Engineering:Trancitor

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Short description: Transfer-capacitor

File:Four possible kinds of active electronic devices.tif

The trancitor as the combined word of a "transfer-capacitor" is to be considered as another active-device category besides the transistor as a "transfer-resistor".[1][2] As observed in the table shown, four kinds of active devices are theoretically deduced. Among them, trancitors are missing to be the third and fourth kinds,[1] whereas transistors, such as bipolar junction transistor (BJT) and field-effect transistor (FET), were already invented as the first and second kinds, respectively.[3][4] Unlike the transistor switching the current at its output (i.e., current source), the trancitor transfers its input to the voltage output (i.e., voltage source), so an inverse relationship with each other.[citation needed]

History

The term, trancitor, and its concept were first conceived by Sungsik Lee, a professor at the Department of Electronics Engineering, Pusan National University, South Korea, through his article, entitled A Missing Active Device — Trancitor for a New Paradigm of Electronics, in arXiv uploaded on 30 April 2018,[5] and published on 23 August 2018 in IEEE Access.[1] And the supplementary video was also publicised.[6] This story was first featured by the MIT Technology Review on 23 May 2018, entitled Another "Missing" Component could Revolutionize Electronics.[7] Since then, it has been distributed and discussed by many other internet media and communities.[8][9][10]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Lee, Sungsik (2018). "A Missing Active Device – Trancitor for a New Paradigm of Electronics" (in en-US). IEEE Access 6: 46962–46967. doi:10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2866883. Bibcode2018IEEEA...646962L. 
  2. "The Transistor". https://www.nobelprize.org/educational/physics/transistor/function/firsttransistor.html. 
  3. "The Transistor - History". https://www.nobelprize.org/educational/physics/transistor/history/. 
  4. (in en-US) W.F. Brinkman et. al., A history of the invention of the transistor and where it will lead us - IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits (Volume: 32, Issue: 12, pp. 1858-1865, Dec 1997). doi:10.1109/4.643644. 
  5. Lee, Sungsik (30 April 2018). "A Missing Active Device - Trancitor for a New Paradigm of Electronics". IEEE Access 6: 46962–46967. doi:10.1109/ACCESS.2018.2866883. Bibcode2018IEEEA...646962L. 
  6. LEE Laboratory (24 May 2018). "A Missing Active Device - Trancitor (Another "Missing" Component - Trancitors)". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQGjWK8Q3cY. 
  7. "Another "missing" component could revolutionize electronics". https://www.technologyreview.com/s/611184/another-missing-component-could-revolutionize-electronics/. 
  8. "PNU 포커스 내용 > 뉴스 > 홍보센터 - 부산대학교". http://www.pusan.ac.kr/kor/CMS/Board/Board.do?mCode=MN109&mode=view&board_seq=1315651. 
  9. "A new theory predicts the existence of an electronic device that works like an inverse transistor. — Electronic & Electrical Engineering". 8 May 2018. https://www.ee.ucl.ac.uk/research/a-new-theory-predicts-the-existence-of-an-electronic-device-that-works-like-an-inverse-transistor. 
  10. López, Juan Carlos (2018-10-04). "Transistores inversos: qué son, para qué sirven y por qué aspiran a reinventar la electrónica" (in es). https://www.xataka.com/investigacion/transistores-inversos-que-sirven-que-aspiran-a-reinventar-electronica. 

External links