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Image: Silicon grown by Czochralski process 1956 closeup

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Description: A silicon crystal being grown by the Czochralski process at the Raytheon Corp. semiconductor plant in Newton, Massachusetts, USA, in 1956 for use in the first silicon transistors. The transistor was invented in 1946, and the Czochralski process was first used to grow silicon crystals to make the first silicon transistors at Bell Labs in 1953, so this is one of the earliest silicon crystal production plants. The induction heating coil visible around the crucible carries a radio frequency current, and the heat induced melts the pure silicon in the crucible at a temperature of 2650°F. A seed crystal of solid silicon is attached to the rod and is lowered into the tube to touch the surface of the melted silicon. By carefully controlling the temperature distribution using the induction heater, the melted silicon is induced to crystallize on the seed, adding to the crystal. The seed is slowly pulled up from the melt, and the silicon freezes onto the end, creating a solid rod of monocrystal silicon. Here the process has just begun, and the tapered end of the crystal is visible just below the rod. In this early device the silicon crystal was only 1 inch wide. Alterations to image: Cropped out most of magazine cover, rotated image by a few degrees CCW to compensate for camera angle and show apparatus upright
Title: Silicon grown by Czochralski process 1956 closeup
Credit: Retrieved September 16, 2014 from Radio and Television News magazine, Ziff-Davis Publishing Co., New York, Vol. 55, No. 5, May 1956, cover on American Radio History site
Author: George E. Meyers
Permission: This 1956 issue of Radio and Television News magazine would have the copyright renewed in 1984. Online page scans of the Catalog of Copyright Entries, published by the US Copyright Office can be found here. [1] Search of the Renewals for Periodicals for 1978 and later show no renewal entries for Radio and Television News. Therefore the magazine's copyright was not renewed and it is in the public domain.
Usage Terms: Public domain
License: Public domain
Attribution Required?: No

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