Alternative To Silicon Chip Invented By Student. Not everything is negative.

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"ScienceDaily (May 13, 2008) — Even before Weixiao Huang received his doctorate from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, his new transistor captured the attention of some of the biggest American and Japanese automobile companies. The 2008 graduate's invention could replace one of the most common pieces of technology in the world--the silicon transistor for high-power and high-temperature electronics.
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Huang, who comes from humble roots as the son of farmers in rural China, has invented a new transistor that uses a compound material known as gallium nitride (GaN), which has remarkable material properties. The new GaN transistor could reduce the power consumption and improve the efficiency of power electronics systems in everything from motor drives and hybrid vehicles to house appliances and defense equipment.

"Silicon has been the workhorse in the semiconductor industry for last two decades," Huang said. "But as power electronics get more sophisticated and require higher performing transistors, engineers have been seeking an alternative like gallium nitride-based transistors that can perform better than silicon and in extreme conditions."

Each household likely contains dozens of silicon-based electronics. An important component of each of those electronics is usually a silicon-based transistor know as a silicon metal/oxide semiconductor field-effect transistor (silicon MOSFET). To convert the electric energy to other forms as required, the transistor acts as a switch, allowing or disallowing the flow of current through the device.

Huang first developed a new process that demonstrates an excellent GaN MOS (metal/oxide/GaN) interface. Engineers have known that GaN and other gallium-based materials have some extremely good electrical properties, much better than silicon. However, no useful GaN MOS transistor has been developed. Huang's innovation, the first GaN MOSFET of its kind in the world, has already shown world-record performance according to Huang.

In addition, Huang has shown that his innovation can integrate several important electronic functions onto one chip like never before. "This will significantly simplify entire electronic systems," Huang said. Huang has also designed and experimentally demonstrated several new novel high-voltage MOS-gated FETs which have shown superior performance compared to silicon MOSFET in terms of lower power consumption, smaller chip size, and higher power density.

The new transistors can greatly reduce energy loss, making energy conversion more efficient. "If these new GaN transistors replaced many existing silicon MOSFETs in power electronics systems, there would be global reduction in fossil fuel consumption and pollution," Huang said.

The new GaN transistors can also allow the electronics system to operate in extremely hot, harsh, and high-power environments and even those that produce radiation. "Because it is so resilient, the device could open up the field of electronic engineering in ways that were not previously possible due to the limitations imposed by less tolerant silicon transistors," he said.

Huang has published more than 15 papers during his time as doctoral student in the Department of Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering at Rensselaer. Despite obvious difficulties, his parents worked tirelessly to give Huang the best possible educational opportunities according to Huang. And when school wasn't enough, Huang's father woke him up early every morning to practice mathematical calculations without a calculator, instilling in Huang a lifelong appreciation for basic, theoretical mathematics and sciences.

He received a bachelor's in electronics from Peking University in Beijing in 2001 and a master's in physics from Rensselaer in 2003. He will receive his doctorate from Rensselaer on May 17, 2008 and plans to work as a device engineer in the semiconductor industry.


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Other than this issue it may not be unwise to imagine that new techonogy may provide a solution to several of our problems which are covered by a few words. Our supplies of everything are getting fewer. More efficiency may be a solution.
 
Other than this issue it may not be unwise to imagine that new techonogy may provide a solution to several of our problems which are covered by a few words. Our supplies of everything are getting fewer. More efficiency may be a solution.

Very true. Artificially constructed things are probably our future as a species...
 
"According to Huang" is a big thing here.

Still I wouldn't be too suprised if this came true, everything is getting replaced on the MOSFET these days, might as well go after the substrate.
 
Looks like he's set for life now.
 
He's from RPI, sweet, that is right near me, and my cousin just turned down a full ride to go there..

Hooray science!
 
"According to Huang" is a big thing here.

Still I wouldn't be too suprised if this came true, everything is getting replaced on the MOSFET these days, might as well go after the substrate.

To be fair there have not been few "Huangs" promising solution to all problems and not delivering.

However there is no reason to condemn th prospect of it being the truth. The issue here is that while the India and China are expanding , resources are getting limited and the only solution appears to be technological innovation.
 
This isn't exactly news. Ga based semiconductors have been the hot stuff for quite some time now and GaN has been getting quite some attention recently. If he really invented the first GaN MOSFET good for him, but it was bound to happen soon anyway.

However it remains to be seen if the advantages of GaN transistors are really good enough to replace silicon. The end of silicon transistors has been predicted often enough when new semiconductors with better properties had been discovered, but most of them ended in niche applications instead of replacing silicon.

Many Billion of dollars have been invested in the perfection of silicon technology in the last 50 years and now we are at a point where new materials would have to be quite superior to silicon so that there actually would be an advantage in using it. There is no point in a transistor with 10 times the power, if its cost is 1000 times higher, except for some special applications. There is also no point in an energy efficient transistor, if its production consumes way more energy.

It will be time to get excited, when they can produce giant pure monocrystals of GaN at competitve price, so that you get wafers for mass production of GaN chips.

And then there still is way more silicon on earth than Gallium.
 
I think it is the efficiency, not the availability of Gallium Vs. Silicon which is the selling point.


I hope he has protected his investment and becomes uber rich, sounds like he and his family deserve it!
 
I think it is the efficiency, not the availability of Gallium Vs. Silicon which is the selling point.

You're right, the efficiency of GaN really is the selling point. However the question is, whether it will be enough of a selling point to offset the disadvantages of availability and difficulties in manufacturing.
 
To be fair there have not been few "Huangs" promising solution to all problems and not delivering.
WTH? Yeah there has!

However there is no reason to condemn th prospect of it being the truth. The issue here is that while the India and China are expanding , resources are getting limited and the only solution appears to be technological innovation.
I'm not condemning anyone, I'm just holding off on the champagne.
 
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