Semiconductor Devices Stocks List

Related ETFs - A few ETFs which own one or more of the above listed Semiconductor Devices stocks.

Semiconductor Devices Stocks Recent News

Date Stock Title
May 17 VSH Vishay (VSH) Bolsters Opto Offerings With New Optocoupler
May 17 TER What Makes Teradyne (TER) a Strong Momentum Stock: Buy Now?
May 17 DD DuPont pops to fresh two-year high as Jefferies raises to Buy
May 17 DD Robinhood upgraded, Baidu downgraded: Wall Street's top analyst calls
May 16 TER Peering Into Teradyne's Recent Short Interest
May 16 DD DuPont Earns Great Place To Work Certification™ for Second Consecutive Year
May 16 ICHR Ichor Announces Upcoming Investor Events
May 16 DD Third Point top buy and sells in Q1
May 16 DD Siemens to Sell Innomotics to KPS Capital Partners for $3.8 Billion
May 15 VSH Vishay Intertechnology 25 MBd Optocoupler Features Digital Input and Output to Simplify Designs and Lower Costs
May 15 ICHR Baron Discovery Fund Sold Ichor Holdings, Ltd. (ICHR) in Q1
May 14 DD DuPont (DD) to Showcase Advanced Circuit Materials in Shanghai
May 14 ON Near Its 52-Week Lows, 1 Top Chip Stock Could Be an Incredible Value
May 14 TER 3M, Teradyne And More: CNBC's 'Final Trades'
May 14 DD DuPont Receives American Chemistry Council's Sustainability Leadership Award
May 13 TRT Trio-Tech GAAP EPS of $0.02, revenue of $10.4M
May 13 DD DuPont Showcases AI Innovations Featuring Advanced Interconnects at 2024 International Electronic Circuits Exhibition
May 13 DIOD This Analyst With 85% Accuracy Rate Sees Over 30% Upside In Uber - Here Are 5 Stock Picks For Last Week From Wall Street's Most Accurate Analysts
May 13 TRT Trio-Tech Reports Improved Third Quarter Results
May 13 TER Teradyne, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:TER) Stock Has Seen Strong Momentum: Does That Call For Deeper Study Of Its Financial Prospects?
Semiconductor Devices

Semiconductor devices are electronic components that exploit the electronic properties of semiconductor material, principally silicon, germanium, and gallium arsenide, as well as organic semiconductors. Semiconductor devices have replaced thermionic devices (vacuum tubes) in most applications. They use electronic conduction in the solid state as opposed to the gaseous state or thermionic emission in a high vacuum.
Semiconductor devices are manufactured both as single discrete devices and as integrated circuits (ICs), which consist of a number – from a few (as low as two) to billions – of devices manufactured and interconnected on a single semiconductor substrate, or wafer.
Semiconductor materials are useful because their behavior can be easily manipulated by the addition of impurities, known as doping. Semiconductor conductivity can be controlled by the introduction of an electric or magnetic field, by exposure to light or heat, or by the mechanical deformation of a doped monocrystalline grid; thus, semiconductors can make excellent sensors. Current conduction in a semiconductor occurs via mobile or "free" electrons and holes, collectively known as charge carriers. Doping a semiconductor such as silicon with a small proportion of an atomic impurity, such as phosphorus or boron, greatly increases the number of free electrons or holes within the semiconductor. When a doped semiconductor contains excess holes it is called "p-type", and when it contains excess free electrons it is known as "n-type", where p (positive for holes) or n (negative for electrons) is the sign of the charge of the majority mobile charge carriers. The semiconductor material used in devices is doped under highly controlled conditions in a fabrication facility, or fab, to control precisely the location and concentration of p- and n-type dopants. The junctions which form where n-type and p-type semiconductors join together are called p–n junctions.
Semiconductor devices made per year have been growing by 9.1% on average since 1978, and shipments in 2018 are predicted for the first time to exceed 1 trillion, meaning that well over 7 trillion has been made to date, in just in the decade prior.

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