Date Announced: 27 Feb 2020
Recognition of decades-long commitment to the semiconductor industry.
Oberkochen, Germany / San José, USA -- Winfried Kaiser, head of Product Strategy of ZEISS Semiconductor Manufacturing Technology (SMT) and, as the highest point of his professional career Fellow of the company, has been honored with the 2020 Frits Zernike Award for Microlithography of the International Society for Optics and Photonics (SPIE). Kaiser received the prize during the SPIE Advanced Lithography Conference in San José, California. The award is considered to be the highest honor in microlithography.
25 years ago, Kaiser launched the development program for lithography with extreme ultra-violet light (EUV) in Europe. Starting in 2019, EUV lithography, a revolutionary manufacturing program using a wavelength of 13.5 nanometers, has made the volume manufacture of enormously powerful microchips with extremely fine structures possible.
Kaiser was also a key figure in the development of lithography technologies such as the Deep Ultraviolet (DUV) system which are now industry standards – particularly lithography with light wavelengths of 248 and 193 nanometers as well as immersion lithography.
Dr. John Greivenkamp, President of SPIE, honored "With his technical know-how and exemplary commitment, Winfried Kaiser has advanced the development of ultra-modern lithographic optical systems including EUV lithography which has made the continuance of Moore's law possible. As well as other products, ZEISS develops and manufactures this type of lithography optics which are used in wafer scanners for the manufacture of increasingly powerful microchips.
'A source of ideas'
Professor Dr. Michael Kaschke, President and CEO of the ZEISS Group, congratulated Kaiser on the award, "Over more than 35 years Winfried Kaiser has worked his way up to the role of a designer and source of ideas who recognizes market opportunities and enjoys the greatest possible esteem among international experts. As well as contributing to global recognition of ZEISS as a technology and market leader in the field of lithography optics, he has also added impetus to greater economic value-added in innovative areas such as EUV technology."
Dr. Markus Weber, member of the ZEISS Management Board and head of the SMT segment added "Congratulations are well and truly due to Winfried Kaiser for the recognition he has just received for his outstanding contributions in the field of microlithography – a singular honor which has only been awarded to a very select group of people; it is also a significant award for a very special colleague without whom SMT would probably not be as it is today. All ZEISS lithography optics are based on his product strategy and his initiatives which demand an in-depth understanding of high-performance optics, their application and his feeling for the needs of a dynamic market and its customers."
Honor in the international arena
At the award ceremony Kaiser commented, "I am indeed pleased to receive this outstanding award. But the award is not just a tribute to me personally but also to the entire ZEISS team and management as well as our strategic partner ASML. This prize is an honor in the international arena for our ground-breaking developments in optical lithography such as EUV – this fills me with pride."
After studying physics at university Kaiser started work for ZEISS and after a range of different positions which included head of the Semiconductor Development Laboratory and Product Development he has been head of Lithography Optics Product Strategy since 2003. In 2007, he was nominated as the ZEISS Group's first Fellow, the highest level of technical ladder. One year later SPIE appointed him as a SPIE Fellow. In 2014 Kaiser received the SEMI Sales and Marketing Excellence Award.
He is the 16th person to receive the SPIE Frits Zernike Award for Microlithography since its inauguration in 2004, an honor which was also extended in 2008 to Martin van den Brink, Co-President & Chief Technology Officer von ASML. Frits Zernike, who gave his name to the award, was a Dutch chemist, physicist and mathematician who received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1953 for the invention of the phase contrast microscope. The SPIE Awards recognize and honor the outstanding contributions of individuals in the world of science.
E-mail: ilka.hauswald@zeiss.com
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