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Transistor 2
Transistor 2
http://www.privateline.com/
TelephoneHistory3/History3.html
Importance
“The Transistor was probably the most important invention of the 20th
Century and the story behind the invention is one of clashing egos
and top secret research.”
Ira Flatow
1968
•Click on a Year to Learn its
1958
1957
Significance
1955
•Click on the Blue Triangle to Return
1950
•You can also click to see how a
1948
1947
transistor works
1945
1936
1934
1928
1907
1906
1898
1895
1883
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ferdinand_Braun.jpg
◄
1883
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Thomas_Edison.jpg ◄
1895
Guglielmo Marconi
-sent a radio signal
over a distance of
more than a mile.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Marconi.jpg
◄
1895
John Ambrose Fleming
-developed the Vacuum
Tube
a device that modify a
http://concise.britannica.com/ebc/art-58608
signal by controlling the
movement of electrons in
an evacuated space.
The electrons flow only
from filament to plate
creating a diode (a device
that can conduct current
only in one direction)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:
Diode_vacuum_tube.png ◄
1898
Thomson discovered
the electron.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Jj-thomson2.jpg
◄
1906
Lee De Forest -Triode in
vacuum tube (amplify
signals) allowing farther
telephone conversations. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Deforest.jpg
The problems with this
Triode is that it was
unreliable and used a lot
of power.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Triode_
vacuum_tube.png
◄
1907
Bell telephone patents
expire.
AT&T (Bell’s company)
bought De Forest’s
triode patent.
Result: transcontinental
telephone service.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Al
exander_Graham_Bell22.jpg
◄
1928
The first patents for the
transistor principle were
registered in Germany by
Julius Edgar Lilienfield.
He proposed the basic
◄
1934
http://www.precide.ch/eng/eheil/eheil.htm
◄
1936
Mervin Kelly Bell Lab's
director of research. He
felt that to provide the
best phone service it will
need a better amplifier;
the answer might lie in
semiconductors. And he
formed a department
dedicated to solid state
science http:// www.pbs.org/transistor/album1/addlbios/kelly.html
◄
1945
Bill Shockley the team leader of
the solid state department
(Hell’s Bell Lab) hired Walter
Brattain and John Bardeen.
He designed the first
semiconductor amplifier, relying
on the field effect.
His device was a small cylinder
coated thinly with silicon,
mounted close to a small, metal
plate. http://www.lucent.com/minds/
The device didn't work, and transistor/history.html
http://www.lucent.com/minds/ http://www.lucent.com/minds/t
http://www.lucent.com/minds transistor/history.html ransistor/history.html
/transistor/history.html
◄
1947 cont.
1947 cont.
Shockley make the
Junction transistor
(sandwich).
This transistor was more
practical and easier to
fabricate.
The Junction Transistor
became the central
device of the electronic
age
http://www.ecse.rpi.edu/Homepages/schubert/Unused%20stuff/Educational%20resources/
Picture%20First%20junction%20transistor.jpg
1947 cont.
A thin piece of semiconductor of
one type between two slices of
another type, is able to control the
flow of the current between emitter
and the collector.
Even if the input current is weak,
the transistor can control a strong
current.
The effect accomplish is that the
current through the collector
mimics and amplify the behavior
of the current through the Emitter.
◄
1948
Bells Lab unveil the transistor.
They decided to name it transistor instead
of Point-contact solid state amplifier.
John Pierce invented the name, combining
transresistance with the ending common
to devices, like varistor and thermistor.
◄
1950’s
Sony receives a license from
Bell Labs to build transistors
In 1946 Sony produced
products for radio repair. In
1950 they decided to build
something for the mass
consumption; the transistor
radio.
In United States they used
the transistors primarily for http://www.sony.net/Fun/SH/1-6/h2.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:SJPan.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:ShockleyBldg.jpg
◄
1957
The traitorous eight abandoned Shockley
founding Fairchild Semiconductor.
www.fairchildsemi.com/company/history_1957.html
http://
◄
1958
Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments –
Invent the Integrated Circuit (IC)
It occurred to him that all parts of
a circuit could be made out of the
same piece of silicon.
The entire circuit could be built
out of a single crystal
Reducing the size
Easier to produce
electrical circuits
contained in a silicon
wafer.
http://www.ece.uiuc.edu/grad/7reasons/5reputation.html
1968
Bob Noyce and Gordon Moore, two of the
traitorous eight together with Andy Grove,
form Intel Corporation
http://www.itnews.sk/buxus_dev/images/
2006/Intel_logo_nove1_velky.jpg
http://www.granneman.com/techinfo/
background/history/
◄
How a Transistor Works
The transistor can function as:
An insulator
A conductor
The transistor's ability to fluctuate between these two states that
enables to switch or amplify.
The transistor has many applications, but only two basic functions:
switching and modulation (amplification).
In the simplest sense, the transistor works like a dimmer.
With a push the knob of the dimmer, the light comes on and off. You
have a switch. Rotate the knob back and forth, and the light grows
brighter, dimmer, brighter, dimmer. Than you have a modulator.
◄
How a Transistor Works cont.
Both the dimmer and the
transistor can control
current flow.
Both can act as a switch
and as a
modulator/amplifier.
The important difference
is that the “hand”
operating the transistor is
millions of times faster.
http://www.ieicorp.com/consum/dimmer.gif
◄
Transistors are made of semi-conductors such
as silicon and gallium arsenide.
These materials carry electricity not well enough
to be called conductors; not badly enough to be
called insulators.
Hence their name semiconductor.
The importance of a transistor is in its ability to
control its own semi conductance, namely acting
like a conductor when needed, or as an insulator
(nonconductor) when that is needed.
◄
You can compare a transistor to an ordinary faucet.
The water enters the faucet in the pipeline from the
water distributor, which would correspond to the source
in the Transistor.
The water then leaves the faucet into the sink, this would
be the drain in the Transistor.
The water tap controls the amount, flow, of water. In the
Transistor the gate operates as this controller.
With a small force you can control the water flow with the
water tap, just as you can control the current flowing
from the source to the drain, with a small change of the
charge of the gate.
http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/physics/transistor/function/watertap.html
◄
Transistors are Made of Silicon
Silicon is a grey colored element with crystalline
structure.
It is the second most abundant element in the earth's
crust, after oxygen.
Silicon is always found in combined form in nature, often
with oxygen as quartz, and is found in rocks and silica
sand.
To be able to use silicon as a semiconductor, it needs to
be in a very pure form.
If there is more than one impure particle in a million, the
silicon can not be used.
Silicon is the most frequently used semiconducting
material today.
◄
Doping
The addition of a small
amount of a different
substance to a pure
semiconductor crystal.
The impurities give an n-type doping
excess of conducting
electrons or an excess of
conducting holes which is
crucial for making a
working transistor.
http://www.astro.virginia.edu/class/oconnell/
astr511/im/Si-B-doping-JFA.jpg
p-type doping ◄
Donor doping
Acceptor doping
131.104.156.23/Lectures/CHEM_462/462_chapter_1.html
http://
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/
Hbase/solids/dsem.html#c2 ◄
Conduction Band: Is a part in which electrons can move freely and can accelerate
under an electric field, constituting an electric current.
Conduction Band
Metals
Valence Band
Energy Gap: Is
the energy Conduction Band
difference Semiconductors
between the Energy gap
valence gap and Valence Band
the conduction
band
Conduction Band
Valence Band: Is a part of the molecule, called band, where you can find the
electrons ◄
Transistor types
◄
Moore’s Law
It’s an observation made by Gordon E.
Moore, in which he predicted that the
number of transistors, inside an Integrated
Circuit, could be doubled every 24 months.
At the density that also minimized the cost
of a transistor.
◄
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/06/Moore_Law_diagram_%282004%29.png ◄
Transistor problems
Power density increased
Device variability
Reliability
Complexity
Leakage
Power dissipation limits device density
Transistor will operate near ultimate limits of size and
quality – eventually, no transistor can be fundamentally
better
◄
The Future of transistors
Molecular electronics
Carbon nanotubes transistors
Nanowire transistors
Quantum computing
CMOS devices will add
functionality to CMOS non-volatile
memory, opto-electronics,
sensing….
CMOS technology will address
new markets macroelectronics,
bio-medical devices, …
Biology may provide inspiration for
new technologies bottom-up
assembly, human intelligence
"Photo: National Research Council of Canada.“
http://www.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/multimedia/picture/
fundamental/nrc-nint_moleculartransistor_e.html ◄
Pictorial History of Transistors
http://www.bellsystemmemorial.com/belllabs_transistor.html ◄
Further Resources
Riordan, Michael and Lillian Hoddeson. Crystal Fire: The Invention of the
Transistor and the Birth of the Information Age. New York: W. W. Norton and
Company, 1997.
Brattain, Walter H. "Genesis of the Transistor." The Physics Teacher. (March,
1968) pp. 109-114.
Hoddeson, Lillian. "The Roots of Solid State Research at Bell Labs." Physics
Today. (March, 1997).
Holonyak, Jr., Nick."John Bardeen and the Point-Contact Transistor." Physics
Today.
(April, 1992).
Shockley, William. "How We Invented the Transistor." New Scientist 21.
(December, 1972) pp. 689-91.
http://www.pbs.org/transistor
http://www.aip.org/history
http://www.lucent.com/minds/transistor/history.html
http://chem.ch.huji.ac.il/~eugeniik/history/lilienfeld.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
You can find two very cool games on transistors in the next link:
http://nobelprize.org/educational_games/physics/transistor/function/intro.html