Background
Lamm was born in Gothenburg on May 22, 1904 to Fredrik Hjalmar Lamm and Aino Maria Lovisa Wilhelmina Wijkander.
Lamm was born in Gothenburg on May 22, 1904 to Fredrik Hjalmar Lamm and Aino Maria Lovisa Wilhelmina Wijkander.
In 1943 Lamm obtained his Doctor of Philosophy from the Royal Institute of Technology, studying part-time while developing the mercury arc valve.
He was sometimes called "The Father of High Voltage Direct Current" power transmission. He obtained his master"s degree at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm in 1927. After a short time in compulsory military service he joined Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget, the Swedish electrical conglomerate, initially working in their training program
In 1929 he was made manager of the project to develop a high-voltage mercury arc valve.
Valves at the time operated only at about 2500 volts, and if higher-voltage valves were available they could have practical use in the transmission of large quantities of electric energy over long distances. After twenty years or so of development work to produce a valve with the necessary rating for HVDC transmission, Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget obtained a contract for the HVDC Gotland project in 1950, which when completed in 1955 became the first modern fully commercial HVDC system.
In 1955 Lamm was made head of the Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget project to develop Sweden"s first commercial nuclear reactors. Lamm was appointed by Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget in 1961 to work with General Electric on the Pacific District of Columbia Intertie project, which combined Air Corps and HVDC transmission systems to move electrical energy from the hydroelectric generators of the Pacific Northwest to consumers in southern California.
By the end of 1964 Lamm had moved to southern California.
From 1967 to 1988 he served as an Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers director at large. He died on June 1, 1989 in Burlingame, California. During his career Lamm obtained 150 patents and wrote about 80 technical papers.
He also wrote extensively on social issues in articles published in Swedish newspapers and magazines, often critical of the Swedish government.
Lamm was described as a staunch anti-Communist who admired some of the positive features of the United States economy. During the Second World War, while required to travel to Nazi Germany to carry out Allmänna Svenska Elektriska Aktiebolaget business, Lamm was criticized by his supervisors for his anti-Nazi attitude, such as refusing to give the Nazi Party salute at patent hearings.
Lamm learned to play the violin in his youth and retained an interest in the performing arts Lamm"s Doctor of Philosophy thesis was titled, in English, "The Transductor, District of Columbia Pre-Saturated Reactor".
While describing this device at a lecture in the United States he also mentioned that the same principle could be applied to resistors, making a transistor.
This was the name later applied to the solid-state amplifier.
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.