Frank Wanlass

Computer pioneer
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroComputer pioneer
PlacesUnited States of America
wasEngineer Electrical engineer
Work fieldEngineering
Gender
Male
Birth17 May 1933, Thatcher
Death9 September 2010Santa Clara (aged 77 years)
ResidenceCalifornia
The details

Biography

Dr. Frank Marion Wanlass (May 17, 1933 in Thatcher, AZ – September 9, 2010 in Santa Clara), CA, was an American electrical engineer. He obtained his PhD from the University of Utah. He invented CMOS logic circuits in 1963 while working at Fairchild Semiconductor. He was given U.S. patent #3,356,858 for "Low Stand-By Power Complementary Field Effect Circuitry" in 1967.
In 1964, Wanlass moved to General Microelectronics (GMe), where he made the first commercial MOS integrated circuits, and a year later to General Instrument Microelectronics Division in New York, where he developed four-phase logic.
He was also remembered for his contribution to solving threshold voltage stability in MOS transistors due to sodium ion drift.
In 1991, Wanlass was awarded the IEEE Solid-State Circuits Award.

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