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{{Short description|
[[File:Selenium Rectifier.jpg|thumb|An 8-plate 160 V 450 mA Federal brand selenium rectifier|224x224px]]
A '''selenium rectifier''' is a type of [[metal rectifier]], invented in 1933.<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Hempstead|first1=Colin|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2ZCNAgAAQBAJ&dq=selenium+rectifier+invented&pg=PA669|title=Encyclopedia of 20th-Century Technology|last2=Worthington|first2=William|date=2005-08-08|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-135-45551-4|pages=669|language=en|quote=selenium rectifiers, which were invented by Charles E. Fitts in 1933}}</ref> They were used in [[power supply|power supplies]] for electronic equipment and in high-current battery-charger applications until they were superseded by [[silicon diode]] rectifiers in the late 1960s. The arrival of the [[alternator (automotive)|alternator]] in some automobiles was the result of compact, low-cost, high-current silicon rectifiers. These units were small enough to be inside the alternator case, unlike the [[selenium]] units that preceded silicon devices.
The rectifying properties of selenium, amongst other semiconductors, were observed by Braun, Schuster and Siemens between 1874 and 1883.<ref>[https://books.google.
==Construction==
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[[File:MADDIDA Selen Rectifier.JPG|thumb|right|Selenium rectifiers used in 1950s [[MADDIDA]] computer]]
[[File:Selenium rectifier.agr.jpg|thumb|Selenium rectifier from 1960s. Each plate is 1-inch square.]]
Selenium rectifiers are able to withstand repetitive significant overload without the need of special protective measures.
[[Receiver (radio)|Radio]] and television receivers used them from about 1947 to 1975 to provide up to a few hundred volts of plate voltage. Vacuum-tube rectifiers had efficiencies of only 60% compared to the 85% of selenium rectifiers, partially because vacuum-tube rectifiers required heating.
==Properties==
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==Replacement==
Selenium rectifiers had a shorter lifespan than desired. In the early stage of failure they produce a modest amount of sweet-smelling gas, sometimes described as "sickly sweet". At that point the rectification properties are almost totally gone, allowing reverse voltage to leak through the rectifier. During catastrophic failure they
==Selenium diode computer logic==
In 1961 IBM started developing a low-speed computer logic family<ref>[https://
==Further reading==
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[[Category:Diodes]]
[[Category:Selenium]]
[[Category:Rectifiers]]
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