ASML Tweaks EUV Light for 50% Wafer Production Gain
By Reuters | 23 Feb, 2026
The Dutch lithography equipment maker has increased its machines' EUV light intensity to 1,000 watts to increase the number of wafers it can process per hour to 330 from the current 220.
Researchers at ASML Holding say they have found a way to boost the power of the light source in a key chip making machine to turn out up to 50% more chips by decade's end, to help retain the Dutch company's edge over emerging U.S. and Chinese rivals.
ASML is the world's only maker of commercial extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUV) machines, a critical tool for chipmakers such as Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Intel and others in producing advanced computing chips.
"It's not a parlor trick or something like this, where we demonstrate for a very short time that it can work," Michael Purvis, ASML's lead technologist for its EUV source light, said in an interview.
"It's a system that can produce 1,000 watts under all the same requirements that you could see at a customer," he added, speaking at the company's California facilities near San Diego.
MACHINES CRITICAL TO CHIP PRODUCTION
The EUV machines are so critical to chip production that U.S. governments of both parties have worked with Dutch leaders to prevent them from being shipped to China, spurring it to launch a national effort to build machines of its own.
In the United States, at least two startups, Substrate and xLight, have raised hundreds of millions of dollars to develop American competitors to ASML's technology, with xLight securing government funding from President Donald Trump's administration.
With the technological advance revealed on Monday, which is being reported here for the first time, ASML aims to outdistance any would-be rivals by improving the most technologically challenging aspect of the machines.
This is the quest to generate EUV light with the right power and properties to turn out chips at high volume. The company's researchers have found a way to boost the power of the EUV light source to 1,000 watts from 600 watts now.
The chief advantage is that greater power translates into the ability to make more chips every hour, helping to lower the cost of each.
Chips are printed similar to a photograph, where the EUV light is shone on a silicon wafer coated with special chemicals called a photoresist. With a more powerful EUV light source, chip factories need shorter exposure times.
"We'd like to make sure that our customers can keep on using EUV at a much lower cost," Teun van Gogh, executive vice president for the NXE line of EUV machines at ASML, told Reuters.
MACHINES COULD PROCESS 330 WAFERS AN HOUR BY 2030
Van Gogh said customers should be able to process about 330 silicon wafers an hour on each machine by the end of the decade, up from 220 now. Depending on the size of a chip, each wafer can hold anywhere from scores to thousands of the devices.
ASML got the power boost by doubling down on an approach that already places its machines among the most complex inventions of humans.
To produce light with a wavelength of 13.5 nanometers, ASML's machine shoots a stream of molten droplets of tin through a chamber, where a massive carbon dioxide laser heats them into plasma.
This is a superheated state of matter in which the tin droplets become hotter than the sun and emit EUV light, to be collected by precision optic equipment supplied by Germany's Carl Zeiss AG and fed into the machine to print chips.
The key advancements in Monday's disclosure involved doubling the number of tin drops to about 100,000 every second, and shaping them into plasma using two smaller laser bursts, as opposed to today's machines that use a single shaping burst.
"It's very challenging, because you need to master many things, many technologies," said Jorge J. Rocca, a professor at Colorado State University whose lab focuses on laser technologies and has trained several ASML scientists.
"What was achieved - one kilowatt - is pretty amazing."
ASML believes the techniques it used to hit 1,000 watts will unlock continued advances in the future, Purvis said, adding, "We see a reasonably clear path toward 1,500 watts, and no fundamental reason why we couldn't get to 2,000 watts."
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Diego; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
A view shows the logo of Dutch computer chip equipment supplier ASML, in Veldhoven, Netherlands, January 29 2025. REUTERS/Piroschka van de Wouw
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