Joint Meeting of the Four Corners and Texas Sections of the American Physical Society
Volume 61, Number 15
Friday–Saturday, October 21–22, 2016;
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Session I7: Plenary IV and Career Panel Luncheon
11:24 AM–12:00 PM,
Saturday, October 22, 2016
Room: Exhibit Hall 2
Chair: Stefan Zollner, New Mexico State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.TSF.I7.1
Abstract: I7.00001 : A Career from Nuclear Physics in Academia to Semiconductor Technology in Industry
11:24 AM–12:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Author:
Robert Doering
(Texas Instruments)
In the late 1970s and early 1980s, the integrated-circuit industry was
revolutionized by the development of robust field-effect transistor (FET)
implementations. Bipolar-junction-transistor (BJT) circuits were not
completely replaced, but FETs, especially in the form of
complementary-metal-oxide-silicon (CMOS) technology, provided a superior
path to higher levels of device integration. For many years, the ``driver
product'' for CMOS technology R{\&}D was memory, especially
dynamic-random-access memory (DRAM). The pace of this development was
approximately 4 times the number of bits/chip every 3 years, about equally
enabled by decreasing device dimensions and by increasing chip size, both
requiring continued advances in lithography and other process technologies.
The competitive pressure for achieving the associated breakthroughs provided
an attractive industrial laboratory environment for quite a few physicists
in this era. The technical challenges tended to be interrelated both within
and between semiconductor-device and thin-film process design, requiring
simulation as well as experiment. Today, electrical engineering has matured
to the point that many EE PhDs are educated in these areas. However, 3-4
decades ago, quite a few academic physicists (even a few from nuclear
physics!) followed this opportunity into industrial semiconductor physics
and helped lead the revolution toward modern nano-electronics. The
integrated-circuit industry is one of many that continue to hire physicists
into the teams that address current R{\&}D challenges. Hopefully, there will
always be opportunities for physicists to ``catch waves of various
amplitudes'' in industrial research. Note that these opportunities include
collaboration with industry, an area in which the academic physics community
might further adopt a few best practices from their engineering colleagues.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.TSF.I7.1