Microsoft-backed Lace raises $40 million for cutting-edge chipmaking machinery.
  • Nisha
  • March 25, 2026

Microsoft-backed Lace raises $40 million for cutting-edge chipmaking machinery.

Norway’s Lace Raises $40 Million to Disrupt Chipmaking with Helium Beam Technology

Norway-based semiconductor equipment startup Lace has secured $40 million in a new funding round to advance its breakthrough chip manufacturing technology, the company announced on Monday.

The startup, backed by Microsoft, is working on an alternative to traditional lithography methods—an innovation that could significantly reshape how next-generation chips are designed and produced.

 

Challenging Traditional Lithography

Today’s most advanced semiconductor manufacturers, including Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company and Intel, rely on light-based lithography to etch microscopic circuits onto silicon wafers.

This process is largely dominated by ASML, whose extreme ultraviolet (EUV) machines use light beams measuring around 13.5 nanometers to create intricate chip designs.

 

A New Approach: Helium Atom Beam

Lace is taking a radically different route. Instead of light, the company has developed a lithography technique that uses a helium atom beam.

According to CEO Bodil Holst, this method could enable chip features that are up to 10 times smaller than current capabilities.

The beam used in Lace’s system is roughly 0.1 nanometers wide—close to the scale of a single hydrogen atom—allowing for extremely precise patterning at near-atomic levels.

Experts believe such precision could unlock major improvements in semiconductor performance. Smaller transistors—the core components of chips—would allow manufacturers to significantly boost computing power, especially for artificial intelligence applications.

John Petersen from Imec noted that this technology could enable feature sizes previously considered “almost unimaginable.”

 

Backing and Future Plans

The Series A funding round was led by Atomico, with participation from M12, Linse Capital, Spanish Society for Technological Transformation, and Nysnø Climate Investments.

While Lace has not disclosed its valuation, it has already developed prototype systems and is targeting deployment of a test tool in a pilot semiconductor fabrication facility by 2029.

The company also recently showcased its research at a major lithography conference earlier this year, signaling growing interest in next-generation chipmaking technologies.

 

Why It Matters

As demand for high-performance computing and AI chips accelerates, the semiconductor industry is under pressure to push beyond the limits of existing manufacturing techniques.

If successful, Lace’s helium-based lithography could extend the current technology roadmap and offer an entirely new pathway for producing smaller, faster, and more efficient chips.