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The Extreme Engineering of ASML’s EUV Light Source 

Asianometry
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After 20+ years of development, extreme ultraviolet lithography has become a commercial reality. As I write these words, multi-million dollar machines from ASML use EUV light to create impossibly small patterns in wafers.
This technological magic requires a powerful heart inside of it. And indeed, there is an amazing system driving ASML's $150 million lithography machine: The EUV Light Source.
In this video, we are going to look at the lasers firing pulses at tin droplets to create the powerful, 13.5 nanometer wavelength light for our latest, greatest microprocessors.
Links:
- The Asianometry Newsletter: asianometry.com
- Patreon: / asianometry
- The Podcast: anchor.fm/asianometry
- Twitter: / asianometry

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7 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 596   
@Asianometry
@Asianometry 2 года назад
Subscribe! And remember to sign up to the newsletter: asianometry.substack.com/
@daviasdf
@daviasdf 2 года назад
Great content as always. One comment: Cymer is like symer, not kymer.
@Bhatakti_Hawas
@Bhatakti_Hawas 2 года назад
Now do Gigaphoton
@NPJGlobal
@NPJGlobal 2 года назад
Oh my god ,such quality niche content! what's your background and what do you work as , if I may ask? :) I might have found my new role model!
@elishmuel1976
@elishmuel1976 Год назад
SUbscribed. That was a great video expalanation!
@mohamedaboelenein7727
@mohamedaboelenein7727 Год назад
The video is absolutely amazing! 17 mins of this video is much more informative of what we learn in the obsolete uni system in years! Great job and thanks a lot!
@TheFulcrum2000
@TheFulcrum2000 2 года назад
As someone working at ASML, I can say this video is surprisingly accurate.
@dannylo5875
@dannylo5875 2 года назад
Ok. I got a question. Will future tech still require chips?
@brodriguez11000
@brodriguez11000 2 года назад
@@dannylo5875 : Maybe we'll go bio, or optical.
@TheFulcrum2000
@TheFulcrum2000 2 года назад
@@dannylo5875 For the foreseeable future, yes.
@dodgedemonsrtx
@dodgedemonsrtx 2 года назад
@@TheFulcrum2000 no u don't work there
@toomaspruuden3940
@toomaspruuden3940 2 года назад
@@brodriguez11000 This is not maybe anymore.
@Maadhawk
@Maadhawk 2 года назад
This is truly an astounding machine. Kudos to all the scientists, engineers, mathematicians, chemists, and precision fabricators for pulling it off.
@Jumpingjackflash123
@Jumpingjackflash123 3 месяца назад
Dont forget quantum physicists
@jwbowen
@jwbowen 2 года назад
Wow. I'd heard the phrase 'tin droplets" associated with EUV, but I had no idea they were using one laser pulse to create a convex target for the main pulse. That's absolutely ridiculous.
@Jacmac1
@Jacmac1 2 года назад
As an ASML employee, I can say that Cymer deserves all the credit for the light source, that's pronounced Sy-Mir. Cymer began development of EUV from a design perspective back in the mid 2000s. The reason ASML bought Cymer is that the two companies required close cooperation to develop an EUV light source/scanner system and this was technically difficult because of responsibilities to keep technology secrets.
@stuffstoconsider3516
@stuffstoconsider3516 7 месяцев назад
The German Trumpf has some serious contributions as well. They are among the leaders in their field.
@donniefeldick2428
@donniefeldick2428 4 месяца назад
Dude, why say you work there when nobody believes that about anyone just online? Just sound smart and credit real sources like physical in person training session 3302? Like I know that also sounds silly, but bro, you just sound like a random douche know it all but just saying, I was there, totally accurate and real
@kendallevans4079
@kendallevans4079 3 месяца назад
When Cymer was in it's infancy I interviewed with them. I'm a medical laser engineer (BSEE). End story was I decided I wanted to stay on the medical end of this technology and am glad I did, but who knows where I'd be if I took them up on their offer?
@BRUXXUS
@BRUXXUS 2 года назад
I has *NO* idea this is what it took to make EUV light for this manufacturing process. It's hard to believe, that out of all the people working on this, that this was the solution they landed on. Truly spectacular engineering and science. (if not straight up bonkers)
@eduwino151
@eduwino151 2 года назад
there are Chinese fanbois who believe that china can copy and build a similar machine in 2 to 4 years, this thing took 40 years from concept to prototype to working samples
@kristofferjohnsen4002
@kristofferjohnsen4002 2 года назад
@@eduwino151 Yeah but that was from scratch. You realize that with the fact that it's already been done and industrial spionage the whole equation changes, right?
@eduwino151
@eduwino151 2 года назад
@@kristofferjohnsen4002 doesnt work like that for lithography machines , minus the research and tech transfer you cant do it , China is still struggling with reliable jet engines and those are simple tech compared to semiconductors
@theicedragon100
@theicedragon100 2 года назад
@@kristofferjohnsen4002 yes because they have the basic concept down it will only take half the time 20 years.
@metatron5199
@metatron5199 2 года назад
@@eduwino151 just matters if the can steal the actual relevant information required to make the EUV, if they can it will allow them to cut the time down for their R&D…. I agree with you though about china and their problems with something relatively simple like jet engines….
@htlhausi
@htlhausi 2 года назад
I heard the quote from an involved engineer that this machine is probably the most advanced piece of hardware ever contructed by a long shot. The science and engineering involved in this is almost magic and the fact that it sattisfies serial productions demands is mindblowing. ZEISS posted several videos explaining some of the science in detail if you're interested.
@manowartank8784
@manowartank8784 Год назад
i think only some one-off marvels like space telescopes, supercoliders and fusion reactors can be described as more complex... it is indeed a feat of engineering and human ingenuity and definitelly one of - if not the most advanced industrially used machine
@CRneu
@CRneu Год назад
This is definitely up there in terms of complications, collaborations, total human-hours, etc. These machines, each one of them, are absolute mind bonkers accomplishments of engineering. I've stood beside these new EUV tools and observed them work. Knowing what's going on inside of them blows my mind. It's just incredible.
@htomerif
@htomerif 2 года назад
Your channel is one of the very few channels that bridges the gap between a good lay understanding of the semiconductor industry and a professional understanding of the semiconductor industry. Its a very rare thing to find in any field. I find it interesting that the "secret" part of "trade secrets" is becoming less and less important as a smaller and smaller number of people or corporations or nations are actually capable of making use of those secrets. I appreciate the explanations that companies like ZEISS give for the construction and function of their optical systems, but on its own it doesn't really increase your understanding of how the whole process works. I get a lot of people in the maker space asking questions like "why can't we 3d print our own microchips". This is why. There's no half-assing an EUV light source. Similarly, there's no half-assing ultra-pure water or the purity and precision of reagents and gasses used in semiconductor manufacture. One microscopic droplet of process oil in a gas stream is enough to ruin a processor, or, worse, ruin a photo-mask. If you're lacking for ideas for videos, one of the things I don't really understand well is how wafers are cut and polished. I'm assuming this has had to keep up with the process nodes as well.
@TheOnlyDamien
@TheOnlyDamien 2 года назад
I love that as well it's like "Yeah here's our secrets and research, the fuck you gonna do with this info?". Not that there aren't things to keep secure but still it's insane the degree of advancement you need to be to even begin dreaming of technology such as this even with all of the information on how to do it at your feet, what an astounding technological and international effort it was to get here. (Also amazingly explained as always by Asianometry)
@Asianometry
@Asianometry 2 года назад
The wafer video is done. It’ll be out in a few weeks.
@htomerif
@htomerif 2 года назад
@@Asianometry Cool! The last I remember about how wafers were cut it involved reels of wire with diamond powder bonded to it. I'd guess there were some kind of acid washing and polishing stages after that. I could probably look it up but I won't. You seem to have a good understanding of the supply dynamics and political interactions that influence the semiconductor industry and thats an important part that wikipedia and research papers aren't even going to touch.
@eone199
@eone199 2 года назад
makers are just makers, probably half of them do not study deeply about EE, do not hold a degree of anything related to it, or even something related with physics of semiconductor.. no wonder that question comes up 😂
@htomerif
@htomerif 2 года назад
@@eone199 I think people get the impression that Moore's law somehow applies to 3d printing. We've been stuck at (optimistically) 100 microns for 20 years for 3d printing and 10 microns for 2d printing for about the same amount of time. For me I guess its interesting to think of how you could pull off making functional electronics "at home" but you're talking about combining molecular beam epitaxy and electron beam lithography and nanometer scale additive manufacturing (which doesn't exist yet, we're still at the micron scale even in research) and now you need tubomolecular pumps and far beyond reagent grade materials and high end CNC machine tools. So I think you could make your own processor as long as you were willing to invest your life savings in a machine that could produce 1 questionable quality processor per week at a running cost of a thousand dollars a piece. For the record, though, we're sitting at the 5nm node right now (which doesn't mean 5nm at all, but that's another story) and electron beam lithography has been able to produce sub 10nm features in semiconductors since the mid 1990's. A lot of progress has been made in industry and mass production but in terms of the academic research leading it, far less progress has been made than people assume.
@rda4140
@rda4140 2 года назад
This makes landing rockets sound like child's play! Mind blowing science and engineering!
@rda4140
@rda4140 2 года назад
Looking forward to the Komatsu/Gigaphoton approach video.
@ParameterGrenze
@ParameterGrenze 11 месяцев назад
I think it’s in the same ballpark. I wonder how one would quantify that though. And I wonder what other projects play in these league. CERN probably ?
@asmael666
@asmael666 Год назад
Totally insane. Everywhere else in physics, synchrotron radiation is appreciated for its narrow spectrum. But for this application, it has too wide of a spectrum. Incredible.
@hdot2613
@hdot2613 Год назад
The synchrotron frequency spectrum IS narrow. The video claims that it has too broad of an angular field of view.
@pakkisid
@pakkisid 6 месяцев назад
Too divergent spatially
@PPIMAGEFACTORYDOTCOM
@PPIMAGEFACTORYDOTCOM Год назад
I work in the world of cinematography lighting, while I do have a knowledge of « light » and a very basic understanding of laser chemistry I am far far from being an optics engineer or physics expert…. YET the way in which you present and explain the industry needs, challenges, mitigations and solutions were EXTREMELY clear and easy to process….and in the end, HIGHLY ENJOYABLE and EDUCATIONAL. Thank you for the video and for teaching a 58year old man about something so intricate and intriguing. MORE PLEASE !
@MoritzvonSchweinitz
@MoritzvonSchweinitz 2 года назад
It boggles the mind how many billions of dollars the information conatined in this video would have been worth even 10 years ago!
@eduwino151
@eduwino151 2 года назад
nope the basic info of EUV has been freely available for years how to build the stuff that makes it work that is where the money is and nobody knows how those companies that supply those parts do it exactly
@metatron5199
@metatron5199 2 года назад
@@eduwino151 exactly, that’s why the specialized physicist get paid the big bucks to do this work, no way around it…
@itisinfactpaul2868
@itisinfactpaul2868 2 года назад
@@eduwino151 Sure, but the point of the video isn't that the important technologies (prepulse tin) are theoretically possible, but that they ended up being the best way to go. If you could have told tsmc 10 years ago that those two technologies were the solution and to just drop everything else there, I'm sure the value could be measured in the billions.
@faithnfire4769
@faithnfire4769 2 года назад
@@itisinfactpaul2868 Insert head Engineer/manager. "And that's why I get paid what I do" The clip of the CEO in that wall street movie from a few years back.
@eightmilesupwind9030
@eightmilesupwind9030 2 года назад
The quality of videos from Asianometry has always been ASTOUNDING! The research thorough. The presentation clean and engaging. THANK YOU!
@jon649
@jon649 2 года назад
Incredible video! I would say it's your best one until now. It's nice how you went super deep in the subject (for a youtube video) keeping everything clear. Props. Keep up the good work.
@kuantumdot
@kuantumdot 2 года назад
Thank you for putting this content together! This clearly shows the insane amount of engineering and science laying the behind the piece of electronics on our hands today.
@PartTimeLaowai
@PartTimeLaowai 2 года назад
Well now I don't feel so bad that my DIY EUV machine was a total failure.
@villageidiot8194
@villageidiot8194 2 года назад
While browsing Gigaphoton's site, its EUV is definitely different, as it's using magnetic fields to direct the tin debris/ions away from the mirror. But it lists a mirror lifespan of >3 months, how will it compare to ASML 1 year replacement life for its mirrors
@L1m3r
@L1m3r 2 года назад
At that point in this clip that was my first thought on what the solution might/would be. I could've understood magnetic mirrors/lenses for debris/ion mitigation better than the hydrogen gas (or how Asianometry did(n't) explain it in this clip).
@No0dz
@No0dz 2 года назад
What an amazing explanation of an incredibly complex process. For all the advances in computational modeling, there are still many applications where empirical experiments are still necessary, and it’s in this intersection of empirical and theoretical research that a lot of amazing solutions come up
@steeletait1254
@steeletait1254 2 года назад
Hello! What a very well put together video I’m very impressed. I currently work for trumpf on the co2 drive laser. Ive sent this video to the recruitment agency who hired me they always send applicants videos like this to prep before hand
@riprod720
@riprod720 Год назад
Please, develop more robust RF generators. Reverse power shouldn't kill them that quickly 😆
@fnw65
@fnw65 2 года назад
Mindblowing! Both the engineering behind EUV lithography and the quality of your videos buddy!
@artiem5262
@artiem5262 2 года назад
When I was a physics student some decades ago, a wavelength of 13.5nm was considered "soft X-rays." But "EUV laser" is a lot more palatable than "X-ray laser" I guess...
@MarcusMedomRyding
@MarcusMedomRyding 2 года назад
If we had kept the maser/laser naming scheme alive, we could have had xasers 🥺 Edit: but after watching this video, it doesn't seem to be an actual laser? I think they just use a laser to produce the plasma, but the plasma itself doesn't lase(?)
@Jaker788
@Jaker788 2 года назад
@@MarcusMedomRyding Correct, they laser a droplet of tin or something and that produces the EUV
@inomo
@inomo 2 года назад
It is indeed soft x-rays. Extreme UV is a marketing term. So, you are right, it's a more palatable term.
@BRUXXUS
@BRUXXUS 2 года назад
@@inomo Naming on the EM spectrum seems similar to the musical scale. Soft X-ray and EUV are the same, similar to how Eb and D# are the same. 😅 That’s how I look at it.
@CB-td4ck
@CB-td4ck 2 года назад
Yeah it's not so much a laser as pulsed coherent light.
@renardrougesombre
@renardrougesombre Год назад
Awesome work, again! I was employed in some sections of semiconductor industry and I'm very glad to find such very understandable videos about highly complex themes without the common inaccuracy of modern days medias. Thanks for your work!
@theknifedude1881
@theknifedude1881 2 года назад
Thank you so much for the educational videos. I don’t begin to understand a lot of what you present, but I always feel that I have gained something valuable. A few weeks ago I decided to cancel my cable service and put @ least that much money into Patreon, to support the creators of the RU-vid channels I enjoy. Asianometry is one of the first channels I felt I needed to support. Thanks again.
@Evergreen64
@Evergreen64 2 года назад
This is great. I don't think I have seen all this information covered in a single source before. Now I really understand why these machines are so expensive and take so long to make.
@howyoudoin2069
@howyoudoin2069 9 месяцев назад
After watching almost all your videos I signed up to your newsletter. Your channel is amazing and your humour is so sharp 😂 I wish I could support you more. Keep up the great work. Cheers. Glen from Sydney.
@WesstLmfao
@WesstLmfao 2 года назад
you make the best content on RU-vid. Absolutely unrivaled in production quality and the topics
@covert0overt_810
@covert0overt_810 2 года назад
Another home run --- every single one of your videos are gold.
@mohamedaboelenein7727
@mohamedaboelenein7727 Год назад
The video is absolutely amazing! 17 mins of this video is much more informative of what we learn in the obsolete uni system in years! Great job and thanks a lot!
@djnavari
@djnavari 2 года назад
Fantastic, another example of why I am a happy Patreon supporter. Great place to learn!
@richteffekt
@richteffekt Год назад
Big fan of your channel after checking out a good portion of it. I have to say thank you for enlightening me to some truly tectonic movements in science and industry both historically and currently.
@FW190D9
@FW190D9 2 года назад
This Video Explained it completely !! Thanks for making it !!!
@AmusicsiteCoUk
@AmusicsiteCoUk 2 года назад
What an amazing system and great job at explaining it so simply.
@jimturpin
@jimturpin 2 года назад
Wow! This video sort of flipped my world of understanding regarding chip manufacture upside down. We've come a long way since discovering fire and casting shadows on the cave wall.
@letthetunesflow
@letthetunesflow 2 года назад
Amazing video! Thank you! This was so well explained! The quality of research you put in could not have been easy to parse, let alone explain, especially in such a way a dumb dumb like me can even attempt to grasp! Bravo, and thank you! I have always been fascinated by the EUV topic, but have Found it either impenetrable, or incredibly surface level, and lacking the depth and explanation of each step of the process. Then you went even above and beyond by explaining the problems faced at each step in the design history! I don’t even wanna know how many white papers and documents you must have had to go through researching just one of these videos! P.S. On a side note: What was your research process, and how many papers did you have to read on average to write each of these scripts John?! I have become absolutely fascinated by the work involved in your script and writing&research process, almost more than the topic of the videos at this point! Care to share a little bit about that? I’m sure many others would love to know as well! Many subscribers must find the process as astonishing as I do! Thanks again!
@doniherald7745
@doniherald7745 Год назад
this is the most detailed how ASML EUV works. finally i found it, thanks.
@bakedbeings
@bakedbeings 2 года назад
Fantastic explanation once again, thanks John 🙏
@michaelrenper796
@michaelrenper796 2 года назад
@17:00 "This last paragraph sounded like a dialogue from a Star Trek movie." You got me here. I was depressed over quarrel with a landlord, you saved my day.
@ngocbui3761
@ngocbui3761 Год назад
Thank you for the deep coverage of the technology. I enjoyed it very much. Great work. You’ve earned a new subscriber.
@avinashdas1013
@avinashdas1013 2 года назад
Very awesome technology analysis. Great video. Love ❤️
@Noisy_Cricket
@Noisy_Cricket 2 года назад
The fact this works at all is mind blowing.
@CBaggers
@CBaggers 2 года назад
That is bonkers. Utterly mind-blowing machine. I love this channel.
@michaeldomansky8497
@michaeldomansky8497 2 года назад
Outstanding presentation! Thanks!
@jacobmcdonald2907
@jacobmcdonald2907 2 года назад
Love your videos! You always seem to find the right topics
@pdsnpsnldlqnop3330
@pdsnpsnldlqnop3330 2 года назад
Brilliant episode, thanks!
@PalCan
@PalCan 2 года назад
Brilliant! I absolutely love high tech like this and you've been able to put it all in simple words for a lay man like me. I knew that ASML machines are notoriously difficult to manufacture, but didn't know the details behind it. Thank you for sharing
@scottfranco1962
@scottfranco1962 2 года назад
That was an awesome overview of the ASML system, thank you. On to 200k.
@billmichae
@billmichae Год назад
Superb presentation!
@fugehdehyou
@fugehdehyou 2 года назад
Bro I’ve been following you since you had no subs. You turned 100 to 149k subs real quick! Let’s see that writing style, in-depth analysis and entertaining commentary turned up! Let’s go 200k!
@Asianometry
@Asianometry 2 года назад
Thanks for watching!
@wildweasel3001
@wildweasel3001 Год назад
Machines like that definitely make fusion feel achievable
@petebuttons210
@petebuttons210 2 года назад
As a lens technician I found this video very interesting. Great work.
@peterfranz286
@peterfranz286 2 года назад
Great conclusion paragraph- very stylish
@dukephuongnguyen2053
@dukephuongnguyen2053 Год назад
Great video. Thank you for the knowledge. Will watch your other videos and I will continue to learn
@truefan1367
@truefan1367 2 года назад
Extreme is an understatement. All this to only create a specific light is INSANE!
@TheNefastor
@TheNefastor 2 года назад
Whenever I see the innards of an ASML stepper, it makes me think of those hugely complicated machines they used to keep Akira cryogenized.
@00bean00
@00bean00 Год назад
Is there one here? Time, pls?
@MenkoDany
@MenkoDany 2 года назад
As a programmer, few of the many university lectures on how cpus/silicon circuits work enlightened me about how it all truly works as much as your channel has!
@ParameterGrenze
@ParameterGrenze 11 месяцев назад
I am always intimidated by real engineers on this level of proficiency. With software development, you always have comparatively more margin for errors when you design a system. Engineering like this that requires you to get things right on the first try with so much investment involved is crazy.
@williamsellner8855
@williamsellner8855 2 года назад
You do such a good job always a pleasure watching
@SiddharthMathur2k007
@SiddharthMathur2k007 2 года назад
Very awesome and engaging documentary! 👌🏼 Channel subscribed!
@Manhattan_69
@Manhattan_69 2 года назад
Loved ur way of explaining things ❤️.
@tim_d_jong
@tim_d_jong 2 года назад
Great job of ASML ! 🇳🇱
@TCDooM
@TCDooM 2 года назад
Thanks. Awesome learning about what seems to be one of the most complicated engineering by humans.
@shangtsung2450
@shangtsung2450 2 года назад
Thank you for posting this. I'm looking forward to see your video on Gigaphoton.
@ufox77
@ufox77 2 года назад
Fantastic video, thank you.
@richardbates6311
@richardbates6311 2 года назад
Good job on the video - keep-em coming!
@simonbrown8509
@simonbrown8509 2 года назад
Very good video, many thanks indeed.
@brad9529
@brad9529 2 года назад
Cool best information on this tech to date, thanks for your attention to details 😀
@bassmechanic237
@bassmechanic237 2 года назад
Thank you for these amazing topics you cover.
@odaialzrigat
@odaialzrigat 2 года назад
Amazing content, wish you talked more about Cymer as a company.
@PlanetFrosty
@PlanetFrosty 2 года назад
The most interesting thing is that light hold the key to the next phase of electronics or photonics more properly, as we now are at the cusp of digital optical transistors and Qbit transistors made from light sensitive protein. This is my companies work and we’ll be coming to Taiwan soon to bring these to production reality. Our work will include super computer for development, laboratory and more.
@G4m3G3ni3
@G4m3G3ni3 2 года назад
Please elaborate more. One question I have would be if in your opinion we could see such a product in a niche application on the market that would be better in one or multiple categories than traditional silicon and what those categories would most likely be and how this would be achieved compared to the present. Or do you have some whitepaper or Research-/Businessplan I could read to catch up on?
@apptouchtechnologies3722
@apptouchtechnologies3722 2 года назад
Sign me up for an SDK…..
@TheAlgorath
@TheAlgorath 2 года назад
A) Holy Shit B) Can they run Crisis?
@dannylo5875
@dannylo5875 2 года назад
please elaborate. You do have a tech company doing this?
@rcjic26
@rcjic26 2 года назад
This was amazing, super informative, and now I am going to build the first ultra extreme UV lithography system to etch sub-nm level siliconj wafers. Ha-ha-ha!!! Maybe not but I wish I could be a dust particle to be there when it is achieved and see first light. Thank you for your hardwork and clear explanations. ASML is an incredible company. Feed me more, feed me more information - insatible seeker of understanding and knowledge. Time to become a patreon.
@kenoliver8913
@kenoliver8913 Год назад
Your best and most insightful post so far. I particularly liked the conclusion, because it is something I have spent a career arguing in a quite unrelated field. The guys who control the money in this world (including government money) underrate the importance of getting the theoretical basic science right for industrial R&D. Engineers who say "best to just do a seat of the pants trial and error approach" really do not understand how technology actually works.
@mm-qd1ho
@mm-qd1ho 2 года назад
Well done video! Really good
@ChristophFretter
@ChristophFretter 2 года назад
Thank you for this great video!
@ddegn
@ddegn 2 года назад
At 16:51 you said *"the modern day moon landing."* Just moments before I was thinking *'This makes the moon landing look easy.'* Thanks for another interesting video.
@theoriginaltoadnz
@theoriginaltoadnz 2 года назад
This was very interesting. Thankyou.
@stachowi
@stachowi 2 года назад
great video, especially at the end
@Carstuff111
@Carstuff111 Год назад
And this is just one of many reason why I have been into physics and all the sciences since I was a kid!
@surewill8190
@surewill8190 2 года назад
very interesting stuff , love the vids , please do the video on GIGAPHOTON approach as well
@paulpedersen1329
@paulpedersen1329 2 года назад
OMG. This is far beyond what I had imagined.
@IAmNumber4000
@IAmNumber4000 2 года назад
Kinda want to find one of these ultra-clean mirrors and lay a big greasy fingerprint on it
@mathewschau9361
@mathewschau9361 Год назад
I got the opportunity to hack apart one of the tin covered mirrors in my undergrad. Unintentional tin coating is still very much an issue today
@ThisIsANameBruh
@ThisIsANameBruh 2 года назад
This reminds me of a scene in the Expanse season 4 where the Rocinante's reactor stops producing plasma from fuel pellets. It literally shows a pellet falling and lasers hitting it but failing to create plasma.
@m2heavyindustries378
@m2heavyindustries378 2 года назад
Inertial confinement fusion!!! I was also just reminded of that from this video
@tylerdurden3722
@tylerdurden3722 2 года назад
There are prototype machines that does this. (not successful enough though)
@allenhr325
@allenhr325 Год назад
Thank you for sharing this
@davidmurray3685
@davidmurray3685 8 месяцев назад
Just subscribed to your channel based on this amazing video. This was brilliant. Thank you 💡💡🙏🙏
@Geogrn
@Geogrn 2 года назад
The quality of videos from Asianometry has always been ASTOUNDING! The research thorough. The presentation clean and engaging
@kezmantun
@kezmantun 2 года назад
fantastic video!
@tzwalter
@tzwalter 2 года назад
wow, great video. so interesting
@wilman_studio
@wilman_studio 2 года назад
I’ve never clicked on something so fast! Excited to watch this :)
@Candyapplebone
@Candyapplebone 2 года назад
Hitting liquid tin droplets 💧 with two separate lasers simultaneously at perfectly calculated angles, 80 times a second, to create a light conversion efficiency six times greater than the YAG laser… WOW
@cbaurtx
@cbaurtx Год назад
50000 times a second, not 80!
@robertmorin6495
@robertmorin6495 Год назад
Wow, I didn't know this had been achieved. I remember reading a bit about the promise of Xenon years ago. I was unaware what was going on with tin. I was always interested in mirror making for telescopes. To think that the first pulse creates a curved surface is amazing. Then the second pulse strikes this curved surface squarely to create EUV....WOW! What an incredible accomplishment....
@curtislavoie2242
@curtislavoie2242 2 года назад
What a great video, thank you. I made the first sets of air bearings that the laser assembly rides in so it can be steered at the tin. I honestly had no idea the scope of this project was so massive. Cymer found a little company in NH called Nelson Air. It was a big project for our 4 man shop. One of the more challenging things I’ve machined.
@Candyapplebone
@Candyapplebone 2 года назад
Air bearings… Didn’t even know such a thing exists
@CATASTEROID934
@CATASTEROID934 Год назад
If you're at liberty to, please tell us more it sounds fascinating
@edstud1
@edstud1 Год назад
Amazing how scientists and engineers can push the boundaries of technology!
@The16979
@The16979 2 года назад
Nice explanation
@anirbankanungoe8020
@anirbankanungoe8020 2 года назад
Great video
@saretgnasoh7351
@saretgnasoh7351 2 года назад
OMG, truly ASTOUNDING 😱😱
@runthejules91
@runthejules91 5 месяцев назад
2 years on you almost got the 20k likes :) Love your content brother!
@danis8455
@danis8455 Год назад
You make excellent content!
@stevengill1736
@stevengill1736 2 года назад
Phenomenal to me that they're doing lithography
@Jaker788
@Jaker788 2 года назад
Now just imagine how they were doing things like 7nm with 193nm light on DUV. Double patterning and weird interference patterns on the mask, Intel tried quad patterning on their original 10nm design but it introduces too many opportunities for error. Although they had many other issues/techniques that ended up abandoned like contact over gate (a very dense transistor design that was too sensitive to defects and was switched out for gate all around)
@tylerdurden3722
@tylerdurden3722 2 года назад
@@Jaker788 it's like trying to do brain surgery with a battleaxe.
@fugehdehyou
@fugehdehyou 2 года назад
That’s crazy. Shoot a pre-pulse then smack it with a big pulse. That’s straight laser DP right there no cap 🤣
@sleeptyper
@sleeptyper 2 года назад
20+ kW in, 250W out. Oh well, at least the factory has no problem heating the place.
@TheFatblob25
@TheFatblob25 Год назад
Almost unbelievable that these kinds of machines can be dreamed up, fabricated & assembled, fine tuned & then work.
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