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The tiny, mighty transistor
LA Times ^ | 15 December 2007 | By Saswato R. Das

Posted on 12/15/2007 7:01:52 AM PST by shrinkermd

...A transistor is a little electronic switch capable of amplifying electric current, invented by John Bardeen, Walter Brattain and William Shockley at Bell Labs in New Jersey on Dec. 16, 1947. They jury-rigged the first transistor using a paper clip, some germanium and gold foil, and found that it boosted electrical current a hundredfold. They kept the discovery to themselves for a bit, and showed their bosses the device just before Christmas. Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley won the Nobel Prize for physics in 1956.

...To put it in economic terms, if the price of an automobile had kept pace with the price drop of a transistor, we would be paying less for a car than for a slice of pizza.

In the next few years, the question is whether the semiconductor industry can sustain this relentless progress. Further shrinking transistors is proving problematic as certain fundamental physical barriers are being reached. At the same time, new frontiers are opening up. The quest is on to create efficient transistors that use and boost light instead of electricity, which will enable much faster processing speeds.

So on its 60th birthday, answer your cellphone, boot up your computer, flip on your iPod -- and in the process, toast the incredible transistor, the humble electronic switch that, in two human generations, has forever changed how we live, work and play.

(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: birthday; transistor
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To: A.A. Cunningham
It that a PNP transistor? If you turn the arrow around the other way is it an NPN (Not pointing in.)

BTW, iirc, the original transistor was a FET.

21 posted on 12/15/2007 7:56:06 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (NYT Headline: Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS: Fake but Accurate, Experts Say)
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To: shrinkermd
Now for the rest of the story. As I recall Bell Labs didn’t want to do anything with the transistor (they were R&D) and sold the patent to the founders of Texas instruments for around $8.000. These persons say the utility of the transistors in solid state amplifiers in extremely hostile environments, i.e., aboard ships. The rest is history. Incidentally TI started up in Texas farmhouses so their factories were called Farmhouse Number 5 or 11 and so on.
22 posted on 12/15/2007 8:04:52 AM PST by Citizen Tom Paine (Swift as the wind; Calmly majestic as a forest; Steady as the mountains.)
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To: fhayek
I’m not impugning the inventors, just that it took ten days to tell their bosses about ‘the most significant invention of the twentieth century’.

I believe the backstory was that they were specifically told not to work on transistors, or rather any semiconductor devices, since there was no word for transistor ("transresistance amplifer") at the time. Their assignment was to investigate the electrical properties of semiconductors, perhaps with an eye towards applying them as solid state rectifiers, in itself a significant advance.

Once you begin to think about how semiconductors work, the idea of a FET (field effect transistor, as opposed to junction transistor) pretty much screams right out at you. Junction transistors are a little more subtle. Once you start making semiconductor amplifiers in serious quantities, someone will hit on the idea.

23 posted on 12/15/2007 8:07:24 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (NYT Headline: Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS: Fake but Accurate, Experts Say)
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To: Rudder

Bzzzzzt.

“Telephone” is from the 19th century.


24 posted on 12/15/2007 8:08:50 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Musketeer
Try living without toilet paper, the washing machine and duct tape.

Yeah, a clean butt is where it's at.

25 posted on 12/15/2007 8:09:04 AM PST by Rudder
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To: oldsalt

That would explain why GE’s 660 page “Transistor Manual” would only cost $2 in 1964...


26 posted on 12/15/2007 8:09:27 AM PST by CRBDeuce (an armed society is a polite society)
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To: shrinkermd
1) Transistor are also commonly used as amplifiers, not just as switches. But it is true that the switching capabilities of transistors gave us solid-state logic gates (AND, OR, NOT), TTL (transistor-transistor logic), and ultimately, the home computer.

2) The humble transistor was neither discovered nor invented at Bell labs. It was re-discovered there.
As cited in Tom Burnham's More Misinformation (Ballantine, 1980), Julius Edgar Lilienfield filed a Canadian patent application for what we now call a "transistor" in 1925. In 1930, he was granted a U.S patent for the invention.

Lilienfield did not fully understand the theory behind his invention, but inventors are not required to understand their inventions to receive a patent as long as the inventions actually work.

See also Theodore L. Thomas, "The Twenty Lost Years of Solid-State Physics". Analog: Science fact and Fiction, March 1965, pages 8 ff.

27 posted on 12/15/2007 8:14:02 AM PST by Ignatz (There's no place like 127.0.0.1....there's no place like 127.0.0.1....)
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To: shrinkermd

Not the first. The first transistor was Lilienfeld's 1930, a FET device. Nearly all but a very few transistors in use today are FET devices.

See http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/history/lilienfeld.htm.

28 posted on 12/15/2007 8:15:34 AM PST by bvw
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To: Ignatz

Geesh. But mine has the picture!


29 posted on 12/15/2007 8:16:54 AM PST by bvw
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets

so noted.


30 posted on 12/15/2007 8:17:52 AM PST by bvw
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To: DuncanWaring

close enough?


31 posted on 12/15/2007 8:18:47 AM PST by Rudder
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To: blam

ping


32 posted on 12/15/2007 8:20:31 AM PST by null and void (things that are really questions are touted as answers.)
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To: bvw
Pictures? Let me take a look.
Ok...NOT GUILTY!

Placed one under the other, our earlier posts do present a pretty convinving argument for Lilienfield as the inventor of the transistor.

33 posted on 12/15/2007 8:21:59 AM PST by Ignatz (There's no place like 127.0.0.1....there's no place like 127.0.0.1....)
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To: bvw

Wasn’t a semiconductor transistor, though, was it. Metal oxide solid state rectifiers were commonly in use for small signals, but not practical for power in 1947. As far as I know, no one ever commercialized a non-semiconductor transistor.


34 posted on 12/15/2007 8:23:25 AM PST by Lonesome in Massachussets (NYT Headline: Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS: Fake but Accurate, Experts Say)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets

one origin: “(”transresistance amplifer”) “

another: TRANSfer + resISTOR = TRANS ISTOR

from early diagrams of the transistor showing how forward biasing one junction and reverse biasing the other to show the amplification power gain (where the junctions are shown as essentially simple resistors).


35 posted on 12/15/2007 8:32:02 AM PST by CRBDeuce (an armed society is a polite society)
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To: Ignatz

Actually, the transistor is founded on a pyramid of semiconductor knowledge. In 1833, Michael Faraday made perhaps the first contribution to semiconductor research...during an experiment with silver sulfide, observing its resistance varied inversely w/ Temperature (opposite of conductors).


36 posted on 12/15/2007 8:38:48 AM PST by CRBDeuce (an armed society is a polite society)
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To: Rudder

Honorable Mention.


37 posted on 12/15/2007 8:46:37 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: null and void
Jack Kilby

" There are few living men whose insights and professional accomplishments have changed the world. Jack Kilby is one of these men. His invention of the monolithic integrated circuit - the microchip - some 40 years ago at Texas Instruments (TI) laid the conceptual and technical foundation for the entire field of modern microelectronics. It was this breakthrough that made possible the sophisticated high-speed computers and large-capacity semiconductor memories of today's information age.

38 posted on 12/15/2007 8:48:31 AM PST by blam (Secure the border and enforce the law)
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To: Lonesome in Massachussets

Base, Collector, Emitter. Never forget.


39 posted on 12/15/2007 8:53:01 AM PST by kilowhskey ("I Carry a Gun Because I Cannot Carry A Cop.")
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To: Rudder
Right up there with the telephone, automobile, airplane, television...

They all pale to VIAGRA ;-)

40 posted on 12/15/2007 9:42:25 AM PST by varon (Allegiance to the constitution, always. Allegiance to a political party, never.)
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