GB2061618A - A through type high-withstand- voltage ceramic capacitor - Google Patents

A through type high-withstand- voltage ceramic capacitor Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2061618A
GB2061618A GB8024798A GB8024798A GB2061618A GB 2061618 A GB2061618 A GB 2061618A GB 8024798 A GB8024798 A GB 8024798A GB 8024798 A GB8024798 A GB 8024798A GB 2061618 A GB2061618 A GB 2061618A
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Prior art keywords
capacitor
pair
cover
insulator
ceramic body
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GB8024798A
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GB2061618B (en
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TDK Corp
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TDK Corp
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Priority claimed from JP11229279U external-priority patent/JPS5930518Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP13938779U external-priority patent/JPS5915063Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP17470579U external-priority patent/JPS5918665Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP510380U external-priority patent/JPS6018832Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP5204080U external-priority patent/JPS6015328Y2/en
Priority claimed from JP5678880U external-priority patent/JPS6028117Y2/en
Application filed by TDK Corp filed Critical TDK Corp
Publication of GB2061618A publication Critical patent/GB2061618A/en
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Publication of GB2061618B publication Critical patent/GB2061618B/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01GCAPACITORS; CAPACITORS, RECTIFIERS, DETECTORS, SWITCHING DEVICES OR LIGHT-SENSITIVE DEVICES, OF THE ELECTROLYTIC TYPE
    • H01G4/00Fixed capacitors; Processes of their manufacture
    • H01G4/35Feed-through capacitors or anti-noise capacitors
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01GCAPACITORS; CAPACITORS, RECTIFIERS, DETECTORS, SWITCHING DEVICES OR LIGHT-SENSITIVE DEVICES, OF THE ELECTROLYTIC TYPE
    • H01G4/00Fixed capacitors; Processes of their manufacture
    • H01G4/002Details
    • H01G4/224Housing; Encapsulation

Abstract

A through type twin ceramic capacitor for use in the noise filter in a high power device comprises (a) a capacitor half assembly having an elliptic column shaped ceramic body (1), a pair of first electrodes (4, 5) attached on the upper surface of said ceramic body, and a common electrode (6) disposed on the bottom surface of the ceramic body, the ceramic body together with the attached electrodes having a pair of holes (2, 3) in order to insert conductor rods, (15, 16) said capacitor half assembly being placed on a ground conductor 7; (b) a pair of on conductive caps (13, 14) disposed on each of said first electrodes to connect electrically the first electrode to said conductor rod; (d) a hollow elliptic column shaped plastics cover (8) positioned below said ground conductor enclosing said conductor rods, and said cover having a bridge (8c) which separates the cross section of the cover to two substantially circular areas, and (e) an insulator (17) injected into said cover and enclosing said capacitor half assembly. Due to the presence of said bridge the injected insulator is separated to two portions. Thus, the linear expansion and/or contraction of said injected insulator is reduced at the central portion (the portion of the conductor rod) of each individual capacitor. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION A through type high-withstand-voltage ceramic capacitor BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION The present invention relates to a through type high withstand voltage ceramic capacitor, in particular, relates to such a capacitor for the use in the noise filter in a high power and high frequency apparatus, like a microwave oven, a broadcasting transmitter and/or an Xray generator.
In a high frequency and high power apparatus operating in the VHF band or UHF band, the noise superposed on a commercial power line must be prevented. For that purpose, a noise filter, which is actually a lowpass filter is inserted in a power supply line of an apparatus.
Fig. 1A shows the circuit diagram of a noise filter inserted in a power supply line of a heater of a magnetron in a microwave oven.
In Fig. 1A, the capacitors C, and C2, and the inductors L, and L2 compose a noise filter, the reference numeral 100 is a conductive filter housing, 102 is a magnetron, 104 is a heater of the magnetron 102, and 106 is an anode of the magnetron 102, and that anode is grounded.
The capacitors C, and C2 must have a high withstand voltage, since a magnetron has a high operational voltage between an anode electrode and a heater. Further, those capacitors must have excellent temperature characteristics, since those capacitors are repetitively heated to a high temperature in a microwave oven.
The present invention relates to the improved structure of a capacitor for the use in for instance the noise filter in a microwave oven.
The capacitor for that purpose is a through capacitor, and two separate capacitors, or a twin capacitor which has two capacitors in a single housing is utilized for that purpose.
Fig. 1 B shows the example of a prior twin through capacitor for a noise filter, Fig. 1 C is a cross sectional view of the capacitor of Fig.
1 B, and Fig. 1 D is the cross sectional view of the noise filter utilizing a twin capacitor of Figs. 1B and 1C.
In those Figure, an elliptic ceramic body 1 has a pair of holes 2 and 3 in the thick vertical direction of the ceramic body 1. On the upper surface of the ceramic body 1, a pair of separated electrodes 4 and 5 having the corresponding holes are attached, and on the lower surface of the ceramic body 1 a common electrode 6 is attached. The rectangular ground conductor 7 has a plate 7c and an elevated portion 7a. The plate 7c has four holes 7c-1 through 7c-4 for fixing the twin capacitor to the filter housing, and the elevated portion 7a has a pair of holes 9 and 10 which correspond to the holes 2 and 3 on the ceramic body 1, and said elevated portion 7a has also a plurality of small holes 7b along the peripheral line of the elevated portion 7c.
Those small holes 7b serves to flow an insulating means as described later. The common electrode 6 is fixed on the elevated portion 7a of the ground conductor 7 so that the holes 9 and 10 coincide with the holes 2 and 3, respectively, and the small holes 7b are positioned outside of the ceramic body 1. The pair of elongated through conductors 11 and 1 2 are inserted in the holes 2 and 3, and the holes 9 and 10, respectively, so that those conductors 11 and 1 2 do not electrically contact with the common electrode 6. In order to assure the insulation between the common electrode 6 and the conductor rods 11 and 12, those rods 11 and 1 2 are covered with flexible plastics tubes (insulation tubes) 1 5 and 16, respectively.The caps 1 3 and 14 are put on the upper portion of the conductive rods 11 and 12, respectively, and those caps 1 3 and 14 are soldered to both the conductive rods 11 and 12, and the electrodes 4 and 5, respectively, in order to assure the electrical contact between the rods 11 and 12, and the electrodes 4 and 5, respectively. Those caps 1 3 and 14 also have elevated portions which have a plurality of small holes 1 3a and 14a, respectively, along the each peripheral line. The hollow elliptic cylindrical plastic cover 8 is attached under the ground conductor 7 so that said cover 8 encloses the rods 11 and 12 with the tubes 15 and 16, respectively.
The insulation filler 17, which is for instance epoxy resin, covers the portion of the bottom of the cover 8, and the periphery of the ceramic body 1, the caps 1 3 and 14 and the rods 11 and 12, as shown in Fig. 1 C. In injecting the insulation filler 17, the capacitor body is covered with the cover 18, and the filler 1 7 is injected in the capacitor from the bottom of the cover 8.The injected insulation filler is injected into the capacitor through the small holes 7b provided on the ground conductor 7, and the small holes 1 3a and 1 4a provided on the caps 1 3 and 14, and thus, the area inside of the cover 1 8 is filled with the insulation filler 1 7. After the filler thus injected is hardened, the cover 1 8 is removed, and the twin capacitor is completed, and the insulation and the protection of the capacitor from the moisture are assured by the injected epoxy resin.
However, a prior twin capacitor as described above has the disadvantage as follows.
The first disadvantage is that the life time of a capacitor is rather short when utilized in a microwave oven. The reason for that short life time comes from the substantially elliptic shape of the filled insulator 1 7. Because of the elliptic insulator 17, the distribution of the stress generated in the insulator 1 7 is not uniform. That ununiform stress is generated in the insulator 1 7 when the insulator 1 7 is cooled and hardened in the manufacturing stage, and/or the capacitor is repetitively heated in a microwave oven. In particular, in the case of a microwave oven with a steam oven, the capacitor is disposed in the atmosphere with high temperature and high moisture repetitively.The ununiform stress in the insulator 1 7 generated by the temperature change causes gaps and/or cracks between the insulator 1 7 and the capacitor components (ground conductor 7, cover 8, and/or conductor rods 11 and 1 2 et al). If gaps ånd/or cracks are generated, the electromagnetic fields in the cracks are increased, and the withstand voltage and/or the voltage that an arc generates is descreased.
Another disadvantage of the prior twin type capacitor is that the particular design consideration is necessary for the conductor rods 11 and 12, the insulator 1 7 and the cover 8 because of the uniform distribution of the stress in the insulator 17.
Another disadvantage of the prior twin type capacitor is that the size of the capacitor must be large in order to assure the preferable withstand voltage in spite of the generation of gaps and/or cracks.
It should be appreciated that said ununiform stress in the insulator comes from the substantially elliptic shape of the insulator, and said elliptic shape comes from the twin capacitor. In case of a single capacitor, the whole body is circular, and the stress in the body is uniform, and thus, no disadvantage described above axists.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION It is an object of the present invention, therefore, to overcome the disadvantages and limitations of a prior through type high withstand voltage ceramic capacitor by providing a new and improved through type high withstand voltage ceramic capacitor.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide such a capacitor which has a long life time and is superior in the withstand voltage characteristics.
Another object of the present invention is to provide such a capacitor which is not degraded in spite of the repetitive change of the ambient temperature.
The above and other objects are attained by a ceramic capacitor comprising (a) a rectangular ground conductor plate having holes for fixing the same to an external device with screws and a pair of holes, (b) a capacitor half assembly having an elliptic column shaped ceramic body, a pair of first electrodes attached on one surface of the column so that those electrodes are electrically separated with each other, and a common electrode disposed on the other surface of the column, and said ceramic body together with the attached electrodes having a pair of holes in the thick vertical direction of the column and said capacitor half assembly being disposed on said ground conductor plate so that said pair of holes of the ground conductor plate coincides with those of the capacitor half assembly, (cr a pair of circular caps disposed on each of said separated electrodes, (d) a pair of conductor rods each piercing holes of said ground con ductor plate, the capacitor half assembly and the cap, and said conductor rods being fixed to said caps so that the conductor rod is electrically coupled with the related electrode, (e) a pair of insulation tubes covering the conductor rods in said capacitor half assembly, (f) a hollow substantially elliptic column shaped plastics cover positioned below said ground conductor plate enclosing said conductor rods, said cover having a bridge acroSs a pair of substantially parallel side walls of said cover so that said bridge separates the cross section of the cover to two substantially circular areas, and (g) an insulator injected into said cover and enclosing said capacitor half assembly.
Preferably, said capacitor half assembly is covered with a plastics housing which is filled with an insulator, and the housing has also a bridge which separates the housing into two circular portions substantially.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS The foregoing and other objects of the present invention will be better understood by means of the following description and the accompanying drawings wherein; Figure 1 shows a circuit diagram of a noise filter utilized in a magnetron tube in a microwave oven utilizing a pair of capacitors, Figure IB is the disassembled view of a prior twin capacitor, Figure 1C is the cross sectional view of a prior twin capacitor, Figures 1D shows the cross sectional view of the noise filter of Fig. 1, Figure 2 is the disassembled view of the twin capacitor according to the present invention, Figure 3 is the cross sectional view of the capacitor of Fig. 2, Figure 4A and Figure 4B are the explanatory drawings for the explanation of the stress applied to the insulator for the explanation of the effect of the present capacitor of Figs. 2 and 3, Figure 5 shows the curves showing the.test result of the present twin capacitor, Figure 6 is the disassembled view of another embodiment of the twin capacitor according to the present invention, Figure 7 is the cross sectional view of the twin capacitor of Fig. 6, Figure 8 shows a part of the cross section of the capacitor of Fig. 6 for the explanation of the effect of that capacitor, Figure 9 shows the experimental curves of the twin capacitor of Fig. 6, Figures 1 OA,lOB,10C and 1 OD show the structure of the capacitor half assembly and the improvement of the slit in the ceramic body according to the present invention, Figures 11A and 1 iB show the experimental results relating to the structure of the slit between the electrodes and the breakdown voltage of the present capacitor, Figures 12A and 12B show the structure of the conductor rod according to the present invention, Figure 13A is the disassembled view of the capacitor utilizing the conductor rods shown in Figs. 1 2A and 12B, Figure 13B is the cross sectional view of the capacitor of Fig. 13A, Figure 14 is the cross sectional view of the conductor rod covered with the insulation tube, Figure 15 is the alternative of the conductor rod, Figure 16 is the cross sectional view of the capacitor which utilizes the conductor rod of Fig. 15, Figure 1 7A and 1 7B are other alternatives of the conductor rods, and Figures 18A and 18B show still another alternative of a conductor rod.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODI MENTS Fig. 2 shows the structure of the present ceramic capacitor, and Fig. 3 is the cross sectional view of the ceramic capacitor of Fig.
2. In those figures, the same reference numerals as those in Fig. 1 B shows the same members as those in Fig. 1 B. In those figures, an elliptic ceramic body 1 which is made of barium titanate or titanium oxide has a pair of holes 2 and 3 in the thick vertical direction of the ceramic body 1. On the upper surface of the ceramic body 1, a pair of separated electrodes 4 and 5 having the corresponding holes are attached, and on the lower surface of the ceramic body 1 a common electrode 6 is attached. The substantially rectangular ground conductor 7 has a plate 7c and an elevated portion 7a on the plate 7c.The plate 7c has four holes 7c-1 through 7c-4 for fixing the twin capacitor to the filter housing by screws, and the elevated portion 7a has a pair of holes 9 and 10 which correspond to the holes 2 and 3 on the ceramic body 1, and said elevated portion 7a has also a plurality of small holes 7b along the peripheral line of the portion 7a. Those small holes 7b serve to allow the flow of an insulating means as described later. The common electrode 6 is fixed on the elevated portion 7a of the ground conductor 7 so that the holes 9 and 10 coincide with the holes 2 and 3, respectively, and the small holes 7b are positioned outside of the ceramic body 1.The pair of elongated through conductors 11 and 1 2 are inserted in the holes 2 and 3, and the holes 9 and 10, respectively, so that those conductors 11 and 1 2 do not electrically contact with the common electrode 6.
With the above structure, it should be appreciated that a capacitor half assembly is composed of the ceramic body (1), the separated pair of electrodes (4, 5) and the common electrode (6). The first capacitance is provided between the electrodes 4 and 6 through the ceramic body 6, and the second capacitance is provided between the electrodes 5 and 6 through the ceramic body. The common electrode 6 is grounded through the ground conductor plate 7 to the external ground, and the electrodes 4 and 5 are connected to external circuits through the conductor rods 11 and 12.
In order to assure the insulation between the common electrode 6 and the conductor rods 11 and 12, those rods 11 and 1 2 are covered with flexible plastics tubes (insulation tubes) 1 5 and 16, respectively. The caps 1 3 and 14 are pierced by the conductive rods 11 and 12, respectively, and those caps 1 3 and 1 4 are soldered to both the conductive rods 11 and 12, and the electrodes 4 and 5, respectively, in order to assure the electrical contact between the rods 11 and 12, and the electrodes 4 and 5, respectively. Those caps 1 3 and 14 also have elevated portions which have a plurality of small holes 1 3a and 14a, respectively, each along the peripheral line.
The hollow elliptic cylindrical plastic cover 8 is attached under the ground conductor 7 so that said cover 8 encloses the rods 11 and 1 2 with the tubes 1 5 and 16, respectively. The cover 8 is essentially elliptically shaped column having a pair of parallel long linear walls 8a and 8b, and a pair of half-circular walls 8d and 8e connecting said long linear walls. The cover 8 has a bridge Sc across the top portion of the same across the centers of said parallel long linear walls 8a and 8b (along the minor axis of the ellipse) so that said bridge Sc separates the space in the cover 8 into two substantially circular areas. The presence of said bridge Sc is the important feature of the present twin capacitor.Due to the presence of the bridge 8c, the cover 8 has two substantially circular (or square) areas, while the inner area of the cover 8 of Fig. 1 B is essentially elliptic.
The insulation filler 17, which is for instance epoxy resin, covers the portion of the bottom of the cover 8, and the outside portion of the ceramic body 1, the caps 1 3 and 14 and the rods 11 and 12, as shown in Fig. 3.
In filling the insulation filler 17, the capacitor body is covered with a cover (not shown), and the filler 1 7 is injected in the capacitor from the bottom of the cover 8. The injected insulation filler is injected into the capacitor through the small holes 7b provided on the ground conductor 7, and the small holes 1 3a and 1 4a provided on the caps 1 3 and 14, and thus, the area inside of the cover 1 8 is filled with the insulation filler 1 7. After the filler thus injected is hardened, the cover (not shown) is removed, and the twin capacitor is completed.
The important feature of the present invention is the presence of the bridge Sc between the longer side walls 8a and 8b of the cover 8 as described before. We found experimentally than the twin capacitor having that bridge Sc is excellent in keeping the withstand voltage.
It should be appreciated that the stress generated in an insulator (filler) is distributed uniformly when the shape of the insulator is circular. And, the insulator 1 7 in the twin capacitor separated by the bridge Sc is essentially circular.
Figs. 4A and 4B shows the stress generated in the insulator 1 7 when no bridge 1 7 is provided. In that figure, the solid line shows the stress when the insulator is expanding, and the dotted line shows the stress when the insulator is contracting. If no bridge is provided, the expansion and/or the contraction of the insulator 1 7 is symmetrical relating to the axis A which is the symmetrical line of the twin capacitor itself, and so, the stress or the expansion/contraction of the insulator at the edges C, C', at the inner side of the hole 2 of the ceramic body 1 is different from that at the edges D and D' at the outer side of the ceramic body 1 but near the external wall B.
That is to say, the strong edge covering occurs at the sides of C and C' which are closer to the symmetrical axis A in every expansion and/or the contraction, while the edge covering is weak at the edge D during expansion step, and the edge covering is also weak at the edge D' during the contraction step. Therefore, gaps and/or cracks are generated at the portion (D, D') where an edge covering is weak, and a twin capacitor is destroyed by those gaps and/or cracks.
Said edge covering has the effect that the thickness of a film of a paint and/or an insulator covering a rectangular body is thin at edge portions of the rectangular body. It should be appreciated that the holes 2 and 3 has edges (C, C', D, D') at the upper and lower openings, and thus, the edge covering effect occurs at those edges, and the thickness of an insulator is thicker at the edges C and C', and is thinner at the edges D and D' as described above.
On the other hand, with the bridge Sc which separates the insulation cover 8 to the two equal areas, the center of the expansion/ contraction of the insulator 1 7 is switched to the center of each area, which coincides with the axis E of the hole 2 and/or 3, because the length between the center E of the stress and those edges (C, C', D, D') is equal to one another. Therefore, the stress in the insulator 1 7 is distributed uniformly. Since the bridge Sc prevents the expansion/contraction of the insulator 17, the bridge Sc operates as a buffer for the stress of the insulator 17, and the bridge Sc supports the mechanical strength of the bottom portion of the cover 8.
Thus, the stress in the insulator 1 7 is decreased, and the distribution of the stress becomes uniform.
The height of the bridge Sc above the edge of the cover 8 is designed according to the nature of the material of the insulator 1 7 and the cover 8.
When the insulator 1 7 is made of epoxy, and the cover 8 is made of nylon 66 which does not adhere with epoxy, the bridge Sc is designed so that the top of the bridge Sc is above the upper level of the cover 8 in order to provide the excellent characteristics during heat cycle test.
When the insulator 1 7 is made of epoxy, and the cover 8 is made of poly-butyleneterephthalate which adheres with epoxy, the experiment shows that the height of the bridge Sc does not effect the heat cycle characteristics test.
Fig. 5 shows the curves demonstrating the effect of the present invention, in which the curve L, shows the characteristics of a prior twin capacitor which does not have a bridge, and the curve L2 shows the characteristics of the present twin capacitor which has a bridge 8c. In Fig. 5, the horizontal axis shows the repetition times of the cycle of heating and cooling, and the vertical axis shows the ratio of the good samples to the total number of samples. The test conditions of the experiment of Fig. 5 are; the temperature is changed from - 30"C to + 120"C or vice versa in three hours and the full cycle in those changes is counted as one heat cycle, and the voltage of AC 1 2 kV (peak-to-peak) is applied for five seconds to the capacitors in every five cycles.When the capacitor is short-circuited, that capacitor is deemed to have become unoperational. In Fig. 5, it should be appreciated that a prior capacitor becomes unoperational in 50 heat cycles, while the present capacitor is still operational after 1 30 times of heat cycle test.
As described above in detail, due to the presence of a bridge Sc across the parallel longer walls of the cover 8, the stress in the insulator 1 7 is distributed uniformly, and then, the present capacitor is utilized in spite of the frequent temperature change.
Now, another embodiment of the present invention is described in accordance with Figs. 6 and 7, in which the same reference numerals as those in Fig. 2 shows the same members as those in Fig. 2.
The feature of the embodiment of Figs. 6 and 7 is the presence of the housing 19, which mounts the twin capacitor together with the insulator 1 7. In the embodiment of Fig. 2, the cover 1 8 is removed after the insulator 1 7 is hardened, however, the housing 1 9 in Figs.
6 and 7 is not removed. Of course the housing 1 9 operates as the cast or the cover when the insulator 1 7 is injected.
The housing 1 9 has a hollow cylindrical external wall 19d, which is essentially elliptic for mounting an elliptic twin capacitor. At the upper portion of the wall 19d, a flat cover 1 9a having a pair of elongated holes 1 9b is provided. Said pair of holes 1 9b accept the conductor rods 11 and 1 2. The top portion of the conductor rods 11 and 1 2 is shaped flat as shown in Fig. 6 so that that portion can go through the holes 19b. Further, the bridge 1 9c is provided across the parallel walls (1 9d1, 1 9d2) of the external wall 1 9d at the center of the flat cover 1 9a (see Fig. 7).The presence of that bridge 1 9c is the important feature of the present invention.
In manufacturing the twin capacitor, the housing 1 9 covers the capacitor, and the insulator 1 7 is injected into the housing 1 9.
That process is the same as that of the capacitor of Fig. 2. While the cover 1 8 in Fig.
2 is removed after the insulator 1 7 is hardened, the housing 1 9 is not removed, and thus, the bridge 1 9c exists as the component of the capacitor.
Accordingly, the insulator 1 7 surrounding the capacitor body is separated into the two essentially circular portions by said bridge 19c, as shown in Fig. 7. Accordingly, although the insulator 1 7 is elliptic itself, the stress by the temperature change of the insulator distributes uniformly due to the presence of said bridge 19c. Since the embodiment of Figs. 6 and 7 has two bridges Sc and 19c, at the bottom portion and the top portion of the capacitor, the stress of the insulator 1 7 is more uniform than that of the embodiment of Fig. 2. Further, the embodiment of Figs. 6 and 7 has the advantage that the productivity of a capacitor is improved as the manufacturing step for removing the cover 18 is not necessary.
Preferably, the coefficient a, of linear expansion of the insulator 1 7 is larger than the linear expansion coefficient a2 of the external housing 1 9 and/or the cover 8. Of course the housing 1 9 and cover 8 must be incombustible. The example of the material of the housing 1 9 and the cover 8 is flexible epoxy resin like nololak epoxy or polyglycol type epoxy, which is available on the market with the tradename Epicoat or Araldyte.The coefficient a, of those materials is rather large, and is approximately a, = 9.3 X 10-5/"C. On the other hand, the example of the material of the insulator 1 7 is polybutylene terephthalete or polyethylene terephthalete, in which the coefficient a2 of linear expansion is in the range a2=2.3X 10-5/ C2.5 X 10-5/ C.
Therefore, the relationship a, > a2 is satisfied.
When the above relationship between a1 and a2 is satisfied, the expansion of the housing 1 9 as shown by the arrow F in Fig. 8 when the temperature is increased, is smaller than the expansion of the insulator 1 7 as shown by the arrow G in Fig. 8. Accordingly, the expansion of the insulator 1 7 is suppressed by the housing 1 9, then, the strength (f) for pushing the insulator 1 7 on the surface of the ceramic body 1 is generated. Accordingly, the gaps and/or cracks on the surface of the ceramic body 1 are prevented, and the operational characteristics of the capacitor for high voltage is considerably improved.On the contrary, if the above relationship between a1 and a2 is reversed, the housing 1 9 expands more than the insulator 17, and then, the gaps and/or cracks are generated on the surface of the ceramic body 1, thus, said gaps and/or cracks deteriorate the high voltage characteristics of the capacitor.
Fig. 9 shows the curves of the high voltage characteristics, in which the curve L, shows the characteristics of the present capacitor, and the curve L2 shows the characteristics of the prior capacitor in which a1 is smaller than a2. In Fig. 9, the horizontal axis shows the repetition times of the heat/cool cycle, and the vertical axis shows the defective ratio of the sample capacitors. As shown in Fig. 9, a prior capacitor has become practically defective in 100 heat/cool cycles as shown in the curve L2, while the present capacitor is relatively effective after 100 heat/cool cycles.
Other experimental conditions of Fig. 9 are the same as those of Fig. 5.
Now, some modifications of the present twin capacitor are described.
The first modification concerns the gap between the electrodes 4 and 5, and is described in accordance with Figs. 1 OA, 1 OB, 10C, 1 OD, 11A and 1 it. It should be appreciated that the gap between the electrodes 4 and 5 should be as small as possible in order to provide the high withstand voltage between the electrode 4 (or 5) and the common electrode 6. However, the withstand voltage between the electrodes 4 and 5 must be larger than the predetermined value, since a high voltage is applied between the electrodes 4 and 5 when the capacitor is utilized in a noise filter as shown in Fig. 1A. Therefore, the gap between the electrodes 4 and 5 must be designed so that both the withstand voltage between the electrodes 4 and 5, and the withstand voltage between the electrode 4 (or 5) and the common electrode 6 are larger than the predetermined requested value.
The solution for satisfying those requests of the capacitor according to the present invention, is to provide a slit in the ceramic body 1 between the electrodes 4 and 5. The shape and the size of that slit are designed to provide the maxiumum withstand voltages.
Fig. 1 OA is the plane view of the ceramic body 1 together with the electrodes 4 and 5, Fig. 10B is the vertical cross sectional view of Fig. 10A, and Fig. 10C is the one embodiment of the enlarged view of the circled portion A in Fig. 10B. In those figures, an elongated gap g, is provided between the electrodes 4 and 5 in the ceramic body 1.
The cross sectional shape of that gap g1 is essentially rectangular, but the width (a) at the top of the slit is larger than the width(d) at the bottom of that slit. The depth of that slit is (d), and the depth of the wider portion of that slit is (c).
According to the present invention, the angle (a) between the surface line of the electrodes 4 and 5, and the slit g, is determined so that the angle (our) is equal to or less than 90 degrees. With that angle, the concentration and/or the leak of the electric field at the edge of the electrodes 4 and 5 is minimized.
Further, the lengths, (a, b, c and d) of the slit 91 is determined so that the withstand voltage is maximum. Fig. 1 IA shows the experimental relations between the length (a) and the puncture (or breakdown) voltage between the electrode 4 (or 5) and the common electrode 6 of the capacitor, where b = 0.8 mm, c=0.3 mm, d=(a-O.3) mm, and the shape and the thickness of the ceramic body 1 are predetermined. The vertical axis of Fig.
11 A shows the breakdown voltage of the alternate voltage in kilo-volts. Thes tests were performed for a = 0.5 mm, a = 1.0 mm, and a = 1.5 mm, and each test was carried out for 20 samples. The breakdown voltage of each sample in the test was plotted in Fig. 1 it, Fig. Fig.11 A shows that the smaller the length (a) is, the higher the breakdown voltage of the capacitor is, and when the length (at is Q.5 mm, the breadown voltage is almost satisfactory. Therefore, the length (a) is preferably as short as possible, and preferably, that length (a) is 0.5 mm.
Fig. 11 B shows another experiment, in which the total periphery length L= (a + 2b + d) of the slit g1 is a parameter, and the breakdown voltage between the electrode 4 and the electrode 5 for the total length 1.0 mm, 2.0 mm and 3.0 mm is tested. It should be appreciated that the higher the breakdown voltage is, the longer the total length is, and that when the total length is longer than 2.0 mm, the breakdown voltage is higher than 10 kilovolts, which is the maximum operational voltage of a commercial microwave oven.
When the total length L is between 2 mm and 3 mm, and the length (a) is 0.5 mm, the length (b) is in the range between 0.5 mm, and 1.0 mm, assuming that (a = d). On the other hand, when the length (b) is 0.5 mm, and the total length L is less than 3.0 mm, the width (a) must be 1.0 mm, which also provides the sufficient breakdown voltage as shown in Fig. 1 IA.
From the above description, the preferred size of the slit (g1) is the width (a) of the slit and the depth (b) of one slit are in the range between 0.5 mm and 1.0 mm. And with that size of slit, the breakdown voltage between the upper electrode 4 and/or 5, and the common electrode is about 60 kilo-volts, and the breakdown voltage between the upper electrodes 4 and 5 is higher than 10 kilovolts.
Fig. 1 0D is the alternative af the embodiment of Fig. 10C, and the feature of Fig. 1 OD is that the bottom of the slit 91 is circular.
When the length of each portion of the slit 91 is designed as shown in Fig. 1 OD, the capacitor has the sufficient breakdown voltage. The embodiment of Fig. 10D has the advantage because of the presence of the circular bottom (the radius R = 0.5 mm), so that the insulator 1 7 injected in the capacitor fills completely the slit g1, and thus, the breakdown voltage characteristics are improved.
According to one embodiment of the present twin capacitor, the main component of the ceramic body 1 is barium titanate with the relative dielectric constant e = 60to, the longer diameter, the shorter diameter, the thickness of the ceramic body I are 24 mm, 12 mm and 9 mm, respectively, the width and the depth of the slit (g1) are 0.9 mm and 0.8 mm, respectively. With the above size of the twin capacitor, the capacitance is 600 pF, tan 8 = 0.7%, the insulation resistance between electrodes is 2 X 10p ME2, and the breakdown voltage is AC 40 kilovolts (p-p).
Figs. 1 2A and I 2B show the modification of conductor rods 11 and 12. The modified conductor rod II A has a thin conductive plate (for instance, aluminium plate) having the end terminal portion t tA-a which has a hole (h) for engaging with an external lead line, an elongated linear portion (I lA-b1 and 11 A-b2) extending below said end terminal portion 1 rA-a so that the first portion 1 IA-b1 is just below the end terminal portion 11 A-a, and the flange 11 A-c provided between said end terminal portion and the elongated linear portion.That flange I lA-c operates as a stopper which touches with the inner' surface of the plate I 9a of the housing 19.
The elongated linear portion is folded along the longitudinal center line (o) so that two portions 1 A-b and I IA-b2 are laminated to each other. Therefore, the cross sectional view of the elongated linear portion is almost rectangular as shown in Fig. 52B.
Fig. 13A shows the capacitor which utilizes the conductor rods 1 IA and 12A of Figs. 12A and 1 2B in the disassembled form, and Fig.
1 3B is the cross sectional view of that capacitor. It should be noted that the feature of the capacitor of Figs. T 3A and t 3B is the rectangular conductor rods 11 A and 12A, and other portions of the capacitor of Figs. 1 3A and t 3B are the same as those in Fig. 6 and Fig.
7.
in Fig. 1 3A, the insulation tubes 15 and 16 covering the conductor rods 11 A and 1 2A are not shown for the sake of the simplicity of the drawing.
The conductor rods of Figs. 1 2A and 1 2B have the advantages as enumerated below.
a) A conductor rod can be manufactured through a single press process, thus, the manufacturing cost of a conductor rod is reduced.
b) The position of an end terminal portion is very accurately manufactured, since that end terminal portion is integral with the elongated linear portion, and thus, the connection with an external circuit is very reliable.
c) The insulation tubes 1 5 and 1 6 can easily cover the conductor rods, since the elongated portion of the conductor rods is rectangular and a gap (g) is provided between the conductor and the tube as shown in Fig.
14. In Fig. 14, the edges (a, b, c, d) of the elongated portion of the conductor rod contact with the internal surface of the insulation tube, but a gap (g) is provided between each side of the conductor rod and those of insulation tube because of the rectangular shape of the conductor rod and the tension of the tube.
Since the contact area between the conductor rod and the insulation tube is small because of the presence of the gaps (g), the friction between a rod and tube is minimum, and it is easy to cover the rod with the tube. Further, said gaps (g) can absorb the stress generated in the insulator 1 7.
Fig. 1 5 is another modification of the conductor rod 11 and/or 1 2. The conductor rod 11 A of Fig. 1 5 has a thin conductive plate (for instance, aluminium plate) having the end terminal portion 11A-a which has a hole (h) for engaging with an external lead line, an elongated linear portion (11A-b, and 11A-b2) extending below said end terminal portion 11A-a so that the first portion 11A-b, is just below said end terminal portion. The first flange 11 A-c is provided at the foot of the end terminal portion between said end terminal portion and the elongated linear portion.
The second flange 11 A-d confronts with said first flange 11A-c. A pair of slits 11A-e are provided between two flanges at both the sides of the end terminal portion. The width (d) of said slits is almost the same as the thickness of the upper surface plate 1 9a of the housing 1 9. The edges of the second flanges 11A-d are slanted as shown in Fig.
1 5. The elongated linear portion is folded along the longitudinal center line (o) so that two portions 11A-b, and 11 A-b2 are laminated to each other. Comparing Fig. 1 5 with Fig. 12A, the feature of the conductor rod of Fig. 1 5 is the presence of the slit 11 A-e between two flanges. That slit and/or the flanges facilitate to support the housing 1 9.
Since the housing 1 9 is supported by the slits of the conductor rods, which are located at the center of the capacitor, the expansion and/or the contraction of the housing 1 9 and/or the insulator 1 7 becomes symmetrical with regard to the center of the capacitor, thus, the expansion and/or the contraction at the central portion is small, and no gaps or cracks are generated at the central portion of the insulator and/or the housing.
Fig. 1 6 shows the cross sectional view of the capacitor which utilizes the conductor rods 11A of Fig. 15. It should be appreciated that the housing 1 9 of the capacitor in Fig. 1 6 is held in the slits 11 A-e provided on the conductor rods 11 A. When the housing 1 9 is covered on the capacitor, that housing 1 9 is entered in the slits through the slanted sides on the slits of the conductor rods.
Fig. 1 7A is the alternative of the conductor rod of Fig. 1 5. In the figures, just a pair of slits 20 are provided, with no flange being provided. Another alternative of the conductor rod of Fig. 1 5 is shown in Fig. 17B, in which a pair of semicircled extensions 20a are provided at the bottom portion of the end terminal 11A-a, instead of a pair of flanges of Fig.
15, and between said extensions 20a, a slit is provided. Figs. 18A and 18B show still another alternative of the conductor rod of Fig. 15, and in that alternative a plurality of projections 21 and 22 are provided on the surface of the end terminal portion 1 1A-a.
Said projections 21 and 22 are aligned on separate two parallel lines as shown in the figures, and between those two lines, a slit is provided, and said projections hold the housing 1 9 between the slits. Said projections are provided on both the surfaces of the end terminal plate 11A-a.
The alternatives of the conductor rods of Fig.15, Fig. 17A, Fig. 17B and Figs. 18A and 18B have the same advantages as those of the conductor rod of Fig. 1 2A, and the formers have the further advantage that the housing is held rigidly at the center of the capacitor.
As described. above in detail, the present capacitor has the feature that the insulator is held at the center of the capacitor, and so the expansion and/or the contraction of the insulator effects the center of the capacitor. Therefore, no gaps or cracks occur at the central portion of the capacitor in spite of frequent heating and cooling experienced in a microwave oven. Therefore, an superior noise filter for that microwave oven is obtained by utilizing the present capacitors.
From the foregoing, it will now be apparent that a new and improved through type high withstand voltage ceramic capacitor has been found. It should be understood of course that the embodiments disclosed are merely illustrative and are not intended to limit the scope of the invention. Reference should be made to the appended claims, therefore, rather than the specification as indicating the scope of the invention.

Claims (9)

1. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor comprising; a) a rectangular ground conductor plate (7) having a plate (7c) and a elevated essentially elliptic portion (7a) elevated from said plate (7c), said plate (7c) having a plurality holes near the edges for fixing the capacitor to an external device, and said elevated portion (7a) having a plurality of small holes (7b) on the closed peripheral line of the elevated portion (7a) and a pair of holes (9, 10), b) a capacitor half assembly having a essentially elliptic column shaped ceramic body (1), a pair of separated electrodes (4, 5) attached on the first upper surface of said ceramic body, and a common electrode (6) disposed on the second bottom surface of said ceramic body (1), said ceramic body (1) together with the attached electrodes (4, 5, 6) having a pair of holes (2, 3) in the thick vertical direction of the ceramic body (1), and said capacitor half assembly being disposed on the elevated portion (7a) inside of said closed line having small holes (7b), c) a pair of circular caps (13, 14) each having an elevated portion (13a, 14a) being provided on the closed peripheral line of each of said caps (13, 14), those caps (13, 14) being disposed on each of said separated electrodes (4, 5), respectively, d) a pair of conductive rods (11, 1 2) each piercing holes of said ground conductive plate (7), the capacitor half assembly and the cap (13, 14), and said conductor rods being fixed to said caps, respectively, e) a pair of insulation tubes (15, 16) covering the conductive rods (11, 12) so that those conductive rods (11, 12) do not electrically contact with the common electrode (6) and the ground conductor plate (7), f) a hollow essentially elliptic column shaped plastics cover (8) positioned below said ground conductor plate (7) covering said insulation tubes (15, 16), said cover (8) having a bridge (8c) across a pair of essentially parallel side walls (8a, 8b) of said cover (8) so that said bridge (8c) separates the cross section of the cover (8) to two essentially circular areas, g) an insulator (17) injected into said cover (8), and said holes (2, 3) of the capacitor half assembly, also enclosing said capacitor half assembly.
2. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 1, further comprising a housing enclosing said capacitor half assembly, said housing (19) having a hollow, essentially elliptic column shaped external wall (19d), a flat top cover (19a) disposed at the top of the external wall (19d) and a bridge (19c) disposed inside of said flat top cover (1 9a).across a pair of essentially parallel external walls (19d) so that said bridge (19c) separates the cross section of the housing (19) to two essentially circular areas, and said housing (19) being filled with said insulator (17).
3. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 2, wherein the thermal coefficient of linear expansion of the housing (1 9) is smaller than that of the insulator (17).
4. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 1, wherein a slit (g1) is provided in the ceramic body (1) between the pair of separated electrodes (4, 5) and the width and the depth of said slit (g,) is in the range from 0.5 mm to 1.0 mm.
5. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 4, wherein the bottom of the slit is circularly curved.
6. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 2, wherein each of said conductor rods is made of thin conductive plate having an end terminal portion which is positioned above a flat top cover (19a) of the housing (19), and an elongated linear portion extending integrally below said end terminal portion, through said ceramic body (1) and said cover (8), and said elongated linear portion has the lamination of said thin conductive plate folded at one side.
7. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 6, wherein each of said conductor rods has a pair of flanges sandwiching a slit between said end terminal portion and said elongated linear portion so that said slit supports the flat top cover of the housing.
8. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 6, wherein one of said flanges is slanted for the sake of the easy insertion of the conductor rod into the flat top cover of the housing.
9. A through type twin high-withstandvoltage ceramic capacitor according to claim 6, wherein each of said conductor rods has a plurality of projections on a pair of parallel lines on the surface of the end terminal portion so that a slit is provided between said parallel lines of projections.
GB8024798A 1979-08-15 1980-07-29 Through type high-withstand-voltage ceramic capacitor Expired GB2061618B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP11229279U JPS5930518Y2 (en) 1979-08-15 1979-08-15 high voltage capacitor
JP13938779U JPS5915063Y2 (en) 1979-10-08 1979-10-08 High voltage feedthrough capacitor
JP17470579U JPS5918665Y2 (en) 1979-12-17 1979-12-17 High voltage feedthrough capacitor
JP510380U JPS6018832Y2 (en) 1980-01-19 1980-01-19 High voltage feedthrough capacitor
JP5204080U JPS6015328Y2 (en) 1980-04-17 1980-04-17 High voltage feed-through capacitor
JP5678880U JPS6028117Y2 (en) 1980-04-24 1980-04-24 High voltage feed-through capacitor

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GB2061618A true GB2061618A (en) 1981-05-13
GB2061618B GB2061618B (en) 1984-04-18

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NL (1) NL185314C (en)

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2545262A1 (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-11-02 Beru Werk Ruprecht Gmbh Co A CAPACITOR FOR ANTIPARASITING
EP0259766A2 (en) * 1986-09-11 1988-03-16 TDK Corporation Through-type capacitor and magnetron using same
EP0364755A2 (en) * 1988-09-20 1990-04-25 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. High voltage through type capacitor and manufacturing method therefor
GB2317501A (en) * 1996-09-18 1998-03-25 Tdk Corp Feedthrough ceramic capacitor

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US4374369A (en) * 1979-12-20 1983-02-15 Murata Manufacturing Co., Ltd. Electromagnetic interference elimination filter
DE3417569A1 (en) * 1983-04-27 1985-11-14 Beru Werk Ruprecht Gmbh Co A Suppression capacitor having connecting lugs, and an insulating element
KR880003356A (en) * 1986-08-13 1988-05-16 무라다 아끼라 High pressure capacitor
JPH031517A (en) * 1989-04-15 1991-01-08 Murata Mfg Co Ltd Through-type capacitor
US5142436A (en) * 1990-02-27 1992-08-25 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. Piercing through type capacitor
DE69226084T2 (en) * 1991-08-27 1998-12-24 Tdk Corp HIGH VOLTAGE CAPACITOR AND MAGNETRON
JP3473795B2 (en) * 1995-05-22 2003-12-08 Tdk株式会社 High voltage capacitors and magnetrons

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US2503912A (en) * 1946-10-07 1950-04-11 Gen Electric Electric capacitor
US2756375A (en) * 1952-02-06 1956-07-24 Sprague Electric Co Feed-through capacitors
DE1739586U (en) * 1956-11-24 1957-02-14 Norddeutsche Mende Rundfunk G FEED-THROUGH CAPACITOR.
DE1060495B (en) * 1957-05-27 1959-07-02 Karl Hopt G M B H Method of manufacturing a rotating plate capacitor
DE2238594A1 (en) * 1972-08-05 1974-02-21 Stettner & Co CERAMIC MULTIPLE FEED-THROUGH CAPACITOR
JPS5552665Y2 (en) 1974-07-17 1980-12-06
US4148003A (en) * 1977-07-08 1979-04-03 Globe-Union Inc. Series feed-through capacitor

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2545262A1 (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-11-02 Beru Werk Ruprecht Gmbh Co A CAPACITOR FOR ANTIPARASITING
DE3315187A1 (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-11-08 BERU Ruprecht GmbH & Co KG, 7140 Ludwigsburg EMISSION CONDENSER
GB2140971A (en) * 1983-04-27 1984-12-05 Beru Werk Ruprecht Gmbh Co A Anti-interference condenser
EP0259766A2 (en) * 1986-09-11 1988-03-16 TDK Corporation Through-type capacitor and magnetron using same
EP0259766A3 (en) * 1986-09-11 1989-06-07 Tdk Corporation Through-type capacitor and magnetron using same
EP0364755A2 (en) * 1988-09-20 1990-04-25 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. High voltage through type capacitor and manufacturing method therefor
EP0364755A3 (en) * 1988-09-20 1990-08-01 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. High voltage through type capacitor and manufacturing method therefor
GB2317501A (en) * 1996-09-18 1998-03-25 Tdk Corp Feedthrough ceramic capacitor
US5886592A (en) * 1996-09-18 1999-03-23 Tdk Corporation Feedthrough ceramic capacitor having a grounding fitting for frictionally fixing the capacitor to a capacitor support
GB2317501B (en) * 1996-09-18 2001-02-14 Tdk Corp Feedthrough ceramic capacitor

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB2061618B (en) 1984-04-18
NL185314C (en) 1990-03-01
DE3029807C2 (en) 1985-01-17
NL8004481A (en) 1981-02-17
NL185314B (en) 1989-10-02
DE3029807A1 (en) 1981-02-26

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