US2662162A - High-frequency furnace - Google Patents

High-frequency furnace Download PDF

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Publication number
US2662162A
US2662162A US261107A US26110751A US2662162A US 2662162 A US2662162 A US 2662162A US 261107 A US261107 A US 261107A US 26110751 A US26110751 A US 26110751A US 2662162 A US2662162 A US 2662162A
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United States
Prior art keywords
coil
circuit
frequency furnace
furnace
output
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Expired - Lifetime
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US261107A
Inventor
Blok Lourens
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Hartford National Bank and Trust Co
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Hartford National Bank and Trust Co
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/02Induction heating
    • H05B6/04Sources of current

Definitions

  • the ends of the circuit 2, which is constructed as a unit, are secured through flexible connecting leads l'l and I8 to the further ⁇ stationary part of the oscillator circuit.
  • the connecting lead i3 is coupled through a blocking capacitor with the anode of the tube I and the connecting lead il is coupled through a grid capacitor t with the control-grid of the tube l and through a coil i with a grounded leak resistor i.
  • the junction of the circuit capacitors l'. and li' is connected as shown in Fig. 2, through a lead it to the ground plate 22 and is grounded by way of the wheels 23 and the grounded rails 24.
  • the tube l is arranged laterally with respect to the displaceable structural unit, thus providing the further advantage that the loops of the flexible connections are only slightly deformed, when the structural unit is displaced.
  • a screening strip 21 (partly removed in the drawing) is inserted between the tube and the circuit unit in order to avoid unwanted coupling of the grid circuit of the tube with other circuit elements. Any tendency of the circuit-arrangement towards parasitic oscillation is thus strongly reduced. For the same reasons it desirable to provide a screening plate 23 between the grid circuit and the anode circuit of the tube.
  • the flexible connections I6 to I3 do not transmit the comparatively high circuit or load currents, in contradistinction to known constructions of high-frequency furnaces.
  • the flexible connections transmit approximately 3 amp. with a circuit current of about 8O amp.
  • the use of the invention provides a construction of a high-frequency furnace, which is attractive from the electrical point of view, the ad- 4 vantages of this construction largely compensating for the slightly less simple structural arrangement, particularly with the use of highfrequency furnaces of high power.
  • a high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said electrode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, a carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil xedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, and means movably mounting said unit in said furnace to effect displacement of said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil.
  • a furnace as set forth in claim 1 further includingrneans to force-cool said circuit coil.
  • a high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said elec-l trode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, said circuit coil being Wound in the form of a cylinder, a carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil nxedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, said output coil being constituted by a cylindricaliy bent ribbon and surrounding said circuit coil, and means movably mounting said unit in said furnace to effect axial displacement 0f said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil.
  • a high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said electrode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, said circuit coil being wound in the form of a cylinder, a rolling carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil flxedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, said output coil being constituted by a cylindrically bent ribbon and surrounding said circuit coil, and means including rails for moving said rolling carrier in said furnace to effect axial displacement of said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil through a distance equal to the axial length of said circuit coil.

Description

Dec. 8, 1953 B LQK HIGH-FREQUENCY FURNACE Filed Dec. ll, 1951 Lourens Blo k wwf/7% Agen? further load circuit is connected. One of the terminals i2 of the coupling coil is normally grounded, but, as an alternative the ground point of the coupling coil li may be shifted in place by 180 or 99 with respect to the output terminals I2- The unit is preferably made so as to be displaceable through a distance equal to the length of the circuit coil 3, the length of the coupling coil being adapted to this length. In a high-frequency furnace an adaptation of load may thus be ensured in a range which is sufficiently great for all practical uses. The ends of the circuit 2, which is constructed as a unit, are secured through flexible connecting leads l'l and I8 to the further` stationary part of the oscillator circuit. The connecting lead i3 is coupled through a blocking capacitor with the anode of the tube I and the connecting lead il is coupled through a grid capacitor t with the control-grid of the tube l and through a coil i with a grounded leak resistor i. The junction of the circuit capacitors l'. and li' is connected as shown in Fig. 2, through a lead it to the ground plate 22 and is grounded by way of the wheels 23 and the grounded rails 24.
The tube l is arranged laterally with respect to the displaceable structural unit, thus providing the further advantage that the loops of the flexible connections are only slightly deformed, when the structural unit is displaced. A screening strip 21 (partly removed in the drawing) is inserted between the tube and the circuit unit in order to avoid unwanted coupling of the grid circuit of the tube with other circuit elements. Any tendency of the circuit-arrangement towards parasitic oscillation is thus strongly reduced. For the same reasons it desirable to provide a screening plate 23 between the grid circuit and the anode circuit of the tube.
In the practical construction of the high-frequency furnace described above use was made of copper screening plates at right angles to the field of the coils and arranged on either side of the coupling coil ii and the circuit coil 3; one plate (25) is shown in broken lines in the ligure, the other (26) forms part of the screening box 2|. These screening plates are provided in order to permit housing the high-frequency furnace in a sheet-iron cabinet without electrical interference.
In the high-frequency furnace according to the invention, the flexible connections I6 to I3 do not transmit the comparatively high circuit or load currents, in contradistinction to known constructions of high-frequency furnaces. In the practical construction of a iii kw. high-frequency furnace comprising two tubes 'IBW 6/6000 in parallel connection, operating as the output tube, the flexible connections transmit approximately 3 amp. with a circuit current of about 8O amp.
The use of the invention provides a construction of a high-frequency furnace, which is attractive from the electrical point of view, the ad- 4 vantages of this construction largely compensating for the slightly less simple structural arrangement, particularly with the use of highfrequency furnaces of high power.
What I claim is:
1. A high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said electrode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, a carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil xedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, and means movably mounting said unit in said furnace to effect displacement of said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil.
2. A furnace as set forth in claim 1 further includingrneans to force-cool said circuit coil.
3. A high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said elec-l trode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, said circuit coil being Wound in the form of a cylinder, a carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil nxedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, said output coil being constituted by a cylindricaliy bent ribbon and surrounding said circuit coil, and means movably mounting said unit in said furnace to effect axial displacement 0f said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil.
l. A furnace as set forth in claim 3 wherein said tube is laterally displaced from said structural unit.
5. A high-frequency furnace including an output discharge tube having an output electrode and an oscillatory circuit coupled to said electrode and constituted by a coil and a capacitance, said circuit coil being wound in the form of a cylinder, a rolling carrier for supporting said coil and said capacitance as a structural unit, an output coil flxedly mounted in said furnace for inductively coupling said oscillatory circuit to a load, said output coil being constituted by a cylindrically bent ribbon and surrounding said circuit coil, and means including rails for moving said rolling carrier in said furnace to effect axial displacement of said circuit coil relative to said coupling coil through a distance equal to the axial length of said circuit coil.
LOURENS BLOK.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name Date i,043,272 Stokes et al Nov. 5, 1912 1,753,182 Harnrnarlund Apr. 1, 1930 2,294,413 Marshall Sept. l, 1942 2,522,035 Gusdorf et al Sept. 12, 1950 2,551,756 Mittelmann May 8, 1951
US261107A 1951-01-12 1951-12-11 High-frequency furnace Expired - Lifetime US2662162A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
NL298303X 1951-01-12

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2662162A true US2662162A (en) 1953-12-08

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ID=19783091

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US261107A Expired - Lifetime US2662162A (en) 1951-01-12 1951-12-11 High-frequency furnace

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US (1) US2662162A (en)
BE (1) BE508359A (en)
CH (1) CH298303A (en)
DE (1) DE960843C (en)
FR (1) FR1048216A (en)
GB (1) GB716891A (en)
NL (1) NL78609C (en)

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2799760A (en) * 1952-12-03 1957-07-16 Fruengel Frank Method and device for high-frequency soldering and induction hardening
US2809357A (en) * 1953-01-22 1957-10-08 Philips Corp Coil system for high-frequency heating generators
US2813184A (en) * 1953-09-29 1957-11-12 Armstrong Cork Co Dielectric heating system
US3021413A (en) * 1958-12-22 1962-02-13 Philips Corp High-frequency furnace for inductive heating
US3137831A (en) * 1958-02-13 1964-06-16 Zenith Radio Corp Layer-wound air-core transformer
DE1218086B (en) * 1961-10-13 1966-06-02 Mannesmann Meer Ag Pipe welding machine
US3272955A (en) * 1963-02-13 1966-09-13 Yamaguchi Sakuji Method of coupling high frequency electric circuit
US3377565A (en) * 1965-12-24 1968-04-09 Patelhold Patentverwertung Variable high-frequency transformer
US3440387A (en) * 1965-11-12 1969-04-22 Philips Corp High frequency heating system with inductive plasma
US3651301A (en) * 1968-05-12 1972-03-21 Ncr Co Installation for casting microwire in glass insulation
US3777096A (en) * 1971-06-09 1973-12-04 Park Ohio Industries Inc Apparatus for inductively heating valve seats
US3849625A (en) * 1972-06-26 1974-11-19 Elphiac Sa Induction heating device
US4017701A (en) * 1972-02-29 1977-04-12 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Induction heating unit with combined tank circuit and heating coil
US4058696A (en) * 1975-06-17 1977-11-15 Tocco-Stel Induction heating apparatus comprising a static converter

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE1007898B (en) * 1954-02-16 1957-05-09 Deutsche Edelstahlwerke Ag Induction heating system
DE1058170B (en) * 1954-07-16 1959-05-27 Radio Heaters Ltd Coupler for high frequency dielectric heating devices
DE1177702B (en) * 1955-04-23 1964-09-10 Siemens Ag Arrangement for the stepless adaptation of a high-frequency generator to the variable resistance of individual consumers
ZA73969B (en) * 1972-02-29 1974-09-25 Illinois Tool Works Induction heating unit

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1043272A (en) * 1911-02-04 1912-11-05 William E D Stokes Tuning device for wireless telegraphy and telephony.
US1753182A (en) * 1927-11-28 1930-04-01 Hammarlund Mfg Company Inc Variable coupling device
US2294413A (en) * 1939-04-25 1942-09-01 Raytheon Mfg Co Method of locally heat-treating metal bodies
US2522035A (en) * 1943-08-09 1950-09-12 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Device for controlling the coupling between two inductively coupled circuits
US2551756A (en) * 1944-07-21 1951-05-08 Mittelmann Eugene High-frequency heating method and apparatus

Family Cites Families (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE463478C (en) * 1926-01-06 1928-08-03 Int Standard Electric Corp Externally controlled tube transmitter
DE527452C (en) * 1928-02-25 1931-06-18 Hirsch Kupfer Und Messingwerke Process for regulating the movement of the metal bath in ironless induction furnaces

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1043272A (en) * 1911-02-04 1912-11-05 William E D Stokes Tuning device for wireless telegraphy and telephony.
US1753182A (en) * 1927-11-28 1930-04-01 Hammarlund Mfg Company Inc Variable coupling device
US2294413A (en) * 1939-04-25 1942-09-01 Raytheon Mfg Co Method of locally heat-treating metal bodies
US2522035A (en) * 1943-08-09 1950-09-12 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Device for controlling the coupling between two inductively coupled circuits
US2551756A (en) * 1944-07-21 1951-05-08 Mittelmann Eugene High-frequency heating method and apparatus

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2799760A (en) * 1952-12-03 1957-07-16 Fruengel Frank Method and device for high-frequency soldering and induction hardening
US2809357A (en) * 1953-01-22 1957-10-08 Philips Corp Coil system for high-frequency heating generators
US2813184A (en) * 1953-09-29 1957-11-12 Armstrong Cork Co Dielectric heating system
US3137831A (en) * 1958-02-13 1964-06-16 Zenith Radio Corp Layer-wound air-core transformer
US3021413A (en) * 1958-12-22 1962-02-13 Philips Corp High-frequency furnace for inductive heating
DE1218086B (en) * 1961-10-13 1966-06-02 Mannesmann Meer Ag Pipe welding machine
US3272955A (en) * 1963-02-13 1966-09-13 Yamaguchi Sakuji Method of coupling high frequency electric circuit
US3440387A (en) * 1965-11-12 1969-04-22 Philips Corp High frequency heating system with inductive plasma
US3377565A (en) * 1965-12-24 1968-04-09 Patelhold Patentverwertung Variable high-frequency transformer
US3651301A (en) * 1968-05-12 1972-03-21 Ncr Co Installation for casting microwire in glass insulation
US3777096A (en) * 1971-06-09 1973-12-04 Park Ohio Industries Inc Apparatus for inductively heating valve seats
US4017701A (en) * 1972-02-29 1977-04-12 Illinois Tool Works Inc. Induction heating unit with combined tank circuit and heating coil
US3849625A (en) * 1972-06-26 1974-11-19 Elphiac Sa Induction heating device
US4058696A (en) * 1975-06-17 1977-11-15 Tocco-Stel Induction heating apparatus comprising a static converter

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
CH298303A (en) 1954-04-30
BE508359A (en)
GB716891A (en) 1954-10-13
NL78609C (en)
DE960843C (en) 1957-03-28
FR1048216A (en) 1953-12-21

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