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The Economic Times
The Economic Times
Team Global

In 1916, a metallurgist accidentally dipped his pen into molten metal; it led to a crystal-growing technique that powers the modern semiconductor industry

Some discoveries emerge from carefully designed experiments, while others begin with an unexpected observation that nobody intended to make. The story of Jan Czochralski belongs firmly in the second category. In 1916, while working with molten metal, the Polish metallurgist reportedly dipped his pen into the melt by mistake and noticed that a thin crystal filament formed as he pulled it away.

The incident has become one of the most famous stories in materials science because it eventually led to the Czochralski method, a technique for growing large single crystals from molten materials. What began as an accidental observation later became a foundation of modern electronics.

Today, the vast majority of silicon crystals used in semiconductor manufacturing are produced using variations of the process that carries Czochralski’s name, making his discovery one of the most influential laboratory accidents in industrial history.

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