Silicon

Silicon

From In Our Time by BBC Radio 4

April 23, 2026 · 53 min

About this episode

Misha Glenny and guests discuss the significance of silicon in various fields including physics, biology, and modern electronics.

Misha Glenny and guests discuss the physics, biology and chemistry of the element silicon which is at the heart of some of the most useful and beautiful objects on the planet. While it is still being created throughout the universe, the silicon we have here was made billions of years ago in dying stars. In its compounds we have long used silicon for glass and, more recently, purified silicon has become the foundation of modern electronics. Perhaps less appreciated is the role silicon compounds play in the biology of life on Earth, on the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the cycling of elements between land, oceans and atmosphere that sustains us. With Kate Hendry Oceanographer at the British Antarctic Survey and Bye-Fellow of Queen’s College, University of Cambridge Andrea Sella Professor of Chemistry at University College London And Monica Grady Professor Emerita in Planetary and Space Sciences at the Open University Produced by Martha Owen Reading list: Christina De La Rocha and Daniel J. Conley, Silica Stories (Springer, 2017) Bernard Quéguiner, The Biogeochemical Cycle of Silicon in the Ocean (John Wiley & Sons, 2016) In Our Time is a BBC Studios Production…

People in this episode

Host: Misha Glenny

Guests: Kate Hendry, Andrea Sella, Monica Grady

Topics covered

  • silicon
  • physics
  • biology
  • chemistry
  • modern electronics
  • environmental science

Keywords

  • silicon
  • electronics
  • biology
  • chemistry
  • environment
  • glass
  • stars

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: British Antarctic Survey, Queen’s College, University of Cambridge, University College London, Open University

Books & works: Silica Stories, The Biogeochemical Cycle of Silicon in the Ocean

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