Stock Markets January 28, 2026

Inside the $250 Million Lithography Machines Powering AI Chip Production

How ASML’s extreme ultraviolet systems became indispensable to advanced chipmakers and the data centre build-out

By Nina Shah NVDA
Inside the $250 Million Lithography Machines Powering AI Chip Production
NVDA

ASML's extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography tools - each costing roughly $250 million - are central to production of the most advanced semiconductors used in AI workloads. The machines' unique combination of precision optics, powerful lasers and magnetic wafer handling has made ASML the most valuable company in Europe, with demand driven by AI advances and a global expansion of data centres.

Key Points

  • ASML holds a monopoly on EUV lithography machines, which are essential for producing the most advanced semiconductors used in AI workloads - impacting the semiconductor manufacturing and technology hardware sectors.
  • The machines combine high-power lasers, ultra-smooth vacuum mirrors and magnetic wafer handling to pattern circuitry at a 13 nanometre EUV wavelength, supporting sophisticated AI chip designs - relevant to capital equipment suppliers and chip fabricators.
  • EUV systems are assembled in the Netherlands and transported in around 40 containers on 747 cargo planes to major foundries such as TSMC and other global chipmakers, linking logistics and aviation support to the semiconductor supply chain.

ASML has emerged as a linchpin in the global semiconductor supply chain thanks to its monopoly on extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography systems - enormous, highly specialised machines that cost about $250 million apiece and are essential for manufacturing the most advanced chips used in artificial intelligence applications.

These systems underpin a large portion of ASML’s business, with demand concentrated among manufacturers producing AI-focused semiconductors. Customers include Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC), which fabricates chips for Nvidia, along with South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix, U.S. firms Intel and Micron, and Japan's Rapidus. The rapid pace of AI development, coupled with global investment in data centres, has been a major factor pushing chipmakers to purchase these tools.


How the machines work

EUV lithography systems are physically imposing: roughly the size of a school bus and with a mass of about 150 tons. Yet they operate at a scale of detail measured in nanometres. The EUV wavelength employed by these machines is 13 nanometres - to put that in perspective, a human hair measures in the order of 80,000 to 100,000 nanometres.

At their core the machines use coordinated laser, mirror and magnetic systems to map microscopic circuit patterns onto silicon wafers. Layers of circuitry are defined by projecting patterned EUV light onto wafers that can hold on the order of a hundred individual AI chips. Industry collaborators have highlighted the combination of patterning precision, scalability and energy efficiency the machines deliver as central to advanced chip fabrication and particularly important for AI chip production.


Key subsystems - lasers, optics and wafer handling

Generating EUV light requires a highly specialised process: tiny droplets of tin are vaporised by extremely powerful lasers at a rate of 50,000 impacts per second. The lasers used in this process are among the most powerful ever produced and are manufactured by a German industrial firm. The resulting EUV light is directed by an optical train of mirrors, produced by a German optics maker, whose surfaces are finished to a smoothness finer than those found on space telescopes. These mirrors operate in a vacuum environment to preserve optical performance.

The silicon wafers are held on a table that levitates on magnetic bearings. During exposure the table must accelerate and decelerate with great speed and precision - on the order of 70 to 80 metres per second - to ensure the patterned light yields accurate circuitry layer after layer.


Logistics and delivery

EUV systems are assembled in the Netherlands. Once complete, each machine is packed into approximately 40 containers and transported by large cargo aircraft - specifically 747 freighters - to customers' fabrication plants. In the most recent year ASML shipped 44 of these EUV systems. Industry analysts expect substantial additional shipments will be required in the 2026 and 2027 timeframe to meet rising production needs.

The concentration of capability within these machines - from EUV generation to the extreme optical precision and magnetic wafer handling - helps explain why few suppliers can match ASML’s offering today, and why advanced semiconductor makers rely heavily on its equipment for AI chip production.

Risks

  • Concentration risk from ASML’s dominant position in EUV systems could leave advanced chip production vulnerable if supply does not keep pace with demand - a risk for semiconductor manufacturers and the broader AI hardware sector.
  • Reliance on specialised supply chains - including high-power lasers and ultra-precise mirrors - creates potential points of failure or bottlenecks in production and delivery that could affect foundries and customers of advanced chips.
  • Projected increases in shipments through 2026 and 2027 imply heavy capital spending and logistics coordination; any disruption to assembly or transport could impede deployment of new capacity at chipmakers and data centre operators.

More from Stock Markets

European equities tick up as metals rebound; Publicis and earnings cycle take center stage Feb 3, 2026 UK Grocery Price Growth Slows to 4.0% as Own-Label Spending Hits Record Share Feb 3, 2026 Tokyo Shares Surge to Record High as Nikkei Climbs Nearly 4% Feb 3, 2026 Price Guarantee Helped Close Anta's $1.8 Billion Acquisition of Puma Stake Feb 3, 2026 Australian Shares Finish Higher as Gold, IT and Mining Stocks Lead Gains Feb 3, 2026