Overview
- Editors:
-
-
P. Siffert
-
General Secretary European Materials Research Society, Strasbourg Cedex 2, France
-
E. F. Krimmel
-
Siemens Corporate Research Laboratories, München, Germany
J.W. Goethe University, Frankfurt/M, Germany
European Materials Research Society, Strasbourg, France
Pullach/Isartal, Germany
- Covers all aspects of the science and technology of silicon
Access this book
Other ways to access
Table of contents (25 chapters)
-
The Roles of Certain Impurities
-
-
Devices
-
Front Matter
Pages 291-291
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Supplementing Silicon: the Compound Semiconductors
-
Front Matter
Pages 421-421
-
- M. Jurisch, H. Jacob, T. Flade
Pages 423-461
-
New, Exciting Fields: Do They Amalgamate with Silicon?
-
Front Matter
Pages 463-463
-
-
- W. Hoenlein, F. Kreupl, G. S. Duesberg, A. P. Graham, M. Liebau, R. Seidel et al.
Pages 477-488
-
- K. Delaney, J. Barton, S. Bellis, B. Majeed, T. Healy, C. O’Mathuna et al.
Pages 489-514
-
-
Back Matter
Pages 533-549
About this book
Silicon. The evolution and development of humanity are commonly charac terized by the key words Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age; that is, characterized by materials. Curse or benefit to mankind? The discovery and utilization of semiconductors, particularly of silicon, revolutionized our liv ing conditions, society, social life, and maxims in a few years, even more than what happened during all the material-specified periods before. Per haps, one day, our descendants will call the period at whose beginning we live the Silicon Age. However, to be correct, the present period is character ized of the discovery and development of a whole bunch of new materials and their utilization. These materials are new alloys, ceramics, the plastics and synthetics produced by organic chemistry, composites, biomaterials, and the materials of microelectronics, nanotechnology, and space science. The materi als of microelectronics are silicon, other elemental semiconductors, compound semiconductors, and organic semiconductors. With regard to the interdepen dences of these materials and their utilization, silicon plays a central role as one of the base materials for electronics. Have we lived in the Silicon Age for only half a century and already jumped into a new age of synthetic organic materials for electronics? We do not know. The first intensive work on silicon started more than 50 years ago. One of the European semiconductor laboratories was installed by the industry in a centuries-old, little countryside castle in Pretzfeld, in the north-east of Bavaria, Germany.
Editors and Affiliations
-
General Secretary European Materials Research Society, Strasbourg Cedex 2, France
P. Siffert
-
Siemens Corporate Research Laboratories, München, Germany
E. F. Krimmel
-
J.W. Goethe University, Frankfurt/M, Germany
E. F. Krimmel
-
European Materials Research Society, Strasbourg, France
E. F. Krimmel
-
Pullach/Isartal, Germany
E. F. Krimmel