The Russian who invented semiconductors 25 years before the USA

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TIL: The Man Who Invented the Future, Then Starved to Death in It

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TIL: The Man Who Invented the Future, Then Starved to Death in It<br>The story of Oleg Losev, LEDs, and a lost manuscript describing a new three-electrode semiconductor device

Semi Doped<br>Jun 06, 2026

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There is a particular kind of tragedy reserved for people who are right too early. Oleg Losev was 18 years old, working as a technician at a Soviet radio lab in Nizhny Novgorod, when he built something in early 1922 that the rest of the world would take another 25 years to catch up to.

Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1946116<br>He would never hold a position higher than technician, until a doctorate arrived in 1938 — four years before his death, too late to change anything. By every bureaucratic measure, he was nobody. And yet.<br>While fiddling with carborundum crystal detectors used in early radio receivers, Losev noticed that passing a direct current through the junction produced a faint, cold light. Henry Round had seen something similar in 1907 and moved on. Losev stayed. He isolated the phenomenon, ruled out heat and chemical reaction, and correctly identified it as a quantum mechanical effect: the inverse of the photoelectric effect. He called it a “light relay,” patented it, and predicted it would replace incandescent bulbs in high-speed optical communications. We call it an LED. It took until April 2007, in Nature Photonics, for the academic world to formally credit him. In a 1951 Physical Review paper that cited his work, his name was misspelled as “Lossew.”<br>The LED was not even his main act.<br>Thanks for reading! This post is public so feel free to share it.

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Losev had discovered something stranger in zincite crystals: negative resistance. Press a fine wire against the crystal at exactly the right point, apply a DC bias, and the material would amplify a radio signal. Current decreased as voltage increased, defying Ohm’s Law in a way that could make the crystal oscillate and amplify.<br>By 1924, he was building fully functional solid-state radios. Hugo Gernsback — editor of Radio News and later the man who coined the term “scientifiction,” giving science fiction its name — devoted a feature to the device and declared: “It is now possible to do anything and everything with a crystal that can be done with a vacuum tube.” He named it the Crystodyne. But Crystodyne was too finicky to scale. Losev abandoned the research after a decade. Negative resistance in diodes was independently rediscovered only in 1957, in the tunnel diode.<br>Meanwhile, the Soviet system had its own way of handling a man like Losev who was born to a retired Tsarist Army captain. His class background blocked every formal academic path. He received a doctorate from the Ioffe Physical-Technical Institute in 1938 only because the institution waived the thesis requirement entirely — a rare acknowledgment that his published work rendered the formality moot. By then, he had 43 papers and 16 author’s certificates for his discoveries.<br>When the Siege of Leningrad began, Losev refused to leave his equipment. He died of starvation on 22 January 1942. He was 38. Shortly before his death, he had mailed a manuscript describing a new three-electrode semiconductor device to Physical Review. The paper was lost in the wartime Atlantic. Five years later, Shockley, Bardeen, and Brattain invented the transistor at Bell Labs — independently, without knowledge of Losev’s work — and the world called it a discovery.<br>The semiconductor industry has always had this quality: the difference between a pioneer and a founder is often just access to materials, capital, and time. Losev had the ideas and none of the rest.<br>Thanks for reading! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support our work.

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Dr. Jasmin Smajic<br>8h

Thanks for sharing. Never heard of this tragic story before.

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