The story of semiconductors / John Orton.
Material type: TextPublication details: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2004.Description: xii, 510 p. : ill. ; 26 cmISBN:- 0198530838 (hbk.)
- TK7871.85 O78 2004
Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Barcode | |
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Books | Library First Floor | TK7871.85 O78 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 10244 |
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TK7871.6 .A47 2007 Antenna engineering handbook / | TK7871.85 A495 2005 Fundamentals of semiconductor devices / | TK7871.85 .B45 2013 Solid state electronic devices / | TK7871.85 O78 2004 The story of semiconductors / | TK7871.85 .S42935 2005 Semiconductor manufacturing handbook / | TK7871.85 .S5558 2001 Semiconductor Devices : Basic Principles / | TK7871.85 .S5558 2001 Semiconductor Devices : Basic Principles / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Perspectives: The 'Information Age'; 2. The Cat's Whiskers: First applications, early days; 3. Minority Rule: The transistor, band structure; 4. Silicon, Silicon and Yet More Silicon; 5. The Compound Challenge: Light emitting devices, microwaves; 6. Low Dimensional Structures: Mesoscopic, electronic, optical devices; 7. Let There Be Light: Laser diodes; 8. Communicating with Light: Fibre optics, photodetectors; 9. Semiconductors in the Infra-Red: Quantum wells, superlattices and other modern wonders; 10. Polycrystalline and Amorphous Semiconductors: Solar cells, liquid crystal displays
The book provides an overview of the fascinating spectrum of semiconductor physics, devices and applications, presented from a historical perspective. It covers the development of the subject from its inception in the early nineteenth century to the recent millennium. Written in a lively, informal style, it emphasizes the interaction between pure scientific push and commercial pull, on the one hand, and between basic physics, materials, and devices, on the other. It also sets the various device developments in the context of systems requirements and explains how such developments met wide ranging consumer demands. It is written so as to appeal to students at all levels in physics, electrical engineering, and materials science, to teachers, lecturers, and professionals working in the field, as well as to a non-specialist scientific readership.
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