Editor's Choice


From the editor's desk: Could X-ray lithography disrupt the economics of advanced chip manufacturing?

EMP 2026 Electronics Manufacturing & Production Handbook Editor's Choice

Advanced semiconductor manufacturing is currently dominated by two companies, TSMC and ASML, with Samsung and Intel operating at a smaller scale. TSMC (Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company) operates numerous fabs and R&D facilities globally including Taiwan, the USA and Japan and is currently the largest contract chipmaker. ASML, a Dutch company headquartered in Veldhoven, Netherlands, builds the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems needed to fabricate the world’s most advanced chips.


Peter Howells, Editor

For many years, these companies and others have pushed the boundaries of chipmaking with ever-decreasing sizes of chip transistors, the building block of modern computing. Around six years ago, 10 - 14 nm fabrication was common at the leading edge. Since then, EUV lithography has enabled a rapid transition to 5 nm and 3 nm nodes, with 2 nm now in production.

However, the current model of advanced semiconductor manufacturing may be approaching a technical breakpoint. Advanced chips are defined by how small their transistor features are, and lithography is the most critical and expensive step in producing them. Today’s leading-edge chips rely on EUV lithography, a technology so complex that only ASML can currently build the machines. As features shrink further, manufacturers are forced to use multi-patterning, which increases cost, complexity, and defect risk.

Despite technical progress such as High-NA EUV, which is used for fabrication around the 2 nm region, the economics are worsening. These future leading-edge fabs are expected to cost around 10 - 20x more than current fabs, concentrating advanced chip production into the hands of a few massive players and locking out smaller companies and new entrants.

However, a new US-based company calling themselves Substrate has vowed to shake things up with their proposed X-ray lithography. X-rays have much shorter wavelengths than EUV, theoretically allowing much smaller features to be printed in a single exposure. While X-ray lithography has existed in theory for decades, it was previously impractical due to the need for massive synchrotrons and the difficulty of controlling X-rays.

Substrate claims recent advances in compact particle accelerators, optics, and materials now make X-ray lithography feasible inside a factory-scale tool. Their system reportedly uses a compact accelerator to generate X-rays within the lithography machine itself. The company claims to have demonstrated printing of 12 nm features suitable for sub-2 nm transistors, and single patterning for all layers, avoiding costly multi-patterning. They also claim feature consistency across a wafer with an accuracy of around 0,25 nm.

Unlike ASML, Substrate does not want to sell its machines. Rather, it intends to build its own fabs in the USA and operate as a foundry. This will put it in direct competition with the likes of TSMC and Samsung. However, success is far from guaranteed. TSMC’s dominance is built on decades of process knowledge, massive scale, and learning across dozens of factories. Moving from a lab demo to high-volume, reliable manufacturing could take a decade or more, just as EUV did.

However, if X-ray lithography succeeds, the consequences could be enormous; dramatically lower costs for advanced chip manufacturing, and increased compute availability for AI and future technologies. There could also be major implications to worldwide economic power.

Advanced semiconductor manufacturing has reached a point where technical progress is increasingly constrained by economic reality. Substrate’s proposed use of X-ray lithography represents a bold attempt to reset these economics.

Whether this approach succeeds remains uncertain. The challenges of materials, yield, throughput, and manufacturing discipline are immense, and history shows that success at scale requires decades of accumulated knowledge. Yet if X-ray lithography can deliver even a portion of its promised cost and simplicity advantages, it could reshape the current semiconductor manufacturing climate.


Credit(s)



Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page

Further reading:

Designing with PCIe
Spectrum Concepts Editor's Choice Interconnection
PCI Express has become the backbone of modern high-performance systems with each new generation promising higher bandwidth, but that performance comes with a cost.

Read more...
Understanding two key tools for cleaner serial data
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Analogue, Mixed Signal, LSI
Understanding how pre-emphasis and equalisation works, and when to use one over the other, is critical when designing reliable high-speed systems.

Read more...
Connected without limits: An engineering perspective on Altron Arrow’s wireless ecosystem
Altron Arrow Editor's Choice Design Automation
Wireless connectivity is no longer a supporting technology, but rather, a core design consideration that underpins modern electronic systems across industries.

Read more...
Telemetry powering South Africa’s industry
Interlynx-SA Editor's Choice
As South Africa’s economy evolves, industries are under increasing pressure to improve operational efficiency and cut costs. Telemetry is becoming a vital component of industrial strategy, allowing companies to harness real-time data to optimise processes and reduce waste.

Read more...
AI-controlled swarms: Algorithmic warfare
Technews Publishing AI & ML
The rapid proliferation of Unmanned Aerial Systems (UAS), ranging from hobbyist quadcopters to sophisticated munitions-carrying military drones, has fundamentally altered the security landscape and come to the fore with the current war in the Middle East.

Read more...
From the editor's desk: How electronics and AI are transforming the battlefield
Technews Publishing Editor's Choice
The current war in Iran has highlighted one critical observation: electronic engineers are shaping the future of defence and in modern warfare, superiority is no longer measured in firepower, but rather in processing power.

Read more...
Engineering in a world that cannot assume connectivity
Technews Publishing Editor's Choice News
Across industrial automation, networking, and defence systems, engineers are rediscovering the importance of resilience and autonomy in an increasingly connected world.

Read more...
Designing IoT devices for deterministic LPWAN environments
Editor's Choice Telecoms, Datacoms, Wireless, IoT
Built on Ultra Narrow Band communication technology, the Sigfox network focuses on low power, wide area M2M connectivity rather than maximising data throughput.

Read more...
Driving excellence in electronics manufacturing
Jemstech Editor's Choice Manufacturing / Production Technology, Hardware & Services
Jemstech’s reputation for disciplined execution and client-focused service has earned it strong loyalty from companies operating in demanding industries.

Read more...
In sync with the line
Testerion Editor's Choice Manufacturing / Production Technology, Hardware & Services
In modern SMT lines, stencil printing must meet two requirements at the same time: it has to ensure a reproducible solder paste volume, while adhering to the specified line cycle time.

Read more...









While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd | All Rights Reserved