Donald L. Klein

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Donald_L._Klein an entity of type: Thing

Donald Lee Klein (born December 19, 1930) is an American inventor and chemist, most known for inventing the process to fabricate the self-aligned gate MOSFET transistor along with Robert E. Kerwin and John C. Sarace in 1967 at Bell Labs. In 1994, together with Kerwin and Sarace, Klein received the IEEE Jack A. Morton award (renamed in 2000 to the IEEE Andrew S. Grove Award) "For pioneering work and the basic patent on the self-aligned silicon-gate process, a key element in fabrication of very large scale integrated circuits." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Donald L. Klein
rdf:langString Donald Klein
rdf:langString Donald Klein
xsd:date 1930-12-19
xsd:integer 63827221
xsd:integer 1124618104
rdf:langString
rdf:langString New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame
rdf:langString Brooklyn Technical High School Alumni Hall of Fame
rdf:langString IBM Invention Award
rdf:langString IEEE Jack A. Morton award
xsd:date 1930-12-19
xsd:integer 6
rdf:langString Invention of MOSFET transistor
rdf:langString American
rdf:langString Ruth Kintzburger
rdf:langString Donald Lee Klein (born December 19, 1930) is an American inventor and chemist, most known for inventing the process to fabricate the self-aligned gate MOSFET transistor along with Robert E. Kerwin and John C. Sarace in 1967 at Bell Labs. In 1994, together with Kerwin and Sarace, Klein received the IEEE Jack A. Morton award (renamed in 2000 to the IEEE Andrew S. Grove Award) "For pioneering work and the basic patent on the self-aligned silicon-gate process, a key element in fabrication of very large scale integrated circuits." That same year, Klein, Kerwin and Sarace were declared "Inventors of the Year" by the New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12848
xsd:gYear 1930

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