Introduction To Solid State Devices, Examples and Applications
Introduction To Solid State Devices, Examples and Applications
Their widespread application is related to the fact that they can be utilized to
interface with all human senses.
The first solid-state device was the “cat’s whisker” (1906), in which
a fine wire was moved across a solid crystal to detect a radio signal.
More than ten billion components are fabricated onto a single eight-
inch silicon wafer.
HISTORY
During the 1940s the jobs of simple solid-state devices were
performed with vacuum tubes and mechanical relays. (If a
vacuum tube covered one square inch of area, the same ten billion
devices that fit on an eight-inch wafer would cover 6.5 square
kilometers [2.5 square miles].)
HISTORY
The integrated circuit ( IC ), the light-emitting diode ( LED ), and the liquid-crystal
display ( LCD ) have evolved as further examples of solid-state devices.
Transistors, made of one or more semiconductors, are at the heart of modern solid-
state devices; in the case of IC, millions of transistors can be involved.
Example of Solid State Devices: IC
Example of solid State Device: Transistor
Example of Solid State Devices: IC
Example of Solid State Devices: IC
Solid-state component
In a solid-state component, the current is confined to solid elements and
compounds designed specifically to switch and amplify it. Current flows in
two forms: as negatively charged electrons, and as positively charged electron
deficiencies called holes.
Light emitting diodes (LEDs) and solid-state lasers produce light used in
all kinds of displays that interface with sight.
Materials of Solid-State Devices
Solid-state
devices consist of crystalline materials that exhibit insulating,
semiconducting, or conducting properties.
Insulators, typically composed of SiO2, block the flow of current from one
part of the device to another.