Mataré completed his studies in mathematics, chemistry, electrochemistry, nuclear physics and solid-state physics at the Technical University of Aachen with degree "Diplom-Ingenieur" in Applied Physics. In addition, he studied mathematics, physics and chemistry at the University of Geneva. In 1939 he joined the Telefunkenresearch laboratory in Berlin. At that time it became obvious that the miniaturization of vacuum tubes had met a technical limit and that alternative solutions had to be sought using solid state circuits and principles of the previous transistor inventions of Julius Edgar Lilienfeld, Oskar Heil, Walter Schottky and Robert Wichard Pohl. Because of the massive air raids on Berlin in 1943, the Telefunken laboratory were moved to the Cisterian abbey in Lubiąż Silesia, where Mataré focused on the improvement of the cm-wave receiver sensitivity. In 1944, as the Russian army closed in, the site and most of its equipment were abandoned and the operation was transferred to Thuringia. Later Mataré taught physics and mathematics in Wabern near Kassel and gave lectures at the Aachen university, and he was invited to build a semiconductor diode plant for Compagnie des Freins & Signaux Westinghouse in Aulnay-sous-Bois near Paris.
Academic degrees
Important Work
At the same time as the American researchers and independently, the German researchers Mataré and Heinrich Welker developed the first operational "French transistor" at Compagnie des Freins & Signaux Westinghouse in Aulnay-sous-Bois near Paris during the years 1945 to 1948. They filed their first transistor patent application on 13 August 1948. On 18 May 1949, this European invention coined as the "Le Transistron" was presented to the public. In 1951/1952, Mataré founded Intermetall in Düsseldorf, the world's first company which offered diodes and transistors.
The following list can only present a part of the more than 80 patents which Mataré has filed.
Controversial views
Mataré had contributed articles to the controversial journal Mankind Quarterly. In his book Conscientious Evolution he supported genetic engineering, eugenic measures, controlled procreation, sterilization and capital punishment. He supported racialist views such as Indians and Negroes are genetically inferior peoples. The anthropologist H. James Birx described the book as deeply prejudiced, "neither a careful examination of the promise of human genetics nor a contribution to the science of organic evolution."