Talk:Julius Edgar Lilienfeld

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I'm interested in the source of any evidence that Lilienfeld DIDN'T build his devices. If we speculate that pure materials were needed and therefore his devices could not have worked, well, that's SPECULATION. (I vaguely remember a SciAm AMATEUR SCIENTIST project where thin-film transistors were made using fairly impure materials!) It was my impression that nobody knows whether Lilienfeld's devices worked or not. --Wjbeaty 19:55, Mar 20, 2005 (UTC)

Well, usually the chain of evidence is unraveled the other way around. There is no evidence that his devices worked, and the common consensus it that they probably did not.
Lack of proof does not constitute disproof; "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." As applied to Lilienfeld, if there is no proof that his transistors displayed gain, then we can only conclude that nobody knows whether they worked. But if someone KNOWS that they didn't work, I want to hear their evidence. For example, did someone try replicating the devices from his patents... and fail? Or is there some theoretical reason why they should fail? As I understand it, ultra-pure materials are only required in grown-crystal devices. Crappy materials work fine for copper-oxide or selenium rectifiers, and possibly for the baked-chemicals semiconductors in that old SciAm article. Bell Labs was never able to make copper-oxide FETs because surface states act as a conductor and screen out the e-fields within the bulk material. I wonder, maybe the negative concensus about Lilienfeld is the "Emperor's Nose" phenomenon described by R. Feynman. Or maybe it's based on an assumption that Lilienfeld would have first had to conquer the "surface states problem." There was an old article in Analog SF magazine, "The 20 lost years of semiconductor physics" which speculated that his broken-glass-gold-foil transistor was actually NPN, not an FET (assumed that metal ions from the foil actually diffused into the thinfilm conductor, forming a narrow "base region" having reversed doping.) What if Lilienfeld's technique eliminates the Surface States Problem right off the bat? His transistors sound like an excellent physics-student project, but I wouldn't be suprised if lots of repeated attempts are needed to get the variables set right. --Wjbeaty 04:43, Mar 22, 2005 (UTC)
That said, I find these patents really fascinating. I am fairly sure that Lilienfeld knew what he did. I found several letters in old journals by him showing that he had a really good grasp of space charge limited currents - a theory that can be used to explain the operation of various types of transistors (although not commonly done so). It is also well established that he knew how to manufacture high quality thin film isolators, as evidenced by his groundbreaking work in electrolytic capacitors.
The description of his devices is very detailed down to the materials chosen. In theory his devices should work. --Qdr 23:17, 20 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Removed from the article

It is unclear why Lilienfeld did not receive a Nobel Prize for his pioneering work. Nobel Prizes are not awarded posthumously, but Lilienfeld was still alive when Shockley, Bardeen, and Brattain : each received 1/3 of the physics prize in 1956. The Nobel Committee, however, does not publish the reasons leading to its decisions.

The nobel price was obviously given for the first experimental and theoretical demonstration of the transistor. There are numerous other people who contributed and demonstrated related work, not limited to Lilienfeld. (O. Heil, H. Matare and H. Welker come to mind.) --Qdr 22:48, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Interesting! Evidence of a Bell Labs' coverup[edit]

The semiconductor physicist H. E. Stockman says "Lilienfeld demonstrated his remarkable tubeless radio receiver on many occasions, but God help a fellow who at that time threatened the reign of the tube." See Bell Labs Memorial: Who really invented the transistor?, starting at "Oscillating Crystals".

Here's a paper which details some history of the laboratory testing of Lilienfeld's patent claims by others: The Other Transistor: early history of the MOSFET See pp235-236

Briefly: In 1964 a physicist V. Bottom asked in Physics Today magazine whether these transistors worked, and J. B. Johnson of Bell Labs responded saying that he'd tested them and they didn't work. This probably is the origin of the story that Lilienfeld never had any working hardware. Then in 1995 R. G. Arns found a 1948 legal deposition by Johnson which said the opposite: that Bell Labs back then had a project to test Lilienfeld's transistors, and before Johnson took over the project, Shockely and Pearson had built Lilienfeld's aluminum oxide MOSFET from his patent and found only an 11% modulation index, but that "useful power output is substantial"! To me this sounds like Johnson, being with Bell Labs, perhaps had an agenda to promote his own company's discovery while misleading the physics community about Lilienfeld's. After Shockley/Pearson's success, Johnson had tested the other two Lilienfeld patents and was unable to replicate them ...so Johnson was only dishonest in his covering up the fact that Bell Labs well knew that Lilienfeld had something real. Between these times B. Crawford in 1991 built successful but unstable Lilienfeld MOSFETs and saw evidence that Lilienfeld had done the same. In 1995 J. Ross built stable Lilienfeld MOSFETs. The author makes a very telling statement about the honesty of these scientists: "Published scientific, technical, and hstorical papers by these Bell scientists never mention either Lilienfeld’s or Heil’s prior work." --Wjbeaty 03:13, 1 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Transistors with 1920 technology[edit]

Just in case somebody is interested in how Julius Lilienfelds results can be replicated using 1920ies technologies. I found a paperJVST A Volume 20, Issue 4, pp. 1365-1368 describing transistors made with anodized aluminum gate insulator and a chemical bath deposited semiconductor (CdS/CdSe). Both are techniques that do not require complicated equipment (beaker, current source, heater) and should have been accessible in the 1920ies.

Bizarrely enough the same authors managed to file patent on their technique (US6225149), despite of all the prior art. (Using chemical bath deposition for transistors is not exactly a novel idea..) --Qdr 20:36, 2 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Even more bizarre: Bell Labs had a project to replicate Lilienfeld's transistors. They were successful, producing 11% FET modulation and substantial gain. And they published a 1948 paper about it, in the same journal with the famous 1948 paper on the BJT. But then they lied: concealing that this was a successful test of Lilienfeld devices. 1948 Shockley & Pearson in Phys Rev "Modulation of thin-film conductance... " http://journals.aps.org/pr/abstract/10.1103/PhysRev.74.232 205.175.118.146 (talk) 08:57, 16 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
That sounds like WP:OR to me. Unless you find an article someone else published saying that Bell Labs lied on this, it doesn't belong in this article. Tarl.Neustaedter (talk) 05:02, 17 December 2015 (UTC)[reply]
The story of Bell Labs and EB Johnson being caught in multiple lies about Lilienfeld's transistors comes from "The Other Transistor: early history of the MOSFET" http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpls/abs_all.jsp?arnumber=730824 ESE Journal 1998 75.172.131.212 (talk) 19:22, 18 August 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Lilienfeld being Polish[edit]

In this Canadian patent from 1927 he referred to himself as "a citizen of Poland" and on page 20 of this presentation a letter from Lilienfeld to Maria Skłodowka-Curie can be seen, where he asks about "a possibility of presenting relevant phenomena to the French" and explains how "a Pole in Germany" cannot go back to Poland, as it would mean stopping his work for a few years. This letter is quoted to be from the archive of the Maria Skłodowkska-Curie Museum, bearing the number M/320. I do not have the means to verify that with the Museum, but I feel like this is sufficient evidence of him being Polish. 188.146.75.74 (talk) 18:41, 9 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]

You've convinced me that at one point he was legally Polish. The "citizen of Poland" refers to the brief period 1918-1939 where the Versailles treaty moved his birth city into a newly-created Poland, before the Soviets took it back out. Presumably his passport in 1927 (after the Austro-Hungarian empire vanished), was issued by this new Poland, but I'm not convinced from reading his biography that he ever visited that country. He lived in Berlin and Leipzig after 1900, and moved to the United States in '21, so there is only a three-year window in the immediate post-war years where he could have even entered that Poland. The letter to Maria Slodowska (Curie) on page 20 of that powerpoint presentation (which, by the way, is of unknown source and does not identify its quotations, so does not qualify as WP:RS), does not say he considers himself Polish. It sympathizes with Poles living in Germany, which I understand to refer to Mdme. Curie, but unless there is a grammatical trick I'm missing (I'm not fluent in Polish), it doesn't say he is one. From that era, ethnic identifications of Polish vs. German vs. Hungarian were not based merely on location (as passport issuance was), but on linguistic and ethnic history. From what I've seen, his was German and Jewish. Tarl N. (discuss) 23:08, 9 March 2017 (UTC)[reply]
Lilienfeld obviously had a polish passport in 1925 (the year he wrote the patent paper). This Source shows an CV, written by himself (page 44). Lilienfeld writes "Am 18. April 1882 zu Lemberg in Oesterreich geboren bin ich, Julius Edgar Lilienfeld, oesterreichisch-ungarischer Staatsbürger, israelitischen Glaubensbekenntnisses." (austro-hungarian citizen...). Kein Einstein (talk) 21:16, 12 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@Kein Einstein: The CV states the equivalent of "austro-hungarian citizen", which isn't at question. The issue is whether his birth city of Lemberg (German name, since he spoke German), having briefly moved through Polish ownership after he left, would require him to be considered Polish. Since the action which resulted in Lwów coming under Polish government in 1918 also included burning the Ukrainian and Jewish sectors of the city, I suspect he was unlikely to consider this his home at the time. (See Lviv#Polish–Ukrainian_War).
Polish is usually considered an ethnic identity, and I've seen no evidence that he considered himself (or anyone else considered him) part of that ethnicity. His home city's existence as part of Poland was brief, and long after he'd left. We'd be as justified in calling him Ukrainian, since that city was Lviv in Ukraine by the time he died. Tarl N. (discuss) 21:36, 12 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]
@Tarl N.: Oh, it was not my aim to change anything. User 188.146.75.74 wanted to change Lilienfeld to "polish" in de:wikipedia. So I wanted to point out, that "beeing Polish" is not correct. Kein Einstein (talk) 21:59, 12 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]
Wow. He's still at it, two years later? Well, it's a Polish IP address, so presumably we're talking ethnic pride here. :-) Tarl N. (discuss) 22:51, 12 March 2019 (UTC)[reply]

Wheat allergy[edit]

Any evidence of this wheat allergy being an undiagnosed gluten intolerance MagistrateAustin (talk) 13:51, 7 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]

No. The two conditions don't resemble each other, either (one is digestive, the other is respiratory). Tarl N. (discuss) 16:22, 7 February 2023 (UTC)[reply]