Elon Musk wants to build a dirty 2nm chipmaking fab that you can smoke and eat cheeseburgers in — bets that Tesla will turn the concept of cleanrooms upside down
That is, if Tesla has its own fab.
Elon Musk this week said that the chipmaking industry builds cleanrooms in the wrong way. The head of Tesla and SpaceX promised that once Tesla builds its own 2nm-capable fab, he would eat a cheeseburger and smoke a cigar in that fab.
"I think they are getting clean rooms wrong in these modern fabs," said Elon Musk in an interview with Moonshots. "I am going to make a bet here, that Tesla will have a 2nm fab, and I can eat a cheeseburger and smoke a cigar in the fab."
Elon - “I think they’re getting clean rooms wrong in these modern (chip) fabs. I’m going to make a bet here, that @Tesla will have a 2nm fab, and I can eat a cheeseburger and smoke a cigar in the fab.” 😂😅 https://t.co/cro6t91lHuJanuary 6, 2026
When asked whether Musk had sketched Tesla's fab in his mind and whether he found a way to protect silicon wafers from cheeseburger grease, he responded that all wafers should be contained at all times. "They just maintain wafer isolation the entire time," Musk said.
A modern fab is a large, integrated manufacturing facility that encompasses ultra-clean production cleanrooms where wafers are processed; sub-fab levels housing vacuum pumps, gas handling, and exhaust systems, dedicated tool service corridors for maintenance and utilities; centralized chemical delivery and waste management infrastructure; as well as office and control areas used for administrative work, engineering, and monitoring.
Meanwhile, cleanrooms are essentially buildings within fab buildings as they are completely separated from other segments of the fab shell. Cleanliness in cleanrooms is specified by ISO Class standards that define the number of particles per cubic meter of air at different particle sizes. For example, an ISO Class 1 cleanroom allows at most 10 particles ≥0.1 µm per cubic meter and 2 larger particles, whereas an ISO Class 2 cleanroom allows up to 100 particles ≥0.1 µm per cubic meter and 38 larger particles. The most critical operations — such as EUV or DUV lithography exposures or advanced gate formation are performed in ISO Class 1 and 2 environments. By contrast, an ISO Class 3 cleanroom allows up to 1,000 particles ≥0.1 µm per cubic meter, which is still vastly cleaner than typical fab environments and common in advanced fabs for less sensitive operations.
Naturally, smoking or eating a burger in ISO Class 1 – 3 environments is absolutely not allowed, as it renders hundreds of millions or billions of particles. In fact, one human breath produces millions of particles along with moisture, not to mention organic contamination with bacteria or viruses. So, even if wafer and tool isolation is perfect, human breath (not to mention smoke or food particles) can affect the environment, which will affect ultra-sensitive EUV mirrors and perhaps fab chemistry.
Eating and smoking in other areas of the fab is also prohibited due to contamination control and safety requirements. In theory, Musk could eat a burger and smoke his cigar in office areas, which is possible even today. Still, smoking is banned in most office buildings anyway.
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This is not the first time that Elon Musk has blasted the foundry industry. While he admired Tesla's partners TSMC and Samsung Foundry, in recent months, he has criticized the foundry industry for slow fab buildout and insufficient capacities, which is slowing down the development of Musk's xAI artificial intelligence initiatives. Musk once mentioned that at some point, Tesla could build its own semiconductor production facility, but given the extreme complexity of such an endeavor, this is something that is unlikely to happen. Furthermore, given the comments made by Musk, it does not look like he had an expert-level understanding of how modern leading-edge semiconductor fabs work.
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Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.
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cyrusfox Seems absurd, while its fine while the wafers are contained, what about when you need to do maintenance and open up the tools that are part of that contained clean environment. The dirty envelope will then spill into said environment, and it will take a good deal longer to bring the tool back in defect spec. Its about layers of cleanliness, and wafers are already pretty well contained in a higher cleanroom environment then the general fab, but keeping the fab itself clean helps maintain higher level of cleanliness down the layers.Reply -
Notton So, if I'm to understand him, he wants to put the wafers inside an airtight, or dust free box, and move the box around a dirty room?Reply
Even if you were to somehow make a box that's perfectly dust free, you'd still have to open it up because EUV isn't going through a pane of glass or plastic covered in grease and dust.
So, does he want the box to open up like a pizza box, or an MD disc shutter?
Because neither of those are perfectly dust free devices. -
vanadiel007 I sometimes wonder why they claim Elon Musk is a genius, considering some of the thing she says...Reply -
-Fran- Makes sense from a Capitalist mindset: you lower the long term survability of your work force, so they can't claim retirement and/or benefits if they just drop dead before that age. And if they quit due to health issues or you fire them because the health issues are in the way, you still end up winning as a business owner.Reply
Generally, people are stupid and blind enough to allow this because "muh freedoms".
Well, natural selection and all of that I guess?
Regards. -
ezst036 When you have a guy like Elon who throws out a thousand ideas every hour, this is definitely one of the worst. It does sound like more of an off-handed comment and perhaps even a joke though.Reply
Fabs are clean rooms. So dirty is not realistic in a clean room environment. That said,
I can understand and connect with the idea underlying it though that employees might appreciate a more relaxed environment. I've worked at super-stuffy places before, it gets really old and its also morale-draining. I am not a robot. Having a cheeseburger once a month outside of the actual clean rooms would lighten the mood.
Again, it's a stupid idea. It's hard to ignore the employee morale viewpoint though. -
George³ https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/ace/ws/640/cpsprodpb/7727/production/_103330503_musk3.jpg.webpBut he also not live healthy?Reply -
Bigshrimp Whoever thinks they are and claims that Musk is a genius, is not, quite the opposite.Reply -
acprogrammer Reply
We have those already. They're called FOUPs (Front Opening Unified Pod). The cleanroom is clean, but what's inside those is even cleaner. You still need the cleanroom because at nanometer scale, you don't mess around with cleanliness. Everything matters and keeping stuff clean enough so that yield doesn't suck is already hard. And realistically, I have no idea why he thinks the cleanroom is a big deal. Yes, they're annoying to work in, but that's not where the big money and time sinks are when it comes to building a fab.Notton said:So, if I'm to understand him, he wants to put the wafers inside an airtight, or dust free box, and move the box around a dirty room?
Even if you were to somehow make a box that's perfectly dust free, you'd still have to open it up because EUV isn't going through a pane of glass or plastic covered in grease and dust.
So, does he want the box to open up like a pizza box, or an MD disc shutter?
Because neither of those are perfectly dust free devices.