US2714179A - Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits - Google Patents

Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2714179A
US2714179A US272312A US27231252A US2714179A US 2714179 A US2714179 A US 2714179A US 272312 A US272312 A US 272312A US 27231252 A US27231252 A US 27231252A US 2714179 A US2714179 A US 2714179A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
tube
discharge
pulse
pulses
cathode
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US272312A
Inventor
Thomas David Gurney Arnold
Cooke-Yarborough Edmund Harry
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
National Research Development Corp UK
National Research Development Corp of India
Original Assignee
National Research Development Corp UK
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by National Research Development Corp UK filed Critical National Research Development Corp UK
Priority to US272312A priority Critical patent/US2714179A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2714179A publication Critical patent/US2714179A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K29/00Pulse counters comprising multi-stable elements, e.g. for ternary scale, for decimal scale; Analogous frequency dividers

Definitions

  • a number n may be passed for storage by applying 11 pairs of pulses such as pulses 13, 14 of Fig. 2 so that the discharge advances n steps.
  • a rectifier limiter arrangement comprising rectifiers 53, 54, S5, 56 limits the voltage variations of anodes 5 and 51 between sixty volts positive and sixty volts negative.
  • the voltages in the anodes 50 and 51 are fed to a change-over switch 57 by connections 58 and 59 respectively.

Description

July 26, 1955 D. G. A. THOMAS ETAL 2,714,179
MULTI-ELECTRODE GASEOUS-DISCHARGE TUBE CIRCUITS Filed Feb. 19, 1952 5 Sheets-Sheet l F/GZ. [3/ 60v lNVENTOR BY R Gm ATTORNEY July 26, 1955 D. G. A. THOMAS ETAL 2,714,179
MULTI-ELECTRODE GASEOUS-DISCHARGE TUBE CIRCUITS 5 Sheets-Sheet 2 Filed Feb. 19, 1952 N VE N 7' CR6 77/0M/75,
ATTORNEY July 26, 1955 D. G. A. THOMAS ET AL 2,714,179
MULTI-ELECTRODE GASEOUS-DISCHARGE TUBE CIRCUITS Filed Feb. 19, 1952 5 Sheets-Sheet 3 B) QM ATTORNEY United States Patent MULTl-ELECTRQDE GASEOUS-DISCHARGE TUBE CIRCUITS David Gurney Arnold Thomas, Deer-burst Walton, near Gloucester, and Edmund Harry Cooke-Yarborough, Faringdon, England, assignors to The National Research Development Corporation, London, England Application February 19, 1952, Serial No. 272,312
7 Claims. (Cl. 315-163) This invention relates to electrical circuit arrangements using multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tubes. Circuits according to the invention have applications in. electronic calculating machines.
Multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tubes, sometimes referred to as cold cathode counting tubes or polycathode glow tubes, have been described in the literature including an article Polycathode glow tube for counters, by J. 1. Lamb and J. A. Brustman. (Electronics, Mc- Graw-Hill Publishing Company, November 1949; pages 9296), an article The; Damona. new c'o'ld. cathode counting tube, by R. C. Bacon and I. R; Pollard (Electronic Engineering, vol. 22, No. 267, May 1950, pages 173477 and an article Multicathdde gas-tube counters, by G. H. Hough and D. S; Ridler (Electrical Communication, vol. 27, No; 3, September 1950, pages 214--226).
It is the urpose of this invention to provide an electrical circuit for operating a first or receiving multicathode gaseous discharge tube according to a number stored on a second or sending multi-ca-thode gaseousdischarge tube. Such an electrical circuit is hereinafter referred to as a transfer circuit.
A number, represented by the position of the discharge in the sending tube, may be added to a numbersimilarly represented in the receiving tube. Alternatively the compiement of a number in the sendin tube may be added to a number in the receiving tube, this being equivalent to a subtraction operation. I
The transfer circuit according to: the invention comprises a multi-cathode gaseous-discharge. tube (sending tube) pulse generating means to cycle the discharge in the sending tube, means for deriving a pulse (control pulse) when that discharge reaches the output electrode f the sending tube andswitch means operated by the control pulse for switching a pulse tr-ain to another multicathode gaseous-discharge tube (receiving tube) whereby a count is derived in the receiving tube dependent upon the count in the sending tube.
in another aspect a transfer circuit according to the invention comprises a sendingmulti-cathode gaseous discharge tube, pulse generating means connected to move the discharge in said tube, means producing a pulse when said discharge arrives at the' zero cathode of said tube, a switch operated by said pulse connected to. switch'pulses of a pulse train which occur'befdre said'pulse down a first channel and those which occur after said control pulse down a second channel; a eceiving mun-icathode gaseous-discharge tube and a switch for connecting the" receiving tube to either the first or secondchannel.
A transfer circuit embodying the invention is now described with reference to the drawings whereinz Fig. 1 shows diagrammatically the arrangements of the electrodes of a decimal type of multi-cathodegaseousdisc harge tube.
Fig. 2 shows pulse forms for operating the tube of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 shows a diagrammatic form of the tube described with reference to Fig. 1 and as used in the circuit of Fig. 4.
Fig. 4 is a circuit diagram of the transfer circuit.
Fig. 5 shows waveforms at points in the circuit of Fig. 4.
In Fig. 1, nine main discharge cathodes 1 and an output or zero cathode 2 are equally disposed round a central anode 3, and a common connecting wire 4 joins all the cathodes 1. Between adjacent main cathodesand between the zero or output cathode and adjacent main cathodes there are first guide cathodes 5 and second guide cathodes 6 and these have common connecting wires 7, 8 respectively. Leads 9, 1t), 11, 12 are taken from the electrodes as shown. For normal operation the cathode 2 is taken through a resistance to earth or to a small bias potential and the cathodes 1 are earthed. In a typical case the electrodes 5, 6 rest at 60 volts positive and the anode is connected through a resistance of 1 M9 to a 350 volt H. T. supply.
On first switching on a tube such as shown in Fig. 1 a discharge is set up between an anode and one of the cathodes 1 or 2. To move the discharge to the next cathode pulse pairs of the form shown in Fig. 2, are applied to the guide electrodes. Pulse 13, of volts negative swing and 1.5 ms. duration is applied to guide electrodes 5 thus causing the discharge to move from the cathode on which it initially rested on the adjacent electrode 5. At the end of the pulse 13, a pulse 14, similar to pulse 13, is applied to guide electrodes 6 to move the discharge on to the adjacent electrode 6 which has become more negative than any adjacent electrode or cathode. At the end of pulse 14 the discharge moves to the cathode 1 adjacent to the electrode 6, and thus the discharge has completed one step between adjacent cathodes. It is not necessary for the pair of pulses 13 and 14 to overlap, but it is important that there should be no time interval between the end of pulse 13 and the start of pulse 14 in excess of the deionisation time of the tube. Pulses 13 and 14 are conventionally referred to, as A and B pulses respectively.
In Fig. 3 a tube 15 is represented diagrammatically. Electrode 16 is the anode, electrode 17 is the output or zero cathode having an output terminal 13 and a resistance 19 to earth. The main cathodes connected to earth are identified by electrode 20, the first guide cathodes by electrode 21 and the second guide cathodes by electrode 22.
In the operation of a tube such as tube 15 a number n may be passed for storage by applying 11 pairs of pulses such as pulses 13, 14 of Fig. 2 so that the discharge advances n steps.
In Fig. 4 the main components of the circuit are a sending address 30, a trigger neon 31, triggered by a pulse from the zero cathode 32 of the tube 33 in the sending address, a double triode switch 34 operated when the neon 31 is triggered and restored on completion of the transfer operation, a receiving address 35 having a tube 36, and a pulse generator 37 to feed operating pulse trains to the other components of the circuit.
The pulse generator supplies, by connection 38, a train of ten pulses to the first guide electrode 39 of tube 33; by connection 40, a train of ten pulses to the second guide electrode 41 of tube 33; by connections 42, a train of ten pulses, similar and coincident to those in connection 40 but at a different D. C. level, to the cathode 52 of valve 43 in the switch 34; and by connection 44, a train of nine pulses, corresponding in time to the last nine of the pulses in connection 38, to the first guide electrode 62 of the tube 36. The waveforms in connections 38, 40, 42 and 44 are shown in Figs. (a), 5(5), 5(g) and 5(h) respectively. The circuit is now further described for the typical case of a count of three, stored in the sending address 30, which is to be transferred to the receiving address 35.
The first seven pulses shown in each of Figs. 5(a) and 5(b) circulate the discharge on the tube 33 from the third main cathode to the Zero cathode 32 to set up a voltage in the resistance 45 which is transmitted to the trigger electrode 46 of the neon 31 by Way of coupling condenser 47 so as to trigger the neon 31 (see Fig 5(c)). The remaining three pulses of Figs. 5(a) and 5(b), circulate the discharge on tube 33 to reach its initial position on the third main cathode. The triggering of neon 31 causes the potential of the cathode 48 to rise (see Fig. 5(d)) so that the grid 49 of the double triode switch 34 rises to divert the current flow through the switch 34 from the anode 50 to the anode 51. The switch 34, which is being fed with pulses as shown in Fig. 5(3) at the cathode 52 of valve 43, therefore transmits the first seven pulses via anode Stl and the remaining three pulses via anode 51. A rectifier limiter arrangement comprising rectifiers 53, 54, S5, 56 limits the voltage variations of anodes 5 and 51 between sixty volts positive and sixty volts negative. The voltages in the anodes 50 and 51 are fed to a change-over switch 57 by connections 58 and 59 respectively. The switch 57 is shown in the add position, that is, the anode 51, which carries three pulses, is connected by connection 60 to the second guide electrode 61 of the receiving address 35. These three pulses, together with the last three pulses as shown in Fig. 5 (h) which are connected to the first guide electrode 62 of the receiving address 35, cause the discharge in that address to move three steps; that is the count of three in the sending address has been added to the count in the receiving ad dress.
If, before the transfer operation had commenced, the switch 57 was placed in the alternative position to that shown, i. e. in the completement position, the seven pulses at anode 59 would be connected to the second guide electrode 61. The first of these pulses causes the discharge in the receiving address 35 to move backwards relative to the normal direction of operation, on to one of the electrodes of guide electrode 61, and subsequently, at the end of the pulse, to revert to its original position. The first six of the pulses shown in Fig. 501) thereafter pair with the remaining six pulses from anode 50 to move the discharge on the receiving address by six steps; that is the count in the sending address is added as a completement on nine to the receiving address. This operation is the equivalent of subtracting a count of three from the receiving address.
The H. T. supply to the neon 3%. is pulsed by means of an electronic switch in the pulse generator, shown by switch 63, so as to be on only when the transfer circuit is called upon to perform a transfer operation. In this way, the switch 63 resets the circuit after use and minimises the chances of spurious triggering that would preset the double triode switch.
In order to clear to zero the sending address 30 or to zero the tube 33 after switching on, a connection 65 is provided between the complement side of switch 57 and the second guide electrode 4i of tube 33. A double switch, consisting of contact 66 in connection 65 and contact 67 in connection 40', both shown in the unoperated position, may be operated to provide this clear to zero facility. Pulses, as shown in Fig. 5(e), are then paired with a pulse train, such as shown in Fig. 5(a) to circulate the discharge in the tube 33; the pulses as shown in Fig. 5(b) being removed. The circulation of the discharge ceases when the zero cathode of the tube 33 is reached.
A list of component sizes suitable for a circuit such as that of Fig. 4 is given below:
Resistances:
No. 45 180 K No. 68 l M No. 70 l M No. 71 33 K No. 72 27 K No. 74 100 No. 75 10 M No. 76 l M No. 77 l M No. 78 10 K No. 79 l M No. 80 180 K No. 31 Condensers:
No. 45 1500 p No. 69 1500 p No. '73 4700 p We claim:
1. A transfer circuit comprising a first multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube, pulse generating means to cycle the discharge in said tube, means for deriving a control pulse when that discharge reaches the output electrode of said tube and switch means operated by the control pulse for switching a pulse train to a second multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube whereby a count is derived in the second tube dependent upon the count in the first tube.
2. A transfer circuit according to claim 1 wherein said switch means operates to interrupt the pulse train to the second tube whereby the discharge in the second tube is moved by an amount the discharge moves in the first tube in reaching its zero cathode.
3. A transfer circuit according to claim 1 wherein said switch means operates to connect the pulse train to the second tube whereby the discharge in the second tube is moved by an amount depending upon the amount the discharge moves in the first tube after passing the output cathode.
4. A transfer circuit comprising a first multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube, pulse generating means connected to move the discharge in said tube, means producing a pulse when said discharge arrives at the zero cathode of said tube, a switch, operated by said pulse and connected to switch pulses of a pulse train which occur before said control pulse down a first channel and those which occur after said control pulse down a second channel, a second multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube and a switch for connecting the second tube to either the first .or second channel.
5. A transfer circuit comprising first and second multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tubes of the type having first and second groups of transfer cathodes each group having ten cathodes and wherein the discharge is moved by the application of pulse trains, conveniently called A and B pulse train, to said first and second group of transfer cathodes respectively, means for feeding ten pulses of an A pulse train and ten pulses of a B pulse train to the first and second groups of transfer cathodes respectively of said first tube, a triggered gaseous-discharge tube connected to be fired by a pulse generated at the zero cathode of the first tube, means for deriving a switching potential from said trigger tube when it conducts, a changeover switch connected to be operated by said switching potential, means for feeding ten pulses of a B pulse train coincident with the B pulses fed to the second transfer cathode group to the input of said switch, means for connecting either one or the other of the outputs of said switch to the second group of transfer cathodes of said second multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube and means for feeding nine pulses of an A pulse train to the first group of transfer cathodes of said first multi-cathode gaseous-discharge tube so that those nine pulses are suited to pair with the last nine pulses fed to the input of said switch.
6. A transfer circuit according to claim 5 having means for disconnecting said ten pulses of a B pulse train fed to the second group of transfer cathodes of said first Inulti-cathode tube and means for connecting in their place those pulses in an output from said changeover switch.
7. A transfer circuit comprising a first multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube, pulse generating means to cycle the discharge in said tube, means for deriving a References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Lyman June 14, 1949 Wales Oct. 3, 1950
US272312A 1952-02-19 1952-02-19 Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits Expired - Lifetime US2714179A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US272312A US2714179A (en) 1952-02-19 1952-02-19 Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US272312A US2714179A (en) 1952-02-19 1952-02-19 Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2714179A true US2714179A (en) 1955-07-26

Family

ID=23039267

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US272312A Expired - Lifetime US2714179A (en) 1952-02-19 1952-02-19 Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2714179A (en)

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2783415A (en) * 1952-02-21 1957-02-26 Nat Res Dev Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits
US2845578A (en) * 1956-08-24 1958-07-29 Sylvania Electric Prod Drive circuit for counting tubes
US2849655A (en) * 1956-10-31 1958-08-26 Sylvania Electric Prod Glow transfer tube driving circuit
US2851534A (en) * 1951-04-06 1958-09-09 Int Standard Electric Corp Automatic telecommunication exchange system
US2854576A (en) * 1955-10-07 1958-09-30 Philips Corp Electronic memory system
US2864034A (en) * 1957-01-11 1958-12-09 Sylvania Electric Prod Gate reset circuit
US2920826A (en) * 1955-07-01 1960-01-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Computing circuit
US2923853A (en) * 1955-07-12 1960-02-02 Digital Tech Inc Electric discharge device
US2939047A (en) * 1957-02-26 1960-05-31 Chaplin George Brian Barrie Transistor circuit
US2944157A (en) * 1953-11-30 1960-07-05 Ici Ltd Shaft-position determining apparatus
US2966613A (en) * 1959-02-16 1960-12-27 Baird Atomic Inc Reversible counting tube system
US2979638A (en) * 1958-06-30 1961-04-11 Ericsson Telephones Ltd Electric pulse counting arrangement
US2995681A (en) * 1957-01-03 1961-08-08 Philips Corp Counter tube
US3039689A (en) * 1949-11-28 1962-06-19 Int Standard Electric Corp Electrical notation converting circuits
US3303383A (en) * 1963-12-19 1967-02-07 Philips Corp Stepping-tube counting-circuit utilizing a control signal to pre-condition interstage gates to avoid signal time delay
US3303384A (en) * 1963-12-19 1967-02-07 Philips Corp Stepping-tube read-in circuit employing gates to selectively inhibit lower order counters to effect more efficient read-in of additional numbers

Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2473159A (en) * 1949-01-29 1949-06-14 Remington Rand Inc Counting tube transfer circuit
US2524213A (en) * 1947-06-18 1950-10-03 Remington Rand Inc Gaseous discharge tube system

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2524213A (en) * 1947-06-18 1950-10-03 Remington Rand Inc Gaseous discharge tube system
US2473159A (en) * 1949-01-29 1949-06-14 Remington Rand Inc Counting tube transfer circuit

Cited By (16)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3039689A (en) * 1949-11-28 1962-06-19 Int Standard Electric Corp Electrical notation converting circuits
US2851534A (en) * 1951-04-06 1958-09-09 Int Standard Electric Corp Automatic telecommunication exchange system
US2783415A (en) * 1952-02-21 1957-02-26 Nat Res Dev Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits
US2944157A (en) * 1953-11-30 1960-07-05 Ici Ltd Shaft-position determining apparatus
US2920826A (en) * 1955-07-01 1960-01-12 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Computing circuit
US2923853A (en) * 1955-07-12 1960-02-02 Digital Tech Inc Electric discharge device
US2854576A (en) * 1955-10-07 1958-09-30 Philips Corp Electronic memory system
US2845578A (en) * 1956-08-24 1958-07-29 Sylvania Electric Prod Drive circuit for counting tubes
US2849655A (en) * 1956-10-31 1958-08-26 Sylvania Electric Prod Glow transfer tube driving circuit
US2995681A (en) * 1957-01-03 1961-08-08 Philips Corp Counter tube
US2864034A (en) * 1957-01-11 1958-12-09 Sylvania Electric Prod Gate reset circuit
US2939047A (en) * 1957-02-26 1960-05-31 Chaplin George Brian Barrie Transistor circuit
US2979638A (en) * 1958-06-30 1961-04-11 Ericsson Telephones Ltd Electric pulse counting arrangement
US2966613A (en) * 1959-02-16 1960-12-27 Baird Atomic Inc Reversible counting tube system
US3303383A (en) * 1963-12-19 1967-02-07 Philips Corp Stepping-tube counting-circuit utilizing a control signal to pre-condition interstage gates to avoid signal time delay
US3303384A (en) * 1963-12-19 1967-02-07 Philips Corp Stepping-tube read-in circuit employing gates to selectively inhibit lower order counters to effect more efficient read-in of additional numbers

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2714179A (en) Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits
US2303016A (en) Impulse counting circuit
US2521774A (en) Predetermined counter
GB726526A (en) Improvements in or relating to electrical information storage circuits
US2405664A (en) Electronic accumulator
US2402372A (en) Electronic counting device
GB592174A (en) Improvements in or relating to electric impulse responsive apparatus
US2474040A (en) Pulse integrating circuits
US2756934A (en) Electronic counter
US2619282A (en) Electronic signal responsive predetermining circuit
US2555999A (en) Reset circuit for eccles-jordan triggered multivibrator circuits
US2562591A (en) Electronic counting circuit
US2644111A (en) Electronic counter
US2503662A (en) Electronic valve apparatus suitable for use in counting electrical impulses
US2533739A (en) Electronic counting ring
US2521350A (en) Electronic counter
US2783415A (en) Multi-electrode gaseous-discharge tube circuits
US2447661A (en) Electron tube impulse generator
US2685049A (en) Coincidence circuit
US2426279A (en) Electronic accumulator
US2574145A (en) Coincidence indicator for electronic counters
US2598764A (en) Electron tube counting device
US2558936A (en) Electronic counter
US2730655A (en) Gas tube counter
US2690303A (en) Counter