Dawon Kahng | |
---|---|
강대원 | |
Born | [1] | May 4, 1931
Died | May 13, 1992[2] | (aged 61)
Citizenship | South Korean (renounced) United States |
Occupation | Electrical engineer |
Known for | MOSFET (MOS transistor) PMOS and NMOS Schottky diode Nanolayer-base transistor Floating-gate MOSFET Floating-gate memory Reprogrammable ROM |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 강대원 |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Gang Dae-won |
McCune–Reischauer | Kang Daewŏn |
Dawon Kahng (Korean: 강대원; May 4, 1931 – May 13, 1992) was a Korean-American electrical engineer and inventor, known for his work in solid-state electronics. He is best known for inventing the MOSFET (metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor, or MOS transistor), along with his colleague Mohamed Atalla, in 1959. Kahng and Atalla developed both the PMOS and NMOS processes for MOSFET semiconductor device fabrication. The MOSFET is the most widely used type of transistor, and the basic element in most modern electronic equipment.
Kahng and Atalla later proposed the concept of the MOS integrated circuit, and they did pioneering work on Schottky diodes and nanolayer-base transistors in the early 1960s. Kahng then invented the floating-gate MOSFET (FGMOS) with Simon Min Sze in 1967. Kahng and Sze proposed that FGMOS could be used as floating-gate memory cells for non-volatile memory (NVM) and reprogrammable read-only memory (ROM), which became the basis for EPROM (erasable programmable ROM), EEPROM (electrically erasable programmable ROM) and flash memory technologies. Kahng was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame in 2009.