Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Transistors
Episode Date: July 8, 2025One of the most important inventions of the 20th century was the transistor. Prior to the transistor, electronic devices were large and bulky and dependent on vacuum tubes. Vacuum tubes were larg...e, fragile, power-hungry, and prone to failure. The transistor not only replaced the vacuum tube in many applications but also enabled the miniaturization and reliability required for modern electronics, including computers, phones, and spacecraft. Learn more about transistors, how they work, and how they were invented on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. ***5th Anniversary Celebration RSVP*** Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Jerry Compare quotes and coverages side-by-side from up to 50 top insurers at jerry.ai/daily American Scandal Follow American Scandal on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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One of the most important inventions of the 20th century was the transistor.
Prior to the transistor, electronic devices were bulky and dependent upon vacuum tubes.
Vacuum tubes were large, fragile, power-hungry, and prone to failure.
The transistor not only replaced the vacuum tube in most applications,
but also enabled the miniaturization and reliability required for modern electronics,
including computers, phones, and even spacecraft.
Learn more about transistors.
how they work and how they were invented on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The late Mitch Hedberg had a joke that went,
Rice is great if you're really hungry and want to eat 2,000 of something.
Instead of thousands of something, think of something that you own that you don't have thousands of,
but millions or probably even billions of.
The answer to something that you have billions of is transistors.
Modern computer chips have billions of transistors,
and depending on the number of devices you have,
entirely possible that you might own trillions of them.
The path to devices with billions of transistors started with the development of a single one.
And this, of course, raises the question, what exactly is a transistor and what does it do?
Before I get into what a transistor is, I should start with the technology that transistors were created to replace vacuum tubes.
The vacuum tube was invented in the early 20th century as a breakthrough in controlling electrical.
electrical signals. Its origins trace back to Thomas Edison's discovery in 1883 of thermionic
emissions, the release of electrons from a heated filament, although Edison didn't understand the
implications of his discovery. Building on this, John Ambrose Fleming invented the first true vacuum
tube in 1904, which he called the Fleming valve, which acted as a diode and was used to detect
radio signals. A diode is an electronic component that allows electric current to flow in only one.
direction, acting as a one-way valve for electricity. In 1906, Lee DeForest added a third element,
a control grid, creating the triode, which could amplify weak electrical signals. This development
revolutionized electronics, making long-distance telephony, radio broadcasting, and later computing
possible. Vacuum tubes served as the fundamental building blocks of electronic devices from
the early 19th century until about the mid-20th century. Their primary purpose was
to control the flow of electric current, making them essential for three key functions,
amplification, switching, and rectification.
Vacuum tubes could take a weak electrical signal and amplify it, making it stronger,
and this was vital for radios to boost faint signals from distant stations so that they could
drive a speaker.
Vacuum tubes could also act as electronic switches, which are necessary for binary logic in computers.
A slight change in voltage could switch a much larger current on or on.
This allowed early computers like the ENIAC to perform calculations using thousands of vacuum-tume switches to represent binary digits.
Finally, vacuum tubes could convert alternating current into direct current, a process called rectification.
And this was crucial in power supplies for radios, televisions, and other devices.
As critical as vacuum tubes were, they had severe drawbacks.
They consumed a lot of power, generated a lot of heat, were physically large, and burned out quickly.
As the demand for faster and more compact electronics grew, particularly during and after World War II, it became clear that a better alternative was needed.
It turned out, the answer to this problem lay in the discovery made in the 19th century.
In 1874, German physicist and electrical engineer Carl Ferdinand Brown discovered that certain crystalline materials could conduct electricity only in one direction.
This phenomenon, called rectification, laid the groundwork for understanding semiconductors.
Brown noticed that the metal contacts on crystals, such as lead sulfide, created what we now call a crystal detector.
It was essentially a primitive diode.
In the early 1900s, these crystal detectors became crucial components and radio receivers.
Engineers would use a thin wire called a cat's whisker to make contact with a crystal, creating a device that could detect radio waves.
While primitive, these devices demonstrated the fundamental principle that would later enable transistors,
the ability to control electrical current through carefully engineered materials.
The theoretical understanding of this phenomenon deepened in the 1920s and 30s as quantum mechanics emerged.
Scientists began to comprehend why certain materials behaved as semiconductors.
These materials had electrical properties that fell between conductors like copper and insulators like glass.
This understanding proved essential for the deliberate engineering of semiconductor devices.
The transistor's birth occurred at a place familiar to regular listeners of this podcast, Bell Labs,
which, if you remember from previous episodes, invented everything.
It was there that three physicists, John Bardeen, Walter Bratton, and William Shockley,
were investigating semiconductors in search of a replacement for vacuum tubes.
and from a business standpoint, Bell Telephone needed something more reliable for its expanding telephone network.
On December 16, 1947, Bardeen and Bratton achieved a breakthrough.
They placed two gold contacts very close together on a germanium crystal, with the crystal mounted on a metal base.
When they applied voltage to one contact, they discovered that they could control a much larger current flowing between the other contact and the base.
they had created the first point-contact transistor.
Think of this as controlling a large water valve with a small handle.
A tiny signal could control a much larger flow.
This amplification properly made the transistor revolutionary.
The problem was that the point-contact transistor was fragile and difficult to manufacture consistently.
William Shockley, initially frustrated at being excluded from his colleague's breakthrough,
work to understand the underlying physics and develop a more practical design.
In 1948, he invented the junction transistor, which used different layers of differently treated
semiconductor material instead of point contacts. This design proved far more stable and easier
to manufacture. Shockley, Breton, and Bardeen were awarded the Nobel Prize in physics in 1956
for their work on the development of the transistor. And as a side note, John Bardeen won another
Nobel Prize in 1972 for his work in superconductivity, one of only five people to have ever been
awarded two Nobel Prizes. The key insight that the Bell Labs team made is that transistors
operate through the movement of electrons and holes, holes being spaces where electrons are missing
in specially treated semiconductor materials. By carefully controlling the purity and treatment of these
materials, engineers can create devices that switch between conducting and non-conducting states
millions of times per second. The transition from laboratory curiosity to commercial product
required solving numerous manufacturing challenges. Bill Labs initially used germanium in its
transistors, but this material had limitations. It was sensitive to temperature and difficult to
purify consistently. The manufacturing process involved growing single crystals of germanium and then
carefully adding tiny amounts of impurities, called doping, to create the necessary electrical
properties. The first commercial transistor applications appeared in hearing aids around 1952. These devices
benefited enormously from the transistor's small size and low power consumption compared to vacuum tubes.
The transistor industry experienced rapid growth, with companies such as Texas Instruments,
Fairchild, and Motorola entering the market. A crucial breakthrough came with the development of
silicon transistors in the late 1950s. Silicon offered several advantages over germanium.
It was more abundant, could operate at higher temperatures, and was much easier to purify.
Gordon Teal, at Texas Instruments, pioneered the manufacturing of silicon transistors,
creating devices that could withstand the harsh conditions in military and industrial applications.
Transistors changed almost all electronics. Transistors were small, cheap, and much more durable
than vacuum tubes because they were a solid state.
Consider what it did to radios.
Prior to the development of transistors,
commercial radios were large.
They were often the size of an appliance or a piece of furniture.
A family would gather around the radio in the evening
because the radio was too large to be brought to them.
New radios called transistor radios
were very small and portable.
Now it was possible to put a portable radio in your pocket
and take it to the beach or to a ballgame
where you could actually listen to the announcers while you watch the game.
Car radios first introduced in the 1920s became far more affordable and widespread in automobiles with transistors.
However, the simple transistor developed by Bell Labs was just the start.
The next major leap came when engineers realized that they could fabricate multiple transistors on a single piece of semiconductor material.
Jack Kilby at Texas Instruments and Robert Noyce at Fairchild Semiconductor
independently invented the integrated circuit in 1958 and 1959.
The integrated circuit solved a growing problem called the tyranny of numbers.
As electronic devices became more complex requiring thousands of transistors,
the task of connecting them all with individual wires became overwhelming.
The integrated circuit allowed manufacturers to create all the transistors and
and their connections simultaneously, using photographic and chemical processes in one compact package.
This led to the development of the creation of the planar process, which utilized flat silicon
wafers instead of individual crystals. The planar process developed primarily at Fairchild,
enabled the simultaneous manufacturer of thousands of identical transistors dramatically reducing
costs and improving reliability. The logical extension of placing multiple transistors on a single chip
was to create complete computing systems on a single chip.
In 1971, Intel released the 4004, the world's first microprocessor,
which contained approximately 2,300 transistors on a single chip.
This device could perform the same calculations as a room-sized computer from the 1940s.
The microprocessor represented a fundamental shift in how we think about computation.
Instead of building specialized hardware for each task,
engineers could now create general purpose processors that could be programmed to perform virtually any
calculation. This flexibility unleashed an explosion in innovation and computing applications.
Throughout the 1970s and 80s, the semiconductor industry followed what became known as
Moore's Law, the observation that the number of transistors on a chip doubles approximately
every two years, a subject I covered in a previous episode.
A crucial development was the widespread adoption of complementary metal,
oxide semiconductor or Seymoss technology in the 1980s.
Seamoss transistors consume power only when switching between states, making them ideal
for battery-powered devices. This technology became the foundation for modern microprocessors,
memory chips, and virtually all digital electronics. The basic CMOS approach uses pairs of transistors,
one that conducts when the input is high and another that conducts when the input is low.
This complementary design ensures that current flows only during transitions, resulting in a dramatic
reduction in power consumption compared to earlier technologies.
Modern transistors have reached truly microscopic dimensions.
Current cutting-edge processors use transistors with features measured in nanometers, billions of a meter.
To put this in perspective, if a transistor of that size were scaled to the size of a marble,
then a marble would be the size of the Earth.
The incredibly small scale of these transistors
allows for more to be packed into smaller spaces,
resulting in higher density of transistors
in common computing devices.
At the start of this episode,
I said that almost all of you own billions of transistors
even if you don't even know it.
And that is not an exaggeration.
The Apple A18 processor,
which is used in devices like the iPhone 16,
contains approximately 15.2 billion transistors, while the higher-end A-18 Pro boasts around
18 billion transistors. Desktop and laptop CPUs from Intel and AMD have a similar number of
transistors. But that's just the central processor. If you include graphics cards like the
Nvidia RTX 5090, you're talking about another 90 billion transistors. Transistors literally changed the
world. You could say that they are the foundation of modern civilization. Without them,
almost every modern electronic device would not exist. So instead of listening to podcast episodes
about transistors, you'd still be huddled around a gigantic vacuum tube radio in your living room.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel. The associate producers are
Austin Oakden and Cameron Kiefer. I want to thank everyone who supports the show over on Patreon.
your support helps make this podcast possible.
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If you'd like to join in the discussion,
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