ASML CTO s'attend à ce que la lithographie post-haute NA soit d'un coût prohibitif
En tant que tel, current orders are the priority and high-NA development might be put on the back burner if need be, or as Van den Brink puts it “today’s meal takes priority over tomorrow’s.” High-NA scanners are expected to be even more power hungry than EUV machines and are as such expected to pull around two Megawatts for the various stages. The next step in the evolution of semiconductor lithography is where ASML is expecting things to get problematic, as what the company is currently calling hyper-NA is expected to be prohibitively costly to manufacture and use. If the cost of hyper-NA grows as fast as we’ve seen in high-NA, it will pretty much be economically unfeasible,” Van den Brink said. ASML is hoping to overcome the cost issues, but for now, the company has a plan for the next decade and things could very well change during that time and remove some of the obstacles that are currently being seen.