The World’s Most Important Machine

Course Outline

The World’s Most Important Machine tells the story of how extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography moved from a decades-long “impossible” idea into the manufacturing tool that enabled continued chip scaling. While EUV is often discussed in terms of light and optics, this course emphasizes the mechanical engineering realities that make the system work at industrial scale: ultra-stable structures that resist vibration, precision stages that accelerate at extreme rates while maintaining nanometer-level repeatability, thermal management strategies that prevent tiny temperature changes from becoming large positioning errors, and contamination-control hardware that protects delicate optics in a harsh plasma environment.

Participants will gain a practical understanding of how photolithography fits into wafer fabrication, why deep ultraviolet (193 nm) tools faced limits, and why EUV required an entirely new class of machine—one that integrates vacuum systems, precision mechatronics, high-speed motion control, and reliability engineering to run continuously in high-volume manufacturing. The course follows ASML’s path to commercialization and highlights the engineering tradeoffs, failure modes, and iterative problem-solving that turned EUV into a real-world production platform.

At the end of this course, there will be a multiple-choice, open-book quiz, which is designed to enhance your understanding of the course material.

Learning Objectives

At the conclusion of this course, the student will:

Course Content

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