Huawei-related chip tool maker SiCarrier steals the show at Shanghai trade fair
In the first public display of SiCarrier’s latest chipmaking equipment, the company’s booth drew throngs of visitors eager for more information

Four years after its founding, with backing from the Shenzhen government, SiCarrier unveiled dozens of new chip manufacturing and testing machines at Semicon China, an annual gathering of industry players.
It was the first public display of its equipment, which industry insiders speculate may have contributed to the production of Huawei’s home-grown 7-nanometre chips, which debuted in the Mate 60 Pro smartphone in 2023. The company has not confirmed these claims.
While the company did not specify the process nodes that its machines can achieve, a staff member at the event said some of them, including an etching tool that is not on the product list, are capable of supporting 5-nm chip production.
This aligns with a 2023 patent filing for a process enabling 5-nm production using existing deep ultraviolet lithography (DUV) tools. Such advanced chips typically require extreme ultraviolet lithography, the technology for which is largely banned from export to China.
SiCarrier’s booth drew throngs of visitors, with reporters, industry peers and potential clients all eager to catch a glimpse of the company’s products that could reduce China’s reliance on foreign chipmaking equipment.
