HALL OF FAME / inventor profile

Robert N. Hall
Born Dec 25 1919

Asymmetrically Conductive Device and Method of Making the Same
Magnetron
Patent Number(s) 2,994,018

Inducted 1994


Robert Hall invented the version of the magnetron that operates most microwave ovens, the semiconductor laser found in compact disk players, and power rectifiers that greatly improved power transmission efficiency.

Invention Impact

His basic rectifier structure, with silicon replacing the germanium, is used today for AC-to-DC power conversion in electric locomotives and high-voltage DC electrical transmission. In 1962 Hall invented the semiconductor injection laser, a device now used in all compact disk players and laser printers, and most optical fiber communications systems.

Inventor Bio

Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Hall earned a B.S. in Physics at CalTech in 1942 and a Ph.D. in physics at CalTech in 1948. He then returned to the General Electric Research and Development Center in Schenectady, New York, where he had worked during WorldWar II on continuous wave magnetrons to jam enemy radar. These were later incorporated into microwave ovens. After the war Hall worked first on transistors, succeeding in making ingots of never-before-available intrinsic germanium from which devices could be fabricated. A 'chance observation' while measuring the electrical properties of one of these ingots led him to his discovery of alloyed p-n junctions, the fundamental elements of power rectifiers and some transistors. During the 1970s energy crisis Hall worked on photovoltaics and solar cells.

© 2002 National Inventors Hall of Fame