Home business US Startup xLight Gets $40M To Tackle China In Chip Race

US Startup xLight Gets $40M To Tackle China In Chip Race

The EUV machines themselves took the chip industry decades to develop, and Europe's ASML, which xLight is partnering with on its prototype, is currently the world's only supplier.
Leaders of the U.S. startup xLight, which is developing a chip manufacturing laser, Vice President of Accelerator Systems Bruce Dunham, Vice President for Global Policy and Public Sector Partnerships Ben Purser, Vice President of Photon Systems Chris Anderson, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer Nicholas Kelez, Chief Commercial Officer Kevin Heidrich, and Vice President of Engineering and Industrialization Andrew Burrill, stand at the offices of the venture capital firm Playground Global in Palo Alto, California, U.S. in an undated handout photo. xLight/Stephanie Cowan/Handout via REUTERS
Leaders of the U.S. startup xLight, which is developing a chip manufacturing laser, Vice President of Accelerator Systems Bruce Dunham, Vice President for Global Policy and Public Sector Partnerships Ben Purser, Vice President of Photon Systems Chris Anderson, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Technology Officer Nicholas Kelez, Chief Commercial Officer Kevin Heidrich, and Vice President of Engineering and Industrialization Andrew Burrill, stand at the offices of the venture capital firm Playground Global in Palo Alto, California, U.S. in an undated handout photo. xLight/Stephanie Cowan/Handout via REUTERS

Aiming to boost US leadership in chipmaking, Silicon Valley startup xLight has raised $40 million to develop a prototype of a next-generation laser that could disrupt the global semiconductor industry, where China is rapidly expanding its presence.

The company’s laser – based on the same technologies as massive particle accelerators used by US national labs in cutting-edge physics research – will sit at the heart of what are known as extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines. EUV machines are the tools primarily responsible for the creation of smaller, faster chips.

Helping Fabs

In a world where advances in fields such as AI are determined by how many chips Nvidia and other chip companies can supply, xLight is aiming to help chip factories, called “fabs” in the industry, turn out more of the dinner-plate-sized silicon “wafers” that contain advanced chips more quickly and cheaply.

“This is the most expensive tool in the fab. It’s what drives the cost of the wafer more than any other tool in the fab, and it’s what drives capacity more than any other tool in the fab,” Nicholas Kelez, CEO of xLight, said at the company’s Palo Alto headquarters.

XLight declined to disclose its valuation. It expects to have an operational prototype in 2028.

‘Terrible Mistake’

The EUV machines themselves took the chip industry decades to develop, and Europe’s ASML, which xLight is partnering with on its prototype, is currently the world’s only supplier.

The US government has worked across multiple presidential administrations to stop EUV machines from being sent to China, with one official calling it the “single most important export control” held by the US and Europe.


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China has responded by pouring resources into the field, with a close manufacturing partner of national champion Huawei Technologies claiming breakthroughs in developing its own EUV laser and more than a dozen research papers appearing at international conferences chasing the same technological path as xLight.

A US-based firm named Cymer perfected the first EUV laser technology and was scooped up by ASML more than a decade ago for $2.5 billion, helping create ASML’s dominant position in the market.

“There was a terrible mistake made giving Cymer the ability to become a European-owned and controlled company,” said Pat Gelsinger, former CEO of Intel, who now serves as executive chairman of xLight’s board and is a general partner at Playground Global, one of xLight’s investors.

Many of xLight’s prototype components will come from US national labs as xLight works to build a supply chain in the US and allied countries.

“We can build that here, or it can be built elsewhere. China is investing heavily in this space. There’s an extraordinary backstory here that says, ‘Let’s get this one right’,” Gelsinger said.

The financing round was led by Playground Global and joined by Boardman Bay Capital Management. Morpheus Ventures, Marvel Capital, and IAG Capital Partners also joined the round.

(With inputs from Reuters)