On-Prem

Systems

Intel starts mass production on Intel 4 node using EUV in Irish fab

First Euro facility to use the next-gen lithography tech for commercial production


Intel is preparing to kickstart high-volume manufacturing at its plant in Leixlip, Ireland with the Intel 4 process, its first production node using extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography.

The Santa Clara chip biz is holding an event on Friday with CEO Pat Gelsinger and others such as Keyvan Esfarjani, chief global operations officer, to mark the official arrival of Intel 4 at its Irish facility, which will be used to make chips such as the upcoming Meteor Lake PC processors.

However, the company claimed the new manufacturing tech also ushers in "a future of other Intel products," including processors to boost artificial intelligence and improved server chips to drive datacenters. Additionally, Intel claimed the introduction of Intel 4 keeps the company on track to deliver five nodes in four years and "regain process leadership by 2025."

18 months of design and construction just to prep building to house the kit

Although development and early manufacturing of Intel 4 was performed at Intel sites in Oregon, the Leixlip fabrication plant is the company's first high-volume manufacturing location for this production node. Intel said it has spent €17 billion ($18.5 billion USD) on doubling the available manufacturing space at the site over the past several years.

The chipmaker previously said that Intel 4 will allow it deliver a 20 percent improvement in performance-per-watt over products manufactured with Intel 7, which despite the name is a 10nm process with Intel's Enhanced SuperFin transistors.

Intel 4 is made possible by EUV lithography technology, the company said. This is because EUV equipment is capable of defining chip features smaller and more precisely than previous kit using deep ultraviolet lithography (DUV). By using 13.5 nanometre wavelength light, Intel said it can make smaller features and cut down on the number of overall manufacturing steps required.

EUV lithography gear is currently produced by just one manufacturer, ASML, and Intel announced the first delivery of kit from the Dutch company to fit out its Leixlip plant last year.

Intel described it at the time as "arguably the most complicated piece of machinery humans have ever built," with 100,000 parts, 3,000 cables, 40,000 bolts and more than a mile of hosing, and said it took 18 months of design and construction activity to prepare the building to receive the machine.

Other semiconductor manufacturers such as Taiwan's TSMC have had EUV machines for some time. However, the world's largest foundry operator recently said it was putting a halt on further deliveries of some advanced chipmaking equipment in the face of uncertain market conditions.

Gartner's Alan Priestley, vice president analyst at its Emerging Technologies and Trends unit, commented: "When a fab uses EUV isn't really the issue, it's the ability to produce a given node in high volume [that is important]. If this can be done without EUV, that doesn't imply a vendor is behind another that uses EUV. "So, yes, TSMC may have used EUV on an earlier generation tech than Intel but [that] doesn't necessarily mean Intel is behind in its ability to deliver a given node. Moving forward, new nodes will need EUV and the upcoming NA-EUV." ®

Send us news
13 Comments

Intel aims to patch semiconductor skills gap with one-year cert program

New fabs won't achieve much without specialized staff to fill them

Intel CTO suggests using AI to port CUDA code to – surprise! – Intel chips

This is about ending Nvidia's vendor lock-in, insists Greg Lavender

Intel slaps forehead, says I got it: AI PCs. Sell them AI PCs

People try to put us down, talkin' 'bout ML generation

Intel thinks glass substrates are a clear winner in multi-die packaging

Don't get too excited, tech won't be ready until the end of the decade

TSMC gobbles up $430M slice of Intel's IMS Nanofab unit

Taiwanese also plot $100M investment in Arm IPO, x86 giant gets real about Thunderbolt 5

After failed takeover, Intel and Tower Semi aren't giving up on the relationship

Meanwhile, Arm suffers IPO financial muscle loss with low valuation

European Commission hits Intel with new fine over antitrust findings

What a difference a year makes: in June '22 it was asking for half a billion in interest back after a successful appeal

Core blimey, Intel's answer to AMD and Ampere's cloudy chips has 288 of them

And they're all tailored for efficiency

Intel facing worker shortage for German chip plant

Chip giant says it's still in the 'planning and design phase'

Uncle Sam is this keen to keep US CHIPS funds out of China

Meanwhile, GlobalFoundries scores $3B DoD contract to fab chips for military, aerospace

US DoD serves up $238M Chips Act funding to 8 regional hubs

Hoping to bridge the dreaded 'lab-to-fab' gap where R&D dreams go to die

Intel spices up its FPGA game with open source and RISC-V freebies

Tech buffet of updates dished out ahead of IFTD event