
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We鈥檙e suiting up to take you inside a clean
room that鈥檚 building an engineering marvel
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that鈥檒l push the entire electronics industry
to the next frontier.聽They're both amazing
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machines and scary machines. There's an enormous
amount of complexity with them. There's an
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enormous number of things that can potentially
go wrong. It's something that you don't necessarily
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sleep well at night, just having the machine
on your floor. It鈥檚 about the size of a
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school bus, weighing over 180,000 kilograms,
with over 100,000 parts, and 3,000 interlocking
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cables.聽Pop the hood and you鈥檒l see lasers
shooting tiny droplets of tin, generating
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plasma that鈥檒l get collected and reflected
by a series of mirrors, to then etch nanoscale
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patterns onto chips that鈥檒l eventually go
into your next cell phone.聽And after 30 years
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of innovations in physics, chemistry, and
material science, it鈥檚 about ready for its debut.
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An integrated circuit, or chip, is
one of the biggest innovations of the 20th
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century. It launched a technological revolution,
created Silicon Valley, and everyone鈥檚 got
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one in their pocket.聽But if you zoomed in
on one of those chips, I mean, really zoomed
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in, you鈥檇 find a highly complex, nanoscale
sized city that鈥檚 expertly designed to send
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information back and forth.聽Semiconductor
lithography is the ultimate alchemy, turning
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sand into gold. You start with the silicon
wafer. You add insulators, add something called
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a gate which you apply a voltage to it, and
it turns on or off the flow of electrons.
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That's the little switch that's sort of does
the zero to one's that you always hear about
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You build up a sequence of
layers. The network, the streets and buildings
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that you need in order to make these transistors
and interconnect those transistors.
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At the end you can turn that into something that
has substantially more value than a bucket
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of sand. At big tech conferences, chip manufacturers
will announce they鈥檝e hit impossibly small
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new milestones, like 22nm then 14nm and 10nm
designs.聽That means they鈥檝e found a way
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to shrink the size and increase the number
of features on a chip, which ultimately improves
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the overall processing power.聽This is what鈥檚
been driving the semiconductor industry - a
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drumbeat called Moore鈥檚 Law.聽Moore's Law
is an expectation. It's not a natural law.聽It's
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an expectation that聽we innovate at a pace
of roughly doubling the density every two
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years. All of those things allow us to offer
better products,聽allow us to offer cheaper
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products with the same capability and that
in turn drives the demand for the overall
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industry. That means that we've got to be
able to cram in, more and more functionality
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per square millimeter on a chip. All the designs and
streets and everything have to be smaller
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and smaller in dimensions. Moore's Law has
been predicted to be dying for a long time
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and yet it never is. Because each generation
of engineers knows it's their expectation
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to keep working on it, to keep going at a
certain pace. The core technique at the heart
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of this expectation is called photolithography.聽It鈥檚
a chip manufacturing process that鈥檚 similar
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to darkroom photography, but instead of a
negative for a picture, they鈥檙e using something called
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a mask or reticle to expose a geometric print.聽It's
basically a projection system where we have
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a light source, a mask or reticle, which is
the blueprint, then the wafer. And we have
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to manage the light on the way through to
get a perfect reproduction of that pattern
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on a silicon wafer. That enables you to build
all of the billions of transistors that you
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need in order to make a functional chip. The
light sources are lasers, created from a mixture
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of gases, like carbon dioxide or argon fluoride.
When excited by an electric current, the gas
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molecules will emit laser radiation that are
then tuned to a specific wavelength that imprints
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the chip design.聽There鈥檚 a drive to get
the light source to shorter and shorter wavelengths,
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because the shorter it gets, the more transistors
you can cram onto a chip.聽In terms of the
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electromagnetic spectrum, what we can see
visibly is about 400 and 650 nanometers.聽The
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chip industry鈥檚 gone from 365 nm wavelengths
to 248 nanometers to something called聽argon
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fluoride immersion. So argon fluoride refers to a wavelength, 193 nanometers.
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It is produced using a deep
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ultraviolet laser light source. The industry
tried to go to 157 nanometer light, and that
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failed after companies had invested hundreds
of millions of dollars in it. The field then had
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to invent new technical tricks for the
systems in use today.聽They actually put water
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in between the bottom lens element and the
wafer, because the wavelength of light in
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water is quite a bit shorter. When I first
heard about it, I thought it was just crazy.
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You're going to get water all over the stages,
and the electronics inside the tool. There
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was some very clever engineering that allowed
them to contain that water in a little puddle
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as the wafer is going back and forth at about 700 millimeters a second.
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But that turns out to be coming near the end of
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its ability to produce even finer and finer
features. So to keep Moore鈥檚 Law on track
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without breaking the laws of physics, chip
manufacturers have been racing聽to bring this
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technology online: Extreme Ultraviolet
Lithography.聽It takes the wavelength of light
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from 193 nanometers down to 13.5.聽The jump
is much larger than what we would normally
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do. And that's partly because it's more of
a disruptive technology.聽The first academic
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work on EUV was done in 1986, when I was still
an undergraduate in college. Through my whole
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career, we've been hearing that EUV was coming.
There was so many fundamental problems with
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using these soft x-ray wave lengths for a
lithography tool. We're down to the point
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where the amount of variation can be measured
in atoms. And so you have to work very hard
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to have a control of those dimensions. And
that is where ASML comes in.聽ASML is the
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most important tech company you've never heard
of. We build the big machines that make small
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chips. EUV was a massive step for us to undertake.
Not only did we need to have an entirely new
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scanner because we had to work in a vacuum
and at wavelengths where you need to have
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only reflective optics which required a huge
amount of innovation.聽But we also needed
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a new light source as well. In fact, it's
the first time ever, that we've needed to
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change the light source and huge elements
of the scanner design at the same time. But
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for this story, we鈥檙e just going to focus
on the lasers.聽Here鈥檚 how they work in
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the machine.聽The source of the light is a
tiny little droplet of tin. They're smaller
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than the diameter of a human hair in which
we fire across the vessel and then we intercept
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those with a pulsed laser beam of very high
power.聽And I have to hit it with an accuracy
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of just a few microns even though it's traveling
at, let me say at the speed in excess of the speed limit.
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It forms a plasma that emits EUV light. There's
a collector mirror that collects that light
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and sends it into the scanner. Then there
are four mirrors that essentially shape that
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light into a slit that bounces off the reticle.聽You
will see a reticle stage doing this, and a
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wafer stage doing this. And what is happening
is step and scan. Which basically means we
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continue to reproduce that particular pattern
over and over again.聽Just to give you a sense
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of the mechanical complexity even, the wafer
stage itself is something like 200 kilograms
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in weight and yet it's able to accelerate
faster than a fighter jet.
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The thing that probably had people the most skeptical was, getting the power on the source up. When we
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started out we didn't generate the power that
we wanted and we struggled at the beginning
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to understand why. Every year it was slipping
out, and the actual power we were getting
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was stuck around very low levels, impractical
levels.聽We continued to dive into looking
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more fundamentally at the basic plasma physics.
What were we missing? It was around about
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2015 where we finally unlocked the secret.
It's all about exactly controlling how you
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deliver that energy to the droplet and then
how you would deliver it to the tin afterwards.
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It becomes very critical in pushing that conversion
efficiency up. You don't just need to hit
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the tin droplet with one laser pulse but,
in fact, two. The first of those pulses, shapes
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the target in a way that enables us to get
this high conversion efficiency and then the
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second pulse of course, generates that very
hot plasma that we need for generating 13.5
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nanometers at high power. Once we crested
that, it became, I wouldn't say easy, but
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at least we saw the path and we were able
to make changes to the system and we could
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see the immediate benefit. We actually still do
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work looking at how do we continue to push
the power and the features of the light source
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that will support future scanners. Bunny suits
are required around these precision tools,
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because the tiniest particle could kill a
wafer pattern.
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The major
source of particles in a clean room is actually
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the people. The equipment generally, unless
something is actually scraping, something's
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misadjusted, they don't generate particles.
The bunny suits are to protect the tools,
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and the wafers from the contamination.聽Here
we have, largely the manufacturing activities
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as associated with the droplet generator.
We also have an area we call integration where
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we look at the entire source and how it performs.
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When you go in to look at an EUV source, you see
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a large vessel with lots of interconnection
everything. We have gas, power, water, etc.
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that's needs to be delivered. We'll
see a beam transport system. So where we actually
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bring the high power laser beam into the vessel.
ASML has been shipping this machine to chip
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manufacturers and it takes 40 freight containers,
spread over 20 trucks and 3 cargo planes just
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to ship one of them.聽This is an army of people
putting things together and pushing the edge
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of technology to make it work at all. And
then of course having to make it work day
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in and day out.The EUV scanner is the most
technically advanced tool of any kind, that's
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every been made. It's so far from normal human
experience.聽I can't think of anything that
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has pushed the envelope in so many areas.
There were many knowledgeable people
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in the field who just said. "You can never
make a practical tool this way." We're just
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starting to enter into high volume manufacturing
with EUV powered scanners and in fact, we're
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just starting to see some end products that
are actually coming out that have chips that
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have been enabled by EUV technology. There's
an insatiable amount of data, so you can build
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chips to store data, process data, move data
around. The whole cloud is lots and lots of
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chips, doing all three of those things.聽I
was talking with some people that are building
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the next particle accelerators and they're
going to generate trillions of events every
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second. And there's no way to make sense of
all of that even with this generation
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of computers. So you've got to go build ever
faster computers, larger data storage, just
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to make sense of the science that's going
on. Part of predicting the future is around
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diagnosing trends in technology. If you don't
know what the future holds, are you afraid
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of that or are you encouraged by it? And I'm
in the category of being encouraged by it聽because
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there's things to do that you haven't done
before, things to create that you haven't
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created before. And then you may not set out
to change the world, but we changed the world
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one step at a time.
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