William Shockley received his undergraduate degree from
Caltech and moved east to complete his PhD at
MIT with a focus on physics. He graduated in 1936 and immediately went to work at
Bell Labs. Through the 1930s and '40s he worked on
electron devices, and increasingly with semiconductor materials, pioneering the field of solid state electronics. This led to the 1947 creation of the first
transistor, in partnership with
John Bardeen,
Walter Brattain and others. Through the early 1950s a series of events led to Shockley becoming increasingly upset with Bell's management, and especially what he saw as a slighting when Bell promoted Bardeen and Brattain's names ahead of his own on the transistor's patent. However, others that worked with him suggested the reason for these issues was Shockley's abrasive management style, and it was this reason that he was constantly passed over for promotion within the company. These issues came to a head in 1953 and he took a sabbatical and returned to Caltech as a visiting professor. Shockley struck up a friendship with
Arnold Orville Beckman, who had invented the
pH meter in 1934. Shockley had become convinced that the natural capabilities of
silicon meant it would eventually replace
germanium as the primary material for transistor construction.
Texas Instruments had recently started production of silicon transistors (in 1954), and Shockley thought he could create a superior product. Beckman agreed to back Shockley's efforts in this area, under the umbrella of his company,
Beckman Instruments. However, Shockley's mother was aging and often ill, and he decided to live closer to her house in
Palo Alto. Shockley set about recruiting his first four PhD physicists:
William W. Happ who had previously worked on semiconductor devices at
Raytheon,
George Smoot Horsley and
Leopoldo B. Valdes from Bell Labs, and
Richard Victor Jones, a recent
Berkeley graduate. The Shockley Semiconductor Laboratory opened for business in a small commercial lot in nearby
Mountain View in 1956. Initially he tried to hire more of his former workers from Bell Labs, but they were reticent to leave the east coast, then the center of most high-tech research. Instead, he assembled a team of young scientists and engineers, some from other parts of Bell Laboratories, and set about designing a new type of crystal-growth system that could produce single-crystal silicon
boules, at that time a difficult prospect given silicon's high melting point. ==Shockley diodes==