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Inventors Of The Modern Computer
Integrated Circuit (IC)
Jack Kilby & Robert Noyce
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"What
we didn't realize then was that the integrated circuit would reduce the
cost of electronic functions by a factor of a million to one, nothing had
ever done that for anything before" - Jack Kilby
 It
seems that the integrated circuit was destined to be invented. Two separate
inventors, unaware of each other's activities, invented almost identical
integrated circuits or ICs at nearly the same time.
Jack
Kilby, an engineer with a background in ceramic-based silk screen circuit
boards and transistor-based hearing aids, started working for Texas Instruments
in 1958. A year earlier, research engineer Robert
Noyce had co-founded the Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation. From
1958 to 1959, both electrical engineers were working on an answer to the
same dilemma: how to make more of less.
In
designing a complex electronic machine like a computer it was always necessary
to increase the number of components involved in order to make technical
advances. The monolithic (formed from a single crystal) integrated circuit
placed the previously separated transistors,
resistors, capacitors and all the connecting wiring onto a single crystal
(or 'chip') made of semiconductor material. Kilby used germanium and Noyce
used silicon for the semiconductor material.
In
1959 both parties applied for patents. Jack Kilby and Texas Instruments
received U.S. patent #3,138,743 for miniaturized electronic circuits. Robert
Noyce and the Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation received U.S. patent
#2,981,877 for a silicon based integrated circuit. The two companies wisely
decided to cross license their technologies after several years of legal
battles, creating a global market now worth about $1 trillion a year.
In
1961 the first commercially available integrated circuits came from the
Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation. All computers then started to be made
using chips instead of the individual transistors and their accompanying
parts. Texas Instruments first used the chips in Air Force computers and
the Minuteman Missile in 1962. They later used the chips to produce the
first electronic portable calculators. The original IC had only one transistor,
three resistors and one capacitor and was the size of an adult's pinkie
finger. Today an IC smaller than a penny can hold 125 million transistors.
Jack
Kilby now holds patents on over sixty inventions and is also well known
as the inventor of the portable calculator (1967). In 1970 he was awarded
the National Medal of Science. Robert Noyce, with sixteen patents to his
name, founded Intel, the company responsible for the invention of the microprocessor,
in 1968. But for both men the invention of the integrated circuit stands
historically as one of the most important innovations of mankind. Almost
all modern products use chip technology.
Further
Reading:
The history of integrated circuits, patent drawings, photos, biographies
of the inventors and company histories.
all artwork ©MaryBellis
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