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Solid-State Diodes: Karl Ferdinand Braun Copper Oxide Selenium Rectifiers

Solid-state diodes were discovered in 1874 when Karl Ferdinand Braun discovered the unilateral conduction of crystals. Braun later patented the crystal rectifier in 1899. Various materials were used for crystal detectors and rectifiers over the following decades, including copper oxide, selenium, galena, and germanium. The development of inexpensive germanium diodes in the 1950s allowed crystal detectors to be widely used again before being replaced by thermionic diodes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
40 views

Solid-State Diodes: Karl Ferdinand Braun Copper Oxide Selenium Rectifiers

Solid-state diodes were discovered in 1874 when Karl Ferdinand Braun discovered the unilateral conduction of crystals. Braun later patented the crystal rectifier in 1899. Various materials were used for crystal detectors and rectifiers over the following decades, including copper oxide, selenium, galena, and germanium. The development of inexpensive germanium diodes in the 1950s allowed crystal detectors to be widely used again before being replaced by thermionic diodes.

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Adriel
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Solid-state diodes[edit]

In 1874 German scientist Karl Ferdinand Braun discovered the "unilateral conduction" of crystals. [11]
[12]

Braun patented the crystal rectifier in 1899.[13] Copper oxide and selenium rectifiers were

developed for power applications in the 1930s.


Indian scientist Jagadish Chandra Bose was the first to use a crystal for detecting radio waves in
1894.[14] The crystal detector was developed into a practical device for wireless
telegraphy by Greenleaf Whittier Pickard, who invented a silicon crystal detector in 1903 and
received a patent for it on November 20, 1906.[15] Other experimenters tried a variety of other
substances, of which the most widely used was the mineral galena (lead sulfide). Other substances
offered slightly better performance, but galena was most widely used because it had the advantage
of being cheap and easy to obtain. The crystal detector in these early crystal radio sets consisted of
an adjustable wire point-contact, often made of gold or platinum because of their incorrodible nature
(the so-called "cat's whisker"), which could be manually moved over the face of the crystal in search
of a portion of that mineral with rectifying qualties. This troublesome device was superseded by
thermionic diodes (vacuum tubes) by the 1920s, but after high purity semiconductor materials
became available, the crystal detector returned to dominant use with the advent, in the 1950s, of
inexpensive fixed-germanium diodes. Bell Labs also developed a germanium diode for microwave
reception, and AT&T used these in their microwave towers that criss-crossed the nation starting in
the late 1940s, carrying telephone and network television signals. Bell Labs did not develop a
satisfactory thermionic diode for microwave reception.

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