US2187126A - Lenard ray tube head - Google Patents

Lenard ray tube head Download PDF

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Publication number
US2187126A
US2187126A US176712A US17671237A US2187126A US 2187126 A US2187126 A US 2187126A US 176712 A US176712 A US 176712A US 17671237 A US17671237 A US 17671237A US 2187126 A US2187126 A US 2187126A
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Prior art keywords
tube
lenard
diaphragm
disc
head
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Expired - Lifetime
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US176712A
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Emil A Kern
Stewart L Clothier
Harold C Hogencamp
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KOLORAMA LAB Inc
KOLORAMA LABORATORIES Inc
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KOLORAMA LAB Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J33/00Discharge tubes with provision for emergence of electrons or ions from the vessel; Lenard tubes
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T292/00Closure fasteners
    • Y10T292/20Clamps
    • Y10T292/205Ring

Definitions

  • This invention relates to Lenard ray tubes and moreparticularly'to an improved method of constructing Lenard ray tube heads.
  • Lenard rays comprise streams of electrons projected into the atmosphere.
  • the electrons are generated within a conventional cathode ray tube and are directed and accelerated as a. beam through an electron-permeable window through which they emerge to the atmosphere as Lenard rays. It is often desirable to successively deflect the stream of electrons transversely so that the beam follows a substantially linear path.
  • Such a beam when properly modulated and deflected finds utility when employed in conjunction with anoscillograph or a television apparatus.
  • Ihe electron-permeable window through which the rays are projected is ordinarily of relatively thin and light material such as an aluminum sheet, or the like.
  • a Lenard ray tube it is customary to evacuate the vessel, and at some time during the evacuation to bake the entire tube so as to drive out occluded gases ordinarily retained in the structural elements of the tube. Since the heat employed in the baking process is ordinarily destructive to the delicate membrane or diaphragm forming the electronpermeable window, it has been a difiicult problem to dc-gas such tubes.
  • One attempted method of solving this problem was to temporarily seal the 4 vessel and to evacuate and bake the same before I sufficient to release undesirable gases after the tube had been evacuated the second time.
  • Lenard ray tubes with an elongated aperture serving as the opening for the window were formed by grinding or machining a slot in the flared end or head of the tube.
  • the mechanical operations employed in forming the aperture introduced slight deposits of oil, foreign metal, or minute portions of the material forming the head of the tube, .sufhcient in. quantity to render the tube-gaseous after the tube was evacuated.
  • the tube could not be baked after the relatively'fragile window was put in place because of the destructive action of the heat. Repeated evacuations of the tube in an attempt to eliminate the gaseous components was expensive and never entirely successful.
  • the electron-permeable window may be attached and hermetically sealed with the tube after baking without the introduction of foreign elements.
  • window plates having apertures of various dimensions may be interchangeably mounted upon the tube.
  • the window construction may be mounted in place at the first instance and the entire assembly baked as a unit.
  • the principal objects of thepresent invention are: to provide a new and improved head for a Lenard ray tube; to provide means whereby a Lenard ray tube may be evacuated and baked, after which the window construction may be placed in position without introducing foreign material within the tube detracting from the operating efiiciency; to provide improved means for holding the Lenard ray window in tightly clamped relation over the window aperture; and to provide means whereby thewindow may be protected from the ordinarily destructive action of the baking heat.
  • Fig. 2 is a longitudinal cross-sectional View of the improved head construction taken along a diametrical plane
  • Fig. 3 is an elevational viewof a blank or disc
  • Fig. i' is an isometric view of the assembled head.
  • one form of the'invention includes providinginterchangeable members for the tube head so that the window construction may be. quickly and conveniently placed into position after the tube has been evacuated a first time and baked.
  • the invention also. comprehends assemblingthe entire improved head and evacuating and baking the same as a unit by the provision of an annularv flange for forming with the diaphragm a receptacle for containing a cooling medium during the baking process.
  • the invention comprises an improved head hermetically sealed with the flared end of a Braun or cathode ray tube I2.
  • the head comprises a tubular metallic cap 01' crown l3 having a flat end portion i4 provided with an integral depending skirt I5.
  • the end of the skirt is ground or turned about a peripheral zone so as to form a feather edge I6, which edge adjoins and is sealed with the flared open end of the glass envelope forming the outer casing for the tube
  • the wall of the end portion I4 is thickened and is provided with a relatively large opening l8 preferably of circular configuration.
  • a plurality of drilled and tapped holes l9 extend longitudinally inward from the end portion l4 near the outer periphery.
  • , an electron-permeable diaphragm 22, and a mounting ring 23 are successively mounted against the flat end portion M, and are each provided with openings 24 corresponding in position and number with the drilled and tapped holes IS.
  • the entire arrangement may be held in the assembled relation by means of a plurality of screws 25, as shown in Figs. 1 and 4.
  • and the mounting ring 23 may be provided with interlocking annular grooves 26 and 21 between which the diaphragm 22 is compressed so that it may be stretched tightly against the disc 2
  • An elongated aperture or slot 28 preferably with slightly rounded edges is formed in the disc 2
  • the slot 28 is preferably relatively narrow so that a thin sheet of aluminum or the like may be employed as a diaphragm without being ruptured by the atmospheric pressure. For example with a slot less than one hundredth of an inch in width a diaphragm 22 of .0004 inch thick may be safely employed.
  • the length of the slot 28 is immaterial from the standpoint of strength, the dimensions being determined by the desired sweep or deflection of the electron beam. Obviously the opening
  • , shown in Fig. 3, is employed in some instances to temporarily replace the disc 2! as will more fully hereinafter appear.
  • the end portion M is ground, planed, or otherwise formed in a smooth and flat condition.
  • is then mounted against the end M with the openings 24 aligned with the holes l9.
  • is sealed with the end l4 by a suitable cement or sealing compound preferably of a non-volatile nature.
  • the mounting ring 23 is similarly positioned adjacent to the blank or disc 2
  • the tube I2 is then evacuated in the usual manner during which the head may be baked as in an oven, by high-frequency bombardment, or by the application of localized heat about successive portions thereof.
  • may be separately baked in any convenient manner so that a similar action takes place.
  • occluded gases are driven out of the component parts by the baking.
  • the diaphragm 22 may be moderately heated in an oven similar to that employed for the disc 2
  • Fig. 1 may be assembled in the order shown and the entire combination clamped together with screws so as to hermetically seal the opening H3 and the slot 28.
  • the mounting ring 23 forms a receptacle with the diaphragm 22 as shown in Fig. 4, which receptacle may be filled with water or other suitable cooling medium and the entire head may then be baked as a unit. Since the cooling medium is in direct contact with the diaphragm 22, the temperature of the diaphragm is continuously maintained below the destructive limit, even though the lower portions of the head are raised to red heat during the evacuation and baking process.
  • in cooperation with similar grooves in the ring 23 tightly engage the diaphragm 22, and in eifect stretch it tightly over the slot 28.
  • the diaphragm is preferably formed of aluminum or other similar relatively soft material the diaphragm acts as a gasket and cooperates with the grooves to hermetically seal itself against the disc 2
  • an electron-discharge tube comprising a solid electron impervious disc for hermetically sealing said tube from the atmosphere; means for detachably securing said disc to said tube; and a Lenard ray window including a supporting plate having a slotted aperture therein, an electron-permeable diaphragm, and means for detachably but hermetically sealing said plate and said diaphragm with said tube when said disc is detached.
  • a method of preparing a Lenard ray tube comprising forming a smooth fiat end on said tube; forming a central opening in said end; covering said open end with a blank; evacuating and baking said tube; replacing said solid electron impervious blank with a support having a slotted aperture therein and a superimposed electron-permeable diaphragm; and evacuating said tube a second time.

Description

Jan. 16, 1940. E. A. KERN Er AL LENARD RAY TUBE HEAD Filed Nov. 26, 1937 LIXI/VZORS M (66412;; Maw
Patented Jan. 16, 1940 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE LENARD RAY TUBE HEAD New J ersey Application November 26, 1937, Serial No. 176,712
2 Claims.
This invention. relates to Lenard ray tubes and moreparticularly'to an improved method of constructing Lenard ray tube heads.
As is well known, Lenard rays. comprise streams of electrons projected into the atmosphere. The electrons are generated within a conventional cathode ray tube and are directed and accelerated as a. beam through an electron-permeable window through which they emerge to the atmosphere as Lenard rays. It is often desirable to successively deflect the stream of electrons transversely so that the beam follows a substantially linear path. Such a beam when properly modulated and deflected finds utility when employed in conjunction with anoscillograph or a television apparatus.
Ihe electron-permeable window through which the rays are projected is ordinarily of relatively thin and light material such as an aluminum sheet, or the like. In the construction of a Lenard ray tube it is customary to evacuate the vessel, and at some time during the evacuation to bake the entire tube so as to drive out occluded gases ordinarily retained in the structural elements of the tube. Since the heat employed in the baking process is ordinarily destructive to the delicate membrane or diaphragm forming the electronpermeable window, it has been a difiicult problem to dc-gas such tubes. One attempted method of solving this problem was to temporarily seal the 4 vessel and to evacuate and bake the same before I sufficient to release undesirable gases after the tube had been evacuated the second time. example, Lenard ray tubes with an elongated aperture serving as the opening for the window, were formed by grinding or machining a slot in the flared end or head of the tube. The mechanical operations employed in forming the aperture introduced slight deposits of oil, foreign metal, or minute portions of the material forming the head of the tube, .sufhcient in. quantity to render the tube-gaseous after the tube was evacuated. In the.iOregoingmethod, the tube could not be baked after the relatively'fragile window was put in place because of the destructive action of the heat. Repeated evacuations of the tube in an attempt to eliminate the gaseous components was expensive and never entirely successful.
In the present invention through the use of an improved headfor the Lenard ray tube, the electron-permeable window may be attached and hermetically sealed with the tube after baking without the introduction of foreign elements. Through the use of the improved device, window plates having apertures of various dimensions may be interchangeably mounted upon the tube. Furthermore, means is provided whereby, if desired, the window construction may be mounted in place at the first instance and the entire assembly baked as a unit. I
Accordingly the principal objects of thepresent invention are: to provide a new and improved head for a Lenard ray tube; to provide means whereby a Lenard ray tube may be evacuated and baked, after which the window construction may be placed in position without introducing foreign material within the tube detracting from the operating efiiciency; to provide improved means for holding the Lenard ray window in tightly clamped relation over the window aperture; and to provide means whereby thewindow may be protected from the ordinarily destructive action of the baking heat. These and other objects of the present invention will become more readily apparent from the following description in conjunction with the appended drawingwhere- Fig. 1 is an exploded isometric view showing the various components of the improved. tube head;
Fig. 2 is a longitudinal cross-sectional View of the improved head construction taken along a diametrical plane;
Fig. 3 is an elevational viewof a blank or disc; and.
Fig. i'is an isometric view of the assembled head.
Briefly, one form of the'invention includes providinginterchangeable members for the tube head so that the window construction may be. quickly and conveniently placed into position after the tube has been evacuated a first time and baked. The invention also. comprehends assemblingthe entire improved head and evacuating and baking the same as a unit by the provision of an annularv flange for forming with the diaphragm a receptacle for containing a cooling medium during the baking process.
Referring again to the drawing, the invention comprises an improved head hermetically sealed with the flared end of a Braun or cathode ray tube I2. The head comprises a tubular metallic cap 01' crown l3 having a flat end portion i4 provided with an integral depending skirt I5. The end of the skirt is ground or turned about a peripheral zone so as to form a feather edge I6, which edge adjoins and is sealed with the flared open end of the glass envelope forming the outer casing for the tube |2. The wall of the end portion I4 is thickened and is provided with a relatively large opening l8 preferably of circular configuration. A plurality of drilled and tapped holes l9 extend longitudinally inward from the end portion l4 near the outer periphery.
A disc 2|, an electron-permeable diaphragm 22, and a mounting ring 23 are successively mounted against the flat end portion M, and are each provided with openings 24 corresponding in position and number with the drilled and tapped holes IS. The entire arrangement may be held in the assembled relation by means of a plurality of screws 25, as shown in Figs. 1 and 4. If desired, the disc 2| and the mounting ring 23 may be provided with interlocking annular grooves 26 and 21 between which the diaphragm 22 is compressed so that it may be stretched tightly against the disc 2|.
An elongated aperture or slot 28 preferably with slightly rounded edges is formed in the disc 2| and defines the contour of the electron-permeable window. The slot 28 is preferably relatively narrow so that a thin sheet of aluminum or the like may be employed as a diaphragm without being ruptured by the atmospheric pressure. For example with a slot less than one hundredth of an inch in width a diaphragm 22 of .0004 inch thick may be safely employed. The length of the slot 28 is immaterial from the standpoint of strength, the dimensions being determined by the desired sweep or deflection of the electron beam. Obviously the opening |8 must be at least as large in diameter as the desired length of the slot 28. A blank or disc 2|, shown in Fig. 3, is employed in some instances to temporarily replace the disc 2! as will more fully hereinafter appear.
In order to assemble the head, the end portion M is ground, planed, or otherwise formed in a smooth and flat condition. The blank 2| is then mounted against the end M with the openings 24 aligned with the holes l9. Preferably the disc 2| is sealed with the end l4 by a suitable cement or sealing compound preferably of a non-volatile nature. The mounting ring 23 is similarly positioned adjacent to the blank or disc 2| with a suitable cement if desired and the screws 25 are inserted and tightened so that the opening I8 is hermetically sealed. The tube I2 is then evacuated in the usual manner during which the head may be baked as in an oven, by high-frequency bombardment, or by the application of localized heat about successive portions thereof. In the meantime the apertured disc 2| may be separately baked in any convenient manner so that a similar action takes place. In both instances occluded gases are driven out of the component parts by the baking. If desired, the diaphragm 22 may be moderately heated in an oven similar to that employed for the disc 2| so that a portion of the occluded gases may be driven oif without exposing the delicate sheet to the destructive action which would ensue if it were exposed to the same temperature as is employed for the remaining portions of the head. After the baking operation has been completed, the air pressure inside the tube is raised to normal, the screws 25 are removed and the apertured disc 2| and the diaphragm 22 are substituted for the blank 2|, after which the screws 25 are inserted in their respective tapped holes and the parts reassembled. Upon evacuating the tube a second time only negligible amounts of gases are released within the tube because all of the parts have been separately baked and no mechanical operations have been performed which would introduce foreign matter within the tube or even to expose new surfaces of the original metal.
As an alternative method the parts disclosed in Fig. 1 may be assembled in the order shown and the entire combination clamped together with screws so as to hermetically seal the opening H3 and the slot 28. The mounting ring 23 forms a receptacle with the diaphragm 22 as shown in Fig. 4, which receptacle may be filled with water or other suitable cooling medium and the entire head may then be baked as a unit. Since the cooling medium is in direct contact with the diaphragm 22, the temperature of the diaphragm is continuously maintained below the destructive limit, even though the lower portions of the head are raised to red heat during the evacuation and baking process. It will be appreciated that the annular grooves formed in the supporting plate or disc 2| in cooperation with similar grooves in the ring 23 tightly engage the diaphragm 22, and in eifect stretch it tightly over the slot 28. Since the diaphragm is preferably formed of aluminum or other similar relatively soft material the diaphragm acts as a gasket and cooperates with the grooves to hermetically seal itself against the disc 2| without the use of cement or other bonding agent. Because of the ease with which the various parts may be disassembled it is possible to easily substitute not only diaphragms of different compositions and thicknesses but also discs 2| provided with various proportioned slots 28. It is obvious that any such substitution necessitates reexhausting the tube.
Various other modifications will readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention or sacrificing any of its advantages.
We claim:
1. In an electron-discharge tube, the combination comprising a solid electron impervious disc for hermetically sealing said tube from the atmosphere; means for detachably securing said disc to said tube; and a Lenard ray window including a supporting plate having a slotted aperture therein, an electron-permeable diaphragm, and means for detachably but hermetically sealing said plate and said diaphragm with said tube when said disc is detached.
2. A method of preparing a Lenard ray tube comprising forming a smooth fiat end on said tube; forming a central opening in said end; covering said open end with a blank; evacuating and baking said tube; replacing said solid electron impervious blank with a support having a slotted aperture therein and a superimposed electron-permeable diaphragm; and evacuating said tube a second time.
EMIL A. KERN. STEWART L. CLOTHIER. HAROLD C. HOGENCAMP.
US176712A 1937-11-26 1937-11-26 Lenard ray tube head Expired - Lifetime US2187126A (en)

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2431113A (en) * 1946-07-23 1947-11-18 Rauland Corp Ion filter
US2454741A (en) * 1944-05-24 1948-11-23 Sylvania Electric Prod Ultra high frequency electronic tube
US2617953A (en) * 1949-06-28 1952-11-11 Electronized Chem Corp Window structure for cathode-ray tubes
US2722620A (en) * 1952-09-11 1955-11-01 High Voltage Engineering Corp Electron window and method of increasing the mechanical strength thereof
US3576583A (en) * 1966-11-02 1971-04-27 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Direct record image discharge tube
US4119234A (en) * 1975-03-27 1978-10-10 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Vacuum-tight windows for passage of X-rays or similar penetrating radiation
US4122967A (en) * 1976-02-11 1978-10-31 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Vacuum-tight window structure for the passage of x-rays and similar penetrating radiation
US4372591A (en) * 1978-12-26 1983-02-08 Standard-Keil Hardware Mfg. Co., A Division Of Buildex Inc. Safety latch
US4734586A (en) * 1986-03-06 1988-03-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy Foil changing apparatus
US20050184735A1 (en) * 2004-02-19 2005-08-25 Helix Technology Corporation Ionization gauge
US20060197537A1 (en) * 2004-02-19 2006-09-07 Arnold Paul C Ionization gauge
US20090015264A1 (en) * 2007-07-11 2009-01-15 Knott Richard A Ionization gauge with a cold electron source

Cited By (15)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2454741A (en) * 1944-05-24 1948-11-23 Sylvania Electric Prod Ultra high frequency electronic tube
US2431113A (en) * 1946-07-23 1947-11-18 Rauland Corp Ion filter
US2617953A (en) * 1949-06-28 1952-11-11 Electronized Chem Corp Window structure for cathode-ray tubes
US2722620A (en) * 1952-09-11 1955-11-01 High Voltage Engineering Corp Electron window and method of increasing the mechanical strength thereof
US3576583A (en) * 1966-11-02 1971-04-27 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Direct record image discharge tube
US4119234A (en) * 1975-03-27 1978-10-10 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Vacuum-tight windows for passage of X-rays or similar penetrating radiation
US4122967A (en) * 1976-02-11 1978-10-31 Siemens Aktiengesellschaft Vacuum-tight window structure for the passage of x-rays and similar penetrating radiation
US4372591A (en) * 1978-12-26 1983-02-08 Standard-Keil Hardware Mfg. Co., A Division Of Buildex Inc. Safety latch
US4734586A (en) * 1986-03-06 1988-03-29 The United States Of America As Represented By The United States Department Of Energy Foil changing apparatus
US20050184735A1 (en) * 2004-02-19 2005-08-25 Helix Technology Corporation Ionization gauge
US7030619B2 (en) 2004-02-19 2006-04-18 Brooks Automation, Inc. Ionization gauge
US20060197537A1 (en) * 2004-02-19 2006-09-07 Arnold Paul C Ionization gauge
US7295015B2 (en) 2004-02-19 2007-11-13 Brooks Automation, Inc. Ionization gauge
US20090015264A1 (en) * 2007-07-11 2009-01-15 Knott Richard A Ionization gauge with a cold electron source
US7768267B2 (en) 2007-07-11 2010-08-03 Brooks Automation, Inc. Ionization gauge with a cold electron source

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