The concept of using stored charge to gate transistors for electronic memory, was first separately patented by Jack Morton and Ian Ross in 1955 at
Bell Labs. Both proposed to store charge in a ferroelectric on the surface of the semiconductor with the purpose of gating electricity for information storage. In 1961, Vasil Uzunoglu and Phillip Koenig, patented the idea applied to MOS-type transistors, also for solid memory. In 1961, Paul Weimer, from RCA, patented insulated electrodes for solid state devices. A FGMOS with thick insulation between the electrode and ferroelectric was later made in 1967 by Dawon Kahng and
Simon Min Sze at Bell Labs and patented by Kahng. Until 1974, single floating gates were unable to be erased electronically and were not mass produced for electronic storage. Modern FGMOS used in flash memories are based on Fowler-Nordheim tunnelling EEPROM gates, which was invented by Bernward and patented by
Siemens in 1974 and further improved by Israeli-American
Eliyahou Harari at
Hughes Aircraft Company and
George Perlegos and others at Intel. Initial applications of FGMOS was digital
semiconductor memory, to store
nonvolatile data in
EPROM,
EEPROM and
flash memory. In 1989, Intel employed the FGMOS as an analog nonvolatile memory element in its electrically trainable
artificial neural network (ETANN) chip, demonstrating the potential of using FGMOS devices for applications other than digital memory. Three research accomplishments laid the groundwork for much of the current FGMOS circuit development: • Thomsen and Brooke's demonstration and use of
electron tunneling in a standard
CMOS double-
poly process allowed many researchers to investigate FGMOS circuits concepts without requiring access to specialized fabrication processes. • The
νMOS, or neuron-MOS, circuit approach by Shibata and Ohmi provided the initial inspiration and framework to use capacitors for linear computations. These researchers concentrated on the FG circuit properties instead of the device properties, and used either
UV light to equalize charge, or simulated FG elements by opening and closing MOSFET switches. •
Carver Mead's
adaptive retina gave the first example of using continuously-operating FG programming/erasing techniques, in this case UV light, as the backbone of an adaptive circuit technology. ==Structure==