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Nick Holonyak, inventor of the light-emitting diode (LED), is a
silicon researcher who was John
Bardeen's first student, and later his friend. Holonyak worked
at Bell
Labs (after Bardeen left) and had first hand experience with
transistor research there. He is a firm believer that John Bardeen
didn't get as much recognition as he deserved for developing the
physics theories that made the invention
of the transistor possible -- and that William
Shockley got too much recognition.
Holonyak was born on November 3, 1928 in Zeigler, Illinois. He earned
his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of Illinois
in Electrical Engineering. In 1951, he took his first course from
Bardeen and, in that class, Holonyak first laid eyes on a transistor.
In 1952, he transferred out of vacuum tube research into Bardeen's
semiconductor lab, even though he was mocked by some of his fellow
students. But Holonyak made the right choice -- semiconductors soon
revolutionized the electronics industry.
When he finished graduate school in 1954, he was hired at Bell
to work on a number of silicon devices, including transistors. He
continued on in solid state science, working for the US Army Signal
Corp and General Electric, before returning to be a professor at
the University of Illinois in 1963. He is the author of Semiconductor
Controlled Rectifiers published in 1964 and of Physical
Properties of Semiconductors published in 1989. He is still
doing research at Illinois in the Department of Electrical and Computer
Engineering.
Resources:
-- "John Bardeen and the Point-Contact Transistor" by
Nick Holonyak, Jr. Physics Today April 1992.
-- Interview
with Nick Holonyak by Frederick Nebeker, June 22, 1993 for the
Institute of Electric and Electronics Engineers
http://www.pbs.org/transistor/album1/addlbios/holonyak.html
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