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Technology / Semiconductors / Semiconductor devices / Transistor / John Bardeen / Walter Houser Brattain / Germanium / William Shockley / Diode / Physics / Science and technology in the United States / Nobel laureates in Physics


Chapter 2 From Germanium to Silicon A History of Change
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Document Date: 2011-05-18 07:22:10


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City

Washington / D.C. / /

Company

AT&T / Bell Labs / Bell System / Western Electric / Naval Ordnance Laboratory / Bell Telephone Laboratories / /

Country

Japan / United States / United Kingdom / /

Currency

USD / /

Facility

Naval Ordnance Laboratory / Cambridge University / Institute of Radio Engineers / Harvard University / /

IndustryTerm

semiconductor technology / germanium device / electronics technology / silicon devices / large powerhungry devices / telephone applications / semiconductor device technology / easier chemical processing / semiconductor supplier / manufacturing arm / semiconductor manufacturing / radio equipment / manufacturing germanium transistors / telephone exchanges / device applications / semiconductor electronics / terminal device / technology transfer / /

Organization

Cambridge University / Institute of Radio Engineers / Harvard University / Stanford University / Department of Defense / /

Person

George F. Dacey / Kelly / Morgan Sparks / William Shockley / Lillian Hoddeson / Walter Brattain / Frederick E. Terman / Philip Seidenberg / John Bardeen / Seidenberg Shockley / G.L. Pearson / Alex Roland / /

Position

vice-president / electrical engineer / leader of the group / historian / eminent physicist / professor / theoretical physicist / /

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Stanford University / /

Technology

semiconductor / military semiconductor technology / 37 Seidenberg technology / field-effect transistor / semiconductors / semiconductor device technology / electronics technology / integrated circuit / /

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