On July 19, 2025, China killed the silicon wafer. And with it, ASML’s monopoly, TSMC’s moat, and every American chip sanction. You just didn’t hear the explosion. Time to break it down. (1/21)
Most people think the chip war is about geopolitics. It’s not. It’s about atomic ratios. And China just mastered a law of nature the West still struggles to pronounce: stoichiometry. (2/21)
Stoichiometry is the a priori rulebook for matter. Not a lab trick. Not engineering. It’s the logic atoms obey when forming compounds. You get the ratios right or the structure collapses. Period. (3/21)
Silicon is forgiving. You can tweak and etch and polish. Add more doping. Fix things post-growth. That’s why the entire Western chip industry is addicted to photolithography and brute-force scaling. (4/21)
Indium selenide (InSe) is not forgiving. It’s a 2D compound. One atom thick. One indium per selenium. Anything less than perfect stoichiometry? You get garbage. Defects. No chip. No circuit. (5/21)
That’s what makes China’s breakthrough historic. Their scientists didn’t invent InSe. They cracked how to grow it perfectly. At scale. With atomic self-correction. No ASML needed. No permission slip. (6/21)
Their method vaporizes indium, condenses it into a liquid layer, and grows InSe by balancing the atomic ratio in real time. The process self-regulates the stoichiometry. That’s the key. (7/21)
They didn’t stop at flakes. They built 5 cm wafers. They etched transistor arrays. They proved it works on a chip, not just under an electron microscope. It’s fabrication-grade. (8/21)
This isn’t a lab paper. It’s the exit wound from the silicon era. The stoichiometric bottleneck is gone. The rest is just assembly. (9/21)
Part II: After Silicon
InSe outperforms silicon in every category that matters:
• 5–10x higher electron mobility
• Atomic thickness
• Tunable bandgap
• Lower power leakage
• Faster switching (10/21)
And unlike graphene, InSe has a real bandgap. It can switch on and off. That makes it a true semiconductor, not a science fair. (11/21)
With China’s new method, this material is now scalable. Which means the entire Western chip industry—built on legacy silicon and ASML tooling—just got outflanked at the atomic level. (12/21)
This wasn’t a node race. It was a material regime shift. While the West focused on 3nm vs 2nm, China rewrote the substrate itself. No EUV. No supply chain fragility. No fab dependency. (13/21)
They don’t need ASML. They don’t need TSMC. They don’t need CUDA. They don’t need Synopsys. The entire ecosystem was decoupled upstream—where the periodic table lives. (14/21)
Western press won’t touch this. There’s no stock ticker. No IPO angle. No Nvidia soundbite. Just a quiet atomic realignment happening under their feet. (15/21)
What comes next is deterministic:
• InSe-native AI accelerators
• Next-gen telecom chips
• Neuromorphic cores
• Fully domestic 2D logic stacks
• Military-grade compute, off-limits to sanctions (16/21)
China didn’t just win the chip war. It exited the battlefield. It no longer competes in silicon. It forges new material futures, governed by first principles, not supply chains. (17/21)
Every restriction the U.S. imposes from here out will be too late. You can’t sanction a law of nature. You can’t embargo a material you no longer understand. (18/21)
The future won’t be built on 2nm silicon. It’ll be built on atomically perfect InSe, grown in a Beijing lab, untouched by ASML, unseen by the West, and unshackled from the past. (19/21)
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NVIDIA just bent the knee at the RISC-V Summit. CUDA now runs on the same architecture China is using to escape U.S. tech control. Here's why that should terrify Washington
NVIDIA just joined the RISC-V Summit to announce CUDA support on RISC-V hosts. Let’s be clear. This isn't leadership. It's capitulation. (1/11)
For years, CUDA was NVIDIA's proprietary fortress. Arm and x86 were the only citizens. RISC-V was treated like a hobbyist toy. Now it’s getting top billing. Why? (2/11)
China just solved a major design flaw in the U.S. Navy’s X‑47B stealth drone. Not with stolen blueprints, but using toy models and public photos. (1/13)
The X‑47B was one of the most advanced drone programs ever launched by the U.S. military. It demonstrated carrier launches, autonomous flight, and midair refueling. (2/13)
The Global South is moving away from the dollar. But it’s China doing the heavy lifting—while India and Russia quietly hitch a free ride. A thread 🧵
(1/12)
China is aggressively dumping U.S. Treasuries, building yuan trade systems, and creating alternatives to SWIFT. This isn’t symbolic. It’s systemic. (2/12)
In doing so, China becomes the lightning rod for Washington’s retaliation. Sanctions, tariffs, tech bans. China absorbs the cost of resistance. (3/12)
The U.S. banned Nvidia's best chips thinking they'd kneecap China’s AI dreams. They forgot one thing. Once you can make an AI GPU, you can make any GPU. (1/11)
Gaming cards are just byproducts. They're dumbed-down versions of compute accelerators. Same die, different drivers, lower clocks. China’s already there. (2/11)
Two Taiwanese cousins control America’s AI chips. No one dares say it out loud.
AMD CEO Lisa Su Says Sourcing AI Chips From TSMC’s U.S. Plants Is 20% More Expensive, Highlighting the Complications of Building Supply Chains in America share.google/drqmuzPAIHbRgf…
Two kissing cousins born in Taiwan built the American AI empire—and gave it to TSMC. If they were born in Wuhan, Langley would've gone code red. 🧵
(1/13)
Lisa Su and Jensen Huang. Cousins. Taiwanese-born. CEOs of AMD and Nvidia. They didn't just lead—they funneled the entire AI chip pipeline into one island: Taiwan.
Why China's future looks different: It invested in its children. We sold ours to the market. 🧵
(1/10)
China treats K-12 education as a civilizational duty. No child, no village, no province is allowed to fall behind. It's not charity. It's national strategy. (2/10)