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Reading: Sub-1nm Process Technology Won’t Arrive Till 2034, Logic Roadmap Highlights 2D FETs For 0.2nm & Sub 0.2nm Nodes By 2043-2046
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Hispanic Business TV > Business > Tech > Sub-1nm Process Technology Won’t Arrive Till 2034, Logic Roadmap Highlights 2D FETs For 0.2nm & Sub 0.2nm Nodes By 2043-2046
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Sub-1nm Process Technology Won’t Arrive Till 2034, Logic Roadmap Highlights 2D FETs For 0.2nm & Sub 0.2nm Nodes By 2043-2046

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Last updated: May 3, 2026 7:58 am
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Contents
It will Be Years Before Process Technology Go Sub-1nm, But They Are In Development: 0.7nm by 2034 & <0.2nm by 2046Moore’s Law Continues To Live On, But At A Slower PaceThe Sub-2nm EraThe Sub-1nm Era

Moore’s Law has slowed down, but progress continues in logic development as a new roadmap points to sub-1nm process nodes around 2034.

It will Be Years Before Process Technology Go Sub-1nm, But They Are In Development: 0.7nm by 2034 & <0.2nm by 2046

Process technologies have slowed down as we transition into the Angstrom era. While newer nodes continue to offer uplifts, they are getting expensive to produce as the machinery needed to achieve newer designs comes at higher costs. Furthermore, the reliance on chiplets through advanced package solutions has reduced the need to shift to newer nodes immediately, as the former provides a scalable and cost-effective chip design.

IMEC, the world’s largest independent research and innovation center for nanoelectronics, based primarily in Belgium, has shared its roadmap through the 2020s-2040s, highlighting the major process innovations that are expected in the semiconductor industry.

Moore’s Law Continues To Live On, But At A Slower Pace

The first roadmap highlights the Logic scaling from 1998 to 2026. From 1998 to 2010, logic density was scaling at 50% each year. This means that the area of SRAM was being halved every year, but since 2010 till 2026, we are now approaching linear scaling. This means that no significant scaling has been achieved in logic over the past few years.

But the industry itself demands more performance, and that comes through higher densities. That is where 2.5D/3D technology has shown its prowess, but there are limitations to that, too, in terms of power, temperatures, and costs. Recently, TSMC has put out its SoW (System-on-Wafer) packaging technology, which scales up the existing CoWoS (Chip-on-Wafer-on-Substrate) design, for massive compute-oriented chip designs. AI chip designs also require close coordination between the chip & memory, too, with DRAM playing an essential role in powering today’s Agentic AI needs.

But despite the reliance on chiplets and advanced packaging solutions increasing tenfold, the logic technologies will continue to evolve in the future. To highlight some of the imminent technologies, IMEC has presented its latest “Logic Device Roadmap”. The roadmap is more research-oriented and gives us a timeframe for when to expect next-gen process technologies. The year respective to the process node does not indicate a production timeframe, but links to the development completion of the technology.

The Sub-2nm Era

Looking at the roadmap, we first have the “Nanosheet” nodes, which will use Nanosheet FETs or GAA (Gate-All-Around) transistor technology. Nanosheets will start with TSMC’s N2, which rolls out this year. The process technology is already in mass production with the follow-up nodes, sub-2nm, going into production readiness state by the end of this year. TSMC and Intel plan on launching several sub-2nm technologies, including A16, A14, A13, A12 from TSMC, and 14A, along with its optimizations from Intel.

A chart titled 'Logic Device Roadmap' illustrates the progression from 'FinFET' in 2018 to '2DFET' in 2046, detailing node advancements like N7, N5, N3, and beyond, with labels highlighting innovations such as 'Power Delivery + Global Clock' and 'Wafer Back-side innovations'.

The last Nanosheet-based node is expected to be A10 around 2031, which will lead us into the sub-1nm era.

The Sub-1nm Era

For sub-1 nm process technologies, semiconductor manufacturers are expected to utilize Complementary FETs or CFETs, which take the same nanosheet technology and stack them vertically. This leads to reduced cell area and a transistor density boost. The first process node featuring CFETs is expected by 2034 and is going to offer the first sub-1 nm process tech.

The A7 (0.7nm) process technology will be followed by A5 (0.5nm) by 2036, and A3 (0.3nm) by 2040. As the CFET technology improves, we can see the transistor density of CMOS logic circuits increase by up to 80%.

Next, we will transition to the 2 Angstrom era, which will feature 2D FET technology. This is where the use of new materials will come into play to form either 2D CFETs or 2D Nanosheet structures. 2D FETs will see their first application by 2043 in an A2 (0.2nm) node, and will be followed by sub-A2 (<0.2nm) technology by 2046. Once again, the roadmap is theoretical; a lot can change in the development cycle & timeframe for each respective technology.

A line graph showing 'Metal Pitch (MP) in nm' decreases from '2nm' to 'A5/A3' as metal pitch range narrows from '24-26 nm' to '12-16 nm,' with annotations for 'Dual-Damascene & Single-Damascene' and 'Semi-damascene (Subtractive Metallization).'
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The next roadmap highlights the BEOL (Back-End-of-Line) scaling, which showcases the materials used to connect transistors. The current standard approach is Dual-Damascene & Single-Damascene, which involves copper process with a metal pitch of 24-26nm. This process will improve till 2028 and the A14 technology, seeing a reduction of pitch size to 20-22nm.

As technology evolves, 1nm and sub-1nm class nodes will transition into Semi-damascene / Subtractive Metallization approaches. Here, Ru (Ruthenium) will replace copper, forming intentional air gaps and self-aligned vias. These offer barrierless vias for reduced resistance, and less “wasted” volume for higher logic conductivity.

The next major step will be for 0.5 and sub-node technologies, which will leverage alternate materials such as Epitaxial PtCoO₂ (platinum cobalt oxide) on Sapphire, which offer exceptionally lower resistance. These will lead to ultra-low pitch sizes ranging from 16nm down to 12nm,

A presentation slide titled 'BEOL Scaling Roadmap' shows process nodes from 2025 to 2037, detailing 'Dual-Damascene & Single-Damascene' and 'Semi-damascene (Subtractive metallization)' techniques with images of 'Cu,' 'Mo,' and 'Ru' structures and captions like 'Barrierless via options: Cu, W, Mo.'
Year Node Metal Pitch (MP) Process Type Key Innovation Highlighted
2025 2 nm 24–26 nm Dual-Damascene & Single-Damascene Barrierless vias (Cu, W, Mo)
2028 A14 20–22 nm Dual-Damascene & Single-Damascene —
2031 A10 18–20 nm Transition → Semi-damascene Ru with air gaps + self-aligned vias
2034 A7 16–18 nm Semi-damascene (Subtractive) Ru with air gaps + self-aligned vias
2037 A5 / A3 12–16 nm Semi-damascene (Subtractive) Alternate metals (e.g., epitaxial PtCoO₂)

Moving gears to power technology, the roadmap covers upcoming features till 2032. The plan mainly involves moving the IVR (Integrated Voltage Regulators), currently featured on the mainboard PCB, to inside the PCB itself. These new IVRs will also help reduce voltages from 48V DC to 12V DC, and then further down to just 0.8V DC.

A slide titled 'Future: IVRs in Package, Interposer and Wafer Backside' depicts a timeline from 2025 to 2028-32 showcasing the integration of IVRs, HBM, and 3D ICs in package and board configurations.

The 2026-2027 roadmap shows IVR within the PCB of the mainboard itself. The IVR sits right below the main chip package, which houses the interposer that is allocated to various 3D ICs and DRAM packages. These solutions will be integrated within the package itself by 2028-2032, leveraging next-gen tech such as 2.5D MIM capacitors and Can/SI Power devices. Remember that MiM (Metal-in-Metal) capacitors are also being leveraged by Intel’s EMIB for 2.5D advanced packaging solutions. EMIB–T also embeds power to logic via TSVs (Through Silicon Vias).

These roadmaps go on to show that despite physical limits in traditional scaling, 3D stacking, new materials, and smart architecture will drive higher density, better performance, and efficiency for decades. This roadmap underscores strong progress in chips powering AI, HPC, and future tech.

Year Node Architecture / Transition Key Features & Innovations Technical Specifications (BEOL Wiring & Materials) Context / Notes
2018 N7 (7 nm) FinFET First mass-produced FinFET node in the roadmap; baseline for logic scaling SRAM cell area: 0.025–0.023 μm² Ongoing logic improvements
2020 N5 (5 nm) FinFET Continued FinFET scaling; major density & performance boost for AI/HPC Density/performance enhancements AI & high-performance computing focus
2023 N3 (3 nm) FinFET Final FinFET node; SRAM cell area stability maintained despite halted horizontal scaling SRAM cell area stability Start of the 3D vertical scaling era
2025 N2 (2 nm) Nanosheet FETs (GAA) First transition from FinFET to Gate-All-Around nanosheet transistors BEOL min. pitch: 24–26 nm (Cu wiring, dual/single damascene) Start of 3D vertical scaling era
2028 A14 (1.4 nm / 14 Å) Improved Nanosheet FETs (GAA) Further nanosheet optimization for higher transistor density BEOL min. pitch: 20–22 nm Continued vertical scaling
2031 A10 (1.0 nm / 10 Å) Continued Nanosheet FETs Introduction of advanced wiring materials & techniques to combat power & heat issues BEOL min. pitch: 18–20 nm; Ru (ruthenium) wiring, air gaps, subtractive manufacturing, self-aligned vias Addresses rising power consumption
2034 A7 (0.7 nm / 7 Å) CFETs (Complementary FETs) Major innovation: Vertically stacked p-channel + n-channel nanosheet FETs; 1.6–1.8× density gain over nanosheet BEOL min. pitch: 16–18 nm (Ru + air gaps + self-aligned vias) First CFET node; solves CMOS logic density limits
2037 A5 (0.5 nm / 5 Å) Continued CFETs Coordinated FEOL/BEOL optimizations for HPC; focus on power & thermal management BEOL min. pitch: 12–16 nm (R&D stage) HPC & AI performance push
2040 A3 (0.3 nm / 3 Å) Continued CFETs Higher integration level; continued 3D scaling Builds on A5 BEOL improvements Long-term density scaling
2043 A2 (0.2 nm / 2 Å) 2D FETs (first disclosure) Breakthrough: Replacement of nanosheet channels with 2D materials; ultra-high density End of the traditional FinFET era First-time public disclosure of 0.2 nm node
2046 Extends the CFET architecture with 2D channel materials Continued 2D FETs Ultimate miniaturization; maximum transistor density via 2D materials Maximized density through 2D materials & 3D interconnection Roadmap endpoint; beyond-2040s vision

News Source: 36kr


Hassan Mujtaba Photo

About the author: A Software Engineer by training and a PC enthusiast by passion, Hassan Mujtaba serves as Wccftech’s Senior Editor for hardware section. With years of experience in the industry, he specializes in deep-dive technical analysis of next-generation CPU and GPU architectures, motherboards, and cooling solutions. His work involves not only breaking news on upcoming technologies but also extensive hands-on reviews and benchmarking.

Follow Wccftech on Google to get more of our news coverage in your feeds.



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