Saltar al contenido principal

Semiconducting Chalcogenide Glass III

Applications of Chalcogenide Glasses

  • 1 Edición, Volumen 80 - 17 de diciembre de 2004
  • Última edición
  • Editores: Robert Fairman, Boris Ushkov
  • Idioma: Inglés

Chalcogenide glass is made up of many elements from the Chalcogenide group. The glass is transparent to infrared light and is useful as a semiconductor in many electronic de… Leer más

Descripción

Chalcogenide glass is made up of many elements from the Chalcogenide group. The glass is transparent to infrared light and is useful as a semiconductor in many electronic devices. For example, chalcogenide glass fibers are a component of devices used to perform laser surgery.

Semiconducting Chalcogenide Glass III: Applications of Chalcogenide Glasses is a comprehensive overview of designs of various chalcogenide glass devices are presented, including switches, phase inverters, voltage stabilizers, oscillators, indicators and display control circuits, memory devices, and sensors. A special chapter is devoted to chalcogenide glass applications in optical fibers.

This collective monograph is intended to survey the current state of chalcogenide glass applications to facilitate further development.

Puntos claves

  • The first collective monograph written by Eastern European scientists covering electrical and optical properties of chalcogenide vitreous semiconductors (CVS)
  • Contributions by B.G. Kolomiets, who discovered the properties of chalcogenide glass in 1955!
  • Provides evidence and discussion by authors from opposing positions

De interès para

Researchers, academics and professionals in materials science, physical chemistry and microelectronics

Detalles del producto

  • Edición: 1
  • Última edición
  • Volumen: 80
  • Publicado: 17 de diciembre de 2004
  • Idioma: Inglés

Sobre los editores

RF

Robert Fairman

Afiliaciones y experiencia
Beaverton, USA

BU

Boris Ushkov

Afiliaciones y experiencia
ELMA, Moscow, Russia

Ver libro en ScienceDirect

Lee Semiconducting Chalcogenide Glass III en ScienceDirect