Meet the 2008 National Inventors Hall of Fame Inductees


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(Photo credit: Reprinted with permission of Alcatel-Lucent)

Daryl M. Chapin
(b. July 21,1906 – d. January 19, 1995)

Silicon Solar Cell

Daryl Chapin, with Bell Labs colleagues Calvin Fuller and Gerald Pearson, invented the first practical device for converting sunlight into useful electrical power.  Today, the silicon solar cell powers devices from hand held calculators to the Mars Rover.

Chapin was born in Ellensburg, Washington.  He earned a bachelor’s degree from Willamette University and a master’s degree from the University of Washington.  He joined Bell Labs in 1930, after teaching physics at Oregon State College for a year.

At Bell Labs, Chapin initially studied magnetic materials.  During World War II, he focused on underwater sound devices and magnetic recording.  In early 1953, in an effort to find new sources of power for transistor telephone systems, he began to investigate the direct conversion of solar energy into electrical energy.  The solar battery was first demonstrated on April 25, 1954.  In 1959, Chapin so simplified the process of making solar cells that it became one of Bell Systems’ Science Experiments performed by high school students around the U.S.

Chapin was a Bell Labs scientist for over 40 years.  After retiring, he continued to invent and was working on a new board game for the blind at the time of his death.


 


Robert Adler

Ruth Benerito
Amar Bose
Daryl Chapin
John Charnley
Willem Einthoven
Calvin Fuller
Nick Holonyak, Jr.
Erna Hoover
Amos Joel, Jr.
Clarence "Kelly" Johnson
Ray McIntire
Malcom McLean
Harold McMaster
William Murphy, Jr.
David Pall
Gerald Pearson
Ken Richardson
Louis Stevens


National Inventors Hall of Fame Fact Sheet

Announcement of 2008 Inductees

For media inquiries, contact media@invent.org

Learn more about the National Inventors Hall of Fame.

 




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