Diemazz

KHDC
Cognitive psychology
Widescreen signaling
Woodblock printing in Japan
du ae
Wang Jun (Tang Dynasty)
jenis awan
Asmara
drip
Muslim history
Hamamatsu Castle
Mortal Kombat (series)
Bp (digraph)
XHEM
Bugchasing and giftgiving
Pin (wrestling)
Mori clan
September 12
hard rock park
Edmund Cartwright
mikey dread
WTMV
OR8B4
indus tv
Auvergne (province)
Firth Brown Steels
Picochip
tribal lion head tattoos
Brice Armstrong
Category:710 deaths
Bardot
Sohonet
DZUP
wedding marches
Odilon
Zayd ibn Harithah
Born again Christianity
vancomycin iv
WVAX
Eunomius


Solid-state electronic components, devices, and systems are based entirely on the semiconductor, such as transistors, microprocessor chips, and the bubble memory. In solid-state components, there is no use of the electrical properties of a vacuum and no mechanical action, no moving parts, although a considerable amount of electromagnetic and quantum-mechanical action takes place within. The expression became prevalent in the 1950s and the 1960s, during the transition from vacuum tube technology to semiconductor diodes and transistors. More recently, the integrated circuit (IC), the light-emitting diode (LED), and the liquid-crystal display (LCD) have evolved as further examples of solid-state devices.

In a solid-state component, the current is confined to solid elements and compounds engineered specifically to switch and amplify it. Current flows in two forms: as negatively-charged electrons, and as positively-charged electron deficiencies called electron holes or just "holes". In some semiconductors, the current consists mostly of electrons; in other semiconductors, it consists mostly of "holes". Both the electron and the hole are called charge carriers. Examples of a non-solid-state electronic components are vacuum tubes and cathode-ray tubes (CRTs). In this device, electrons flow freely through a vacuum from an electron gun, through deflecting and focusing fields, and finally to a phosphorescent screen. For data storage, solid-state devices are much faster and more reliable than mechanical disks and tapes, but are usually more expensive. Although solid-state costs continually drop, disks, tapes, and optical disks also continue to improve their cost/performance ratio.

The first solid-state device was the "cat's whisker" detector, first used in 1930s radio receivers. A whisker-like wire was moved around on a solid crystal (such as a germanium crystal) in order to detect a radio signal.[1]

See also

References

search:

Site Map: RSS 2.0

Recent Searches: Solid state (electronics)
go now downloads
Selena Gomez
Bit shank
I, Jedi
Dick Hebdige
Yolanda Saldivar
Still Life (disambiguation)
Symphonie Fantastique
Neo Thomism

Related Pages:
"integrated circuit"
"solid state electronics semiconductors"
"solid state electronics transistor"
"solid-state devices"