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Walter
H. Brattain
was born in Amoy, China, on February 10, 1902, the son of Ross R. Brattain
and Ottilie Houser. He spent his childhood and youth in the State of
Washington and received a B.S. degree from Whitman College in 1924.
He was awarded the M.A. degree by the University of Oregon in 1926 and
the Ph.D. degree by the University of Minnesota in 1929.
Dr. Brattain has been a member of the Bell Laboratories technical staff
since 1929. The chief field of his research has been the surface properties
of solids. His early work was concerned with thermionic emission and
adsorbed layers on tungsten. He continued on into the field of rectification
and photo-effects at semiconductor surfaces, beginning with a study
of rectification at the surface of cuprous oxide. This work was followed
by similar studies of silicon. Since World War II he has continued in
the same line of research with both silicon and germanium.
Dr. Brattain's chief contributions to solid state physics have been
the discovery of the photo-effect at the free surface of a semiconductor;
the invention of the point-contact transistor jointly with Dr. John
Bardeen, and work leading to a better understanding of the surface properties
of semiconductors, undertaken first with Dr. Bardeen, later with Dr.
C.G.B. Garrett, and currently with Dr. P.J. Boddy.
Dr. Brattain received the honorary Doctor of Science degree from Portland
University in 1952, from Whitman College and Union College in 1955,
and from the University of Minnesota in 1957. In 1952 he was awarded
the Stuart Ballantine Medal of the Franklin Institute, and in 1955 the
John Scott Medal. The degree at Union College and the two medals were
received jointly with Dr. John Bardeen, in recognition of their work
on the transistor.
Dr. Brattain is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and of
the Franklin Institute; a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the American Association
for the Advancement of Science. He is also a member of the commission
on semiconductors of the International Union of Pure and Applied Physics,
and of the Naval Research Advisory Committee.
In 1935 he married the late Dr. Keren (Gilmore) Brattain; they had one
son, William Gilmore Brattain. In 1958 he married Mrs. Emma Jane (Kirsch)
Miller. Dr. Brattain lives in Summit, New Jersey, near the Murray Hill
(N.J.) laboratory of Bell Telephone Laboratories.
From
Nobel Lectures, Physics 1942-1962.
Walter
H. Brattain died in 1987.
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