A Shanghai-based semiconductor startup called Yuanjiwei just flipped the switch on what it claims is the world’s first 8-inch production line for two-dimensional semiconductors. The pilot line, inaugurated around July 10, covers everything from raw material preparation to chip integration, essentially a full manufacturing pipeline for a technology that most of the industry still considers experimental.
Yuanjiwei’s stated goal is to produce chips that rival existing 5nm silicon processes by 2029, and to do it without extreme ultraviolet lithography.
Why 2D semiconductors matter beyond the lab
Traditional silicon chips are running into physics. As transistors shrink toward atomic scales, silicon starts behaving less like a reliable switch and more like a leaky faucet. Two-dimensional materials, particularly transition metal dichalcogenides, are atomically thin sheets that could theoretically maintain performance at scales where silicon falls apart.
Yuanjiwei’s production line supports what the industry calls “tape-out,” the final stage of chip design where a finished layout gets sent to manufacturing. Having tape-out capability on a 2D semiconductor line means this isn’t just a research project anymore.
Nanjing-based startup J-Moly, which spun out of Nanjing University research after its founding in 2024, has announced mass production of 8-inch 2D semiconductor single crystals. The company has developed its own proprietary oxy-MOCVD deposition system and is already shipping products to universities including Cambridge and Fudan.
Shanghai Atomic Technology activated its own pilot line in January 2026, focused on sub-1nm processes. That company is targeting small-batch production by December 2026 and large-scale manufacturing by 2030.
The geopolitical chess match over chips
Washington has spent years tightening export controls on advanced semiconductor equipment, specifically targeting EUV lithography machines made by the Netherlands’ ASML. Yuanjiwei’s entire value proposition is a direct response to that strategy. By pursuing 2D materials that could theoretically achieve 5nm-equivalent performance without EUV, Chinese firms are essentially trying to build a detour around the blockade.
What this means for crypto and AI hardware investors
Cryptocurrency mining and AI model training are both fundamentally constrained by chip availability and performance. Bitcoin mining profitability is largely a function of hash rate per watt. A generational leap in semiconductor efficiency would reset the competitive landscape for mining hardware manufacturers like Bitmain and MicroBT.
Yuanjiwei is targeting 2029 for 5nm-equivalent chips. Shanghai Atomic Technology is looking at 2030 for mass production. These are aspirational dates from startups that have yet to prove they can manufacture at scale with acceptable yields.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

2 hours ago
30









English (US) ·