US3230413A - Coaxial cavity slow wave structure with negative mutual inductive coupling - Google Patents
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- This invention relates in general to high frequency apparatus, more particularly, to a periodic slow wave structure having novel resonating sections in the apparatus, and to the method of providing mutual coupling between sections of the slow wave structure.
- Loaded waveguides or transmission lines are used as wave propagating circuits for traveling wave tubes. These devices are of the filter type circuits consisting of waveguides with some sort of periodic loading to slow down the wave phase velocity to that of the electrons in the beam. This type of structure is more rugged, dissipates more heat, and is more easily manufactured than the helix type structure.
- the usual sort of periodic loading for a waveguide consisted of dividing the waveguide into sections by transverse walls to form a series of cavity resonators and the sections are coupled together either capacitively or inductively or both. If the sections are coupled by both capacitive and inductive coupling, the inductive coupling must be negative and therefore aid the capacitive coupling in making the group velocity of the wave positive for the fundamental space component or harmonic.
- traveling Wave tubes were preferably operated on the fundamental space component of the wave propagating structure than on the first space harmonic component because the amplitude of the interacting fundamental space component was larger than the amplitude of first or higher space harmonics which higher amplitude means that better interaction is obtained between the wave and the beam.
- the principal object of the invention is to provide in high frequency apparatus a novel resonating section having improved characteristics of its propagating wave in its first space harmonic.
- One feature of the present invention is the provision of a periodic wave-propagating structure having a series of cavity resonator sections disposed in an axis with a conducting bar disposed substantially transversely within each section and terminating on opposite axially parallel cavity walls.
- Another feature of the invention is the provision of a periodic wave-propagating structure having a series of cavity resonator sections disposed in an axis with a conducting bar disposed substantially transversely Within each section and terminating on opposite axially transverse common walls.
- Another feature of the present invention is the provision of a high frequency electron discharge device incorporating coaxial cavities for a slow wave interaction circuit, said coaxial cavities being provided with negative mutual inductive coupling means.
- Another feature of the invention is the provision of the addition of inductive coupling slots disposed near the outer region of the transverse common wall between two adjacent cavities and the conducting bar which terminates on the common walls is disposed inwardly of inductive coupling slots.
- Still another feature of the invention is the provision of negative mutual inductive coupling between adjacent coaxial cavities such as to perturb the 1r mode of the circuit formed by the cavities.
- FIG. 1 is a longitudinal section view of a typical traveling wave tube incorporating the novel slow wave structure.
- FIGS. 2a and 2b are fragmentary sectional views of the traveling wave tube of FIG. 1 taken on line 22 in the direction of the arrows, with FIG. 2a showing the 0 mode of operation and FIG. 2b showing the 1r mode of operation.
- FIG. 3 is a fragmentary sectional view of the structure of FIG. 1 taken along line 3-3 in the direction of the arrows.
- FIG. 4 is a Brillouin diagram for the slow wave structure as shown in FIG. 1.
- FIGS. 5a and 5b are fragmentary longitudinal sectional views of another embodiment of the slow wave structure of FIG. 1 having improved coupling with FIG. 5a showing the 0 mode of operation and FIG. 5b showing the 1r mode of operation.
- FIG. 6 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of still another embodiment of the slow wave structure.
- FIG. 7 is a fragmentary sectional view of still a further embodiment of the slow wave structure.
- the present invention will be explained as it is applied to a traveling wave tube, the present invention has application to many different devices including backward wave oscillators, linear accelerators, microwave filters and velocity modulation devices.
- FIG. 1 a traveling wave tube amplifier 11 utilizing the novel periodic slow wave structure 12.
- An electron gun assembly 13 provides a beam of electrons which passes axially through a series of space displaced aligned apertures 14 in the slow wave structure 12.
- a collector assembly 16 is provided at the terminating end of the slow wave structure and serves to collect the electrons of the beam at the terminating end of the beam path and dissipates the power therein while a focusing electrical coil 17 surrounds the slow wave structure 12 to provide a magnetic field to confine the electrons to a prescribed beam path thereby minimizing electron interception within the slow wave structure.
- An input waveguide section 18 is coupled by a coupling aperture 19 into the slow wave structure 12 and transmits low amplitude high frequency electromagnetic wave signals to the slow wave structure 12.
- the wave signals are propagated along the slow wave structure 12 wherein energy is delivered by the beam to the wave signals thereby increasing the amplitude of the wave signals.
- An output waveguide section 21 receives the amplified signals through another coupling aperture 22 and propagates it to a load (not shown).
- Suitable vacuum tight Wave permeable windows 23 are placed in the waveguide sections 18 and 21 forming a part of the vacuum envelope of the tube.
- the slow wave structure 12 includes a series of apertured transverse common walls 24 disposed within a substantial rectangular tube 26 and between two transverse walls 24 are disposed apertured transverse bars 27.
- the transverse bar or inner conductor 27 between the two walls, and the rectangular tube or outer conductor 26 provide a length of coaxial line shorted at its ends to form cavities 28 (FIG. 2).
- the cavities 28 are aligned so that the transverse bar is disposed substantially perpendicular to the beam and preferably parallel to each other as shown.
- the bars 27 (FIG. 3) in the first and last cavities 28 protrude outwardly of the resonators 28' through apertures 19 and 22 respectively into the adjacent waveguide and terminates ona wall therein.
- each cavity 28 formed by two transverse walls 24 have the bar 27 disposed substantially midway between the two walls 24 and the electrical field therein will be either pointed towards the bar 27 or away from the bar 27.
- the electric field in each cavity 28 points away from the bar 28 as shown by arrows E in FIG. 2a, this phenomenon will be known as the mode of operation.
- the electric field in each cavity is reversed in direction to the electric field in its adjacent cavity, as shown again by the arrows E in FIG. 211, it will be known as the 1r mode of operation.
- the slow wave structure 12 has a Brillouin diagram as shown in FIG. 4 wherein the abscissa is the propagation constant B and the ordinate is the frequency w.
- the 1r mode of operation by definition has a propagation constant of 7r/L wherein L is the distance between corresponding points of adjacent cavities 28.
- the sinusoidal curve 31, shown in the diagram has maximum and minimum peaks; representing the cutoff frequency of the structure and these peaks occur at modes 0, 7r, 21r, 311-, etc. respectively because the cavities 28 are capacitively coupled through apertures 14 of walls 24 and the capacitance of the cavities are perturbed in 0, 21, etc., modes and are not perturbed in the 1r mode causing the frequency to go up in the 0, 211', etc.
- the slope at any point of the sinusoidal curve 31 represents the instantaneous group velocity of the wave traveling through the structure 12.
- the slope of any straight line 32 emanating from the origin 0 and intersects the sinusoidal curve 31 represents the phase velocity of the traveling wave and the particular line 32 shown is the phase velocity at 11 of the operating cycle. The closer the electron velocity of the beam approaches the phase velocity of the traveling wave, the interaction between the wave and the beam becomes more efficient, and also when the phase velocity approaches the group velocity the bandwidth of the traveling wave amplifier becomes broader.
- This structure is operated so that the time the electron takes to travel from the same point between adjacent cavities 28 is approximately threequarters of a cycle of the operating frequency of the apparatus and the time the electron takes to travel to one point on one side of one bar 28 to a corresponding point on the other side of the same bar is approximately equal to one-half a cycle of the operating frequency of the tube.
- This can conveniently be accomplished by making the bar thicker than a common wall between the cavities thereby controlling the length of travel of the electron as it goes between corresponding points of opposite sides of the bar 27 within the same cavity and between corresponding point in adjacent cavities.
- the half cycle from one side of the cavity bar to the other side of the cavity bar and a three-quarter cycle between corresponding points with two adjacent cavities are compatible requirements in the first space harmonic component of FIG. 4.
- the interacting first space harmonic will have a large amplitude and electrons will see electric fields practically all the time rather than spend useless time in a drift tube.
- This structure has a drawback that the central hole in the common wall does not give enough coupling between the two cavities and therefore the bandwidth is limited. If one puts a hole in the common wall between cavities and near the periphery of the common wall that is near the end of the coaxial cavity 28, such a hole will produce magnetic or inductive coupling between adjacent cavities but of the wrong kind namely for the 0 mode, the frequency would go down because the inductance of the cavities is increased.
- the inductance of the cavities increases in the 0 mode and not in the 1r mode because in the 0 mode the current on either side of the wall flows in the same direction and therefore must flow around the hole over a greater path but in the 1r mode the current on either side of the wall flows in opposite directions and therefore flows through the hole to the other side over substantially the same length path as if the hole was not there.
- the electrostatic field lines E as in the structure of FIG. 1 point away from the bar 27 in the 0 mode (FIG. 5a) and in the 11' mode (FIG. 5b) the lines point toward the bar in every other cavity 28.
- the bars 27 are made to terminate on opposite common walls- 24, leaving enough room between the bar 27 and walls of the tube 26 to provide a coupling aperture 33 in walls 24.
- the magnetic field line H points into the paper on the lower periphery of the tube 26 (as viewed in the drawing) for each cavity 28 and out of the paper on the upper periphery as denoted by small crosses and dots respectively.
- the inductance of the cavities in the 0 mode does not increase in this case and the frequency is not perturbed, but the inductance of the cavites 28 are increased in the 1r mode as can be seen in FIG. 5b in that the magnetic field lines and point in opposite directions on either side of the aperture 33.
- This coupling concept between adjacent cavities in which the inductance of the cavity is increased in the 1r mode of operation is referred to as negative mutual inductive coupling.
- Negative mutual coupling between cavities 28 which have a center conducting bar 27 may also be obtained by alternate embodiments.
- FIG. 6 shows a variation in the shape of the bars 27 in that they are inclined to the beam axis.
- FIG. 7 shows still another embodiment wherein adjacent cavities are coupled through an inverted coupling loop 34 which extends through a small hole 35 in walls 24. In each of these embodiments the inductance of the cavities is increased in the 1r mode but not in the 0 mode.
- a high frequency slow wave circuit capable of supporting traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon, comprising, cavity resonator means forming at least two cavity resonators successively disposed along and defining an axis of propagation for said electromagnetic wave energy, said cavity resonator means being physically oriented with respect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode of operation electric field lines within said cavity resonator means with said axis, a conducting bar disposed within each of said cavity resonators and crossing said axis, and negative mutual inductive coupling means communicating between said cavity resonators.
- said cavity resonator means include a conducting transverse common wall member separating adjacent cavity resonators, one of said conducting bars disposed within each of said cavity resonators, said negative mutual inductive coupling means communicating between adjacent cavity resonators through inductive apertures provided in said common wall, said apertures being offset with respect to said axis.
- a high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon comprising at least two resonant sections successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy, a conducting wall member separating adjacent resonant sections, said sections being physically oriented with repect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode-of-operation electric field lines within said sections with said axis, a conducting bar disposed within each of said sections and crossing said axis, and negative mutual inductive coupling means intercoupling said at least two resonant sections, said negative mutual inductive coupling means comprising an aperture in said wall members with the ends of each of said bars being terminated on opposite wall members of each section.
- said negative mutual inductive coupling means further include the said aperture in said wall member being disposed on the remote side of said bar from said axis.
- a slow wave circuit for high frequency traveling electromagnetic wave energy comprising, a plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators disposed along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy, inductive coupling means between at least two adjacent coaxial cavity resonators of said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators being defined by spaced conductive walls disposed along said axis, the center conductors of at least two adjacent coaxial cavity resonators of said plurality of coaxial cavity resonators being a conductive bar disposed within each said coaxial cavity resonator, said bars being disposed within each of said cavity resonators with respect to said inductive coupling means so as to cause perturbation of the 1r mode of operation of said cavity resonators while substantially unaifecting the 0 mode of operation of said cavity resonators.
- a slow-wave circuit for high frequency electromagnetic waves comprising, a plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators each having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, said coaxial cavity resonators, having negative mutual inductive coupling means between adjacent coaxial cavity resonators, said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators being coupled together in a manner such as to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy emanating from a source of traveling electromagnetic wave energy coupled to said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators forming said slow wave circuit, said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators forming said slow wave circuit being further coupled together in a manner such that an electron beam can be directed through said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators in a manner such that an energy exchange between traveling electromagnetic wave energy supported on said slow wave circuit and an electron beam directed through said slow wave circuit can occur.
- a high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support electromagnetic traveling wave energy thereon comprising, a plurality of coaxial cavities, said coaxial cavities each having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, said coaxial cavities being successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said electromagnetic traveling wave energy and negative mutual inductive coupling means electrically coupling at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coaxial cavities whereby the 7:" mode of operation is perturbed thus lowering the frequency at the 1r mode of operation.
- a high frequency slow-wave structure comprising a plurality of coupled cavity resonators disposed along an elongated axis, said cavity resonators being defined by spaced conductive walls transversely oriented with respect to said elongated axis, said conductive walls having both axial and axially displaced apertures therein, said resonators having conductive bars disposed therein, each of said conductive bars having an axial aperture therein, said axial apertures in said conducting walls and said bars being aligned along said elongated axis, said conductive bars and said axially displaced apertures in said conducting walls being so oriented whereby 7r mode currents in said conductive walls are displaced around said axially displaced apertures in said conductive walls thus increasing the inductance for the 1r mode of operation and resulting in a lowering of the frequency for the 11' mode of operation.
- a high-frequency slow-wave structure adapted and arranged to support electromagnetic traveling wave energy comprising, a plurality of successively coupled coaxial cavity resonators said coaxial cavity resonators having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, at least two adjacent ones of said plurality of coaxial cavity resonators having negative mutual inductive coupling means therebetween whereby 1r mode currents in common walls which partially define said adjacent coaxial cavity resonators are perturbed and thereby caused to flow around apertures within said common walls thus lengthening the current paths for 1r mode currents in said walls.
- a high frequency electron discharge device comprising an electron gun, slow wave circuit and collector assembly operatively connected to form a traveling wave tube, said slow wave circuit comprising, a plurality of successively coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators being intercoupled by negative mutual inductive coupling means.
- a high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon including resonator means forming at least two coaxial cavity resonators successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy and wherein said axis is substantially a straight line forming the axis of the slow wave circuit, said resonator means being physically oriented with respect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode of operation electric field lines within said means with said axis, the center conductor of each of said coaxial cavity resonators having an axially aligned aperture therein disposed within each of said coaxial cavity resonators and crossing said axis, means for coupling high frequency electromagnetic wave energy into and out of said resonator means, said resonator means being partially defined by transverse conduct- 8 ing walls having axially aligned apertures therein, and negative mutual inductive coupling means intercoupling said at least two adjacentcoaxial cavity resonators whereby the cut-o
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Jan. 18, 1966 M. CHODOROW COAXIAL CAVITY SLOW WAVE STRUCTURE WITH NEGATIVE MUTUAL INDUCTIVE COUPLING Filed Feb. 27, 1961 FIG.3
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FUNDAMENTAL FIRST SPACE HARMONIC Fl 6.4
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INVENTOR. MARVIN CHODOROW ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,230,413 COAXIAL CAVITY SLOW WAVE STRUCTURE WITH NEGATIVE MUTUAL INDUCTIVE COUPLING Marvin Chodorow, Menlo Park, Calif, assignor to Varian Associates, Palo Alto, Calif, a corporation of California Filed Feb. 27, 1961, Ser. No. 92,082 20 Claims. (Cl. 3153.5)
This invention relates in general to high frequency apparatus, more particularly, to a periodic slow wave structure having novel resonating sections in the apparatus, and to the method of providing mutual coupling between sections of the slow wave structure.
Loaded waveguides or transmission lines are used as wave propagating circuits for traveling wave tubes. These devices are of the filter type circuits consisting of waveguides with some sort of periodic loading to slow down the wave phase velocity to that of the electrons in the beam. This type of structure is more rugged, dissipates more heat, and is more easily manufactured than the helix type structure. The usual sort of periodic loading for a waveguide consisted of dividing the waveguide into sections by transverse walls to form a series of cavity resonators and the sections are coupled together either capacitively or inductively or both. If the sections are coupled by both capacitive and inductive coupling, the inductive coupling must be negative and therefore aid the capacitive coupling in making the group velocity of the wave positive for the fundamental space component or harmonic. But a structure that has a group velocity positive for the fundamental space component must interact with a higher-energy beam than a structure which has the group velocity of the wave positive in the first space harmonic component. Up to now, traveling Wave tubes were preferably operated on the fundamental space component of the wave propagating structure than on the first space harmonic component because the amplitude of the interacting fundamental space component was larger than the amplitude of first or higher space harmonics which higher amplitude means that better interaction is obtained between the wave and the beam.
The principal object of the invention is to provide in high frequency apparatus a novel resonating section having improved characteristics of its propagating wave in its first space harmonic.
One feature of the present invention is the provision of a periodic wave-propagating structure having a series of cavity resonator sections disposed in an axis with a conducting bar disposed substantially transversely within each section and terminating on opposite axially parallel cavity walls.
Another feature of the invention is the provision of a periodic wave-propagating structure having a series of cavity resonator sections disposed in an axis with a conducting bar disposed substantially transversely Within each section and terminating on opposite axially transverse common walls.
Another feature of the present invention is the provision of a high frequency electron discharge device incorporating coaxial cavities for a slow wave interaction circuit, said coaxial cavities being provided with negative mutual inductive coupling means.
Another feature of the invention is the provision of the addition of inductive coupling slots disposed near the outer region of the transverse common wall between two adjacent cavities and the conducting bar which terminates on the common walls is disposed inwardly of inductive coupling slots.
3,230,413 Patented Jan. 18, 1966 Still another feature of the invention is the provision of negative mutual inductive coupling between adjacent coaxial cavities such as to perturb the 1r mode of the circuit formed by the cavities.
These and other features and advantages of the present invention will be more apparent after a perusal of the following specification taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
FIG. 1 is a longitudinal section view of a typical traveling wave tube incorporating the novel slow wave structure.
FIGS. 2a and 2b are fragmentary sectional views of the traveling wave tube of FIG. 1 taken on line 22 in the direction of the arrows, with FIG. 2a showing the 0 mode of operation and FIG. 2b showing the 1r mode of operation.
FIG. 3 is a fragmentary sectional view of the structure of FIG. 1 taken along line 3-3 in the direction of the arrows.
FIG. 4 is a Brillouin diagram for the slow wave structure as shown in FIG. 1.
FIGS. 5a and 5b are fragmentary longitudinal sectional views of another embodiment of the slow wave structure of FIG. 1 having improved coupling with FIG. 5a showing the 0 mode of operation and FIG. 5b showing the 1r mode of operation.
FIG. 6 is a fragmentary longitudinal sectional view of still another embodiment of the slow wave structure.
FIG. 7 is a fragmentary sectional view of still a further embodiment of the slow wave structure.
Although the present invention will be explained as it is applied to a traveling wave tube, the present invention has application to many different devices including backward wave oscillators, linear accelerators, microwave filters and velocity modulation devices.
Referring now to the drawings and to FIG. 1 in particular there is shown a traveling wave tube amplifier 11 utilizing the novel periodic slow wave structure 12. An electron gun assembly 13 provides a beam of electrons which passes axially through a series of space displaced aligned apertures 14 in the slow wave structure 12. A collector assembly 16 is provided at the terminating end of the slow wave structure and serves to collect the electrons of the beam at the terminating end of the beam path and dissipates the power therein while a focusing electrical coil 17 surrounds the slow wave structure 12 to provide a magnetic field to confine the electrons to a prescribed beam path thereby minimizing electron interception within the slow wave structure.
An input waveguide section 18 is coupled by a coupling aperture 19 into the slow wave structure 12 and transmits low amplitude high frequency electromagnetic wave signals to the slow wave structure 12. The wave signals are propagated along the slow wave structure 12 wherein energy is delivered by the beam to the wave signals thereby increasing the amplitude of the wave signals.
An output waveguide section 21 receives the amplified signals through another coupling aperture 22 and propagates it to a load (not shown). Suitable vacuum tight Wave permeable windows 23 are placed in the waveguide sections 18 and 21 forming a part of the vacuum envelope of the tube.
The slow wave structure 12 includes a series of apertured transverse common walls 24 disposed within a substantial rectangular tube 26 and between two transverse walls 24 are disposed apertured transverse bars 27. In essence two adjacent transverse walls, the transverse bar or inner conductor 27 between the two walls, and the rectangular tube or outer conductor 26 provide a length of coaxial line shorted at its ends to form cavities 28 (FIG. 2). The cavities 28 are aligned so that the transverse bar is disposed substantially perpendicular to the beam and preferably parallel to each other as shown. To increase the coupling between the waveguides 18 and 21 and the slow wave structure, the bars 27 (FIG. 3) in the first and last cavities 28 protrude outwardly of the resonators 28' through apertures 19 and 22 respectively into the adjacent waveguide and terminates ona wall therein.
Referring to FIGS. 2a and 2b the dominant modes of oscillation of the structure are shown. Each cavity 28 formed by two transverse walls 24 have the bar 27 disposed substantially midway between the two walls 24 and the electrical field therein will be either pointed towards the bar 27 or away from the bar 27. Thus when the electric field in each cavity 28 points away from the bar 28 as shown by arrows E in FIG. 2a, this phenomenon will be known as the mode of operation. When the electric field in each cavity is reversed in direction to the electric field in its adjacent cavity, as shown again by the arrows E in FIG. 211, it will be known as the 1r mode of operation.
The slow wave structure 12 has a Brillouin diagram as shown in FIG. 4 wherein the abscissa is the propagation constant B and the ordinate is the frequency w. The 1r mode of operation by definition has a propagation constant of 7r/L wherein L is the distance between corresponding points of adjacent cavities 28. The sinusoidal curve 31, shown in the diagram, has maximum and minimum peaks; representing the cutoff frequency of the structure and these peaks occur at modes 0, 7r, 21r, 311-, etc. respectively because the cavities 28 are capacitively coupled through apertures 14 of walls 24 and the capacitance of the cavities are perturbed in 0, 21, etc., modes and are not perturbed in the 1r mode causing the frequency to go up in the 0, 211', etc. modes and remains the same in the 1r, 31, etc. modes. The slope at any point of the sinusoidal curve 31 represents the instantaneous group velocity of the wave traveling through the structure 12. The slope of any straight line 32 emanating from the origin 0 and intersects the sinusoidal curve 31 represents the phase velocity of the traveling wave and the particular line 32 shown is the phase velocity at 11 of the operating cycle. The closer the electron velocity of the beam approaches the phase velocity of the traveling wave, the interaction between the wave and the beam becomes more efficient, and also when the phase velocity approaches the group velocity the bandwidth of the traveling wave amplifier becomes broader. This structure is operated so that the time the electron takes to travel from the same point between adjacent cavities 28 is approximately threequarters of a cycle of the operating frequency of the apparatus and the time the electron takes to travel to one point on one side of one bar 28 to a corresponding point on the other side of the same bar is approximately equal to one-half a cycle of the operating frequency of the tube. This can conveniently be accomplished by making the bar thicker than a common wall between the cavities thereby controlling the length of travel of the electron as it goes between corresponding points of opposite sides of the bar 27 within the same cavity and between corresponding point in adjacent cavities. The half cycle from one side of the cavity bar to the other side of the cavity bar and a three-quarter cycle between corresponding points with two adjacent cavities are compatible requirements in the first space harmonic component of FIG. 4. The interacting first space harmonic will have a large amplitude and electrons will see electric fields practically all the time rather than spend useless time in a drift tube.
This structure has a drawback that the central hole in the common wall does not give enough coupling between the two cavities and therefore the bandwidth is limited. If one puts a hole in the common wall between cavities and near the periphery of the common wall that is near the end of the coaxial cavity 28, such a hole will produce magnetic or inductive coupling between adjacent cavities but of the wrong kind namely for the 0 mode, the frequency would go down because the inductance of the cavities is increased. The inductance of the cavities increases in the 0 mode and not in the 1r mode because in the 0 mode the current on either side of the wall flows in the same direction and therefore must flow around the hole over a greater path but in the 1r mode the current on either side of the wall flows in opposite directions and therefore flows through the hole to the other side over substantially the same length path as if the hole was not there. In the embodiment shown in FIGS 5a and 5b the electrostatic field lines E as in the structure of FIG. 1 point away from the bar 27 in the 0 mode (FIG. 5a) and in the 11' mode (FIG. 5b) the lines point toward the bar in every other cavity 28. The bars 27 are made to terminate on opposite common walls- 24, leaving enough room between the bar 27 and walls of the tube 26 to provide a coupling aperture 33 in walls 24. In the 0 mode the magnetic field line H points into the paper on the lower periphery of the tube 26 (as viewed in the drawing) for each cavity 28 and out of the paper on the upper periphery as denoted by small crosses and dots respectively. The inductance of the cavities in the 0 mode does not increase in this case and the frequency is not perturbed, but the inductance of the cavites 28 are increased in the 1r mode as can be seen in FIG. 5b in that the magnetic field lines and point in opposite directions on either side of the aperture 33. This coupling concept between adjacent cavities in which the inductance of the cavity is increased in the 1r mode of operation is referred to as negative mutual inductive coupling.
Negative mutual coupling between cavities 28 which have a center conducting bar 27 may also be obtained by alternate embodiments. FIG. 6 shows a variation in the shape of the bars 27 in that they are inclined to the beam axis. FIG. 7 shows still another embodiment wherein adjacent cavities are coupled through an inverted coupling loop 34 which extends through a small hole 35 in walls 24. In each of these embodiments the inductance of the cavities is increased in the 1r mode but not in the 0 mode.
Since many changes could be made in the above con struction and many apparently widely different embodiments of this invention could be made without departing from the scope thereof, it is intended that all matter contained in the above description or shown in the accompanying drawings shall be interpreted as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
What is claimed is:
1. A high frequency slow wave circuit capable of supporting traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon, comprising, cavity resonator means forming at least two cavity resonators successively disposed along and defining an axis of propagation for said electromagnetic wave energy, said cavity resonator means being physically oriented with respect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode of operation electric field lines within said cavity resonator means with said axis, a conducting bar disposed within each of said cavity resonators and crossing said axis, and negative mutual inductive coupling means communicating between said cavity resonators.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1, wherein said cavity resonator means include a conducting transverse common wall member separating adjacent cavity resonators, one of said conducting bars disposed within each of said cavity resonators, said negative mutual inductive coupling means communicating between adjacent cavity resonators through inductive apertures provided in said common wall, said apertures being offset with respect to said axis.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2 wherein said axis is substantially a straight line forming the axis of the slow wave circuit, and wherein said conducting wall members and said conducting bars have apertures therein, said apertures being aligned along said axis.
4. The apparatus according to claim 3 wherein said successive cavity resonators have substantially equal dimensions.
5. The apparatus according to claim 4 wherein an electron beam is provided to pass through said axially aligned apertures, and wherein the axial distance between corresponding points of adjacent cavity resonators corresponds to the distance that an electron in said beam takes to travel in three-quarters of a cycle of the operating frequency of the apparatus, and the length between corresponding points on opposite sides of said conducting bar within the same cavity is equal to the distance that said electron takes to travel in one-half cycle of said operating frequency.
6. A high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon comprising at least two resonant sections successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy, a conducting wall member separating adjacent resonant sections, said sections being physically oriented with repect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode-of-operation electric field lines within said sections with said axis, a conducting bar disposed within each of said sections and crossing said axis, and negative mutual inductive coupling means intercoupling said at least two resonant sections, said negative mutual inductive coupling means comprising an aperture in said wall members with the ends of each of said bars being terminated on opposite wall members of each section.
7. The apparatus according to claim 6 wherein said negative mutual inductive coupling means further include the said aperture in said wall member being disposed on the remote side of said bar from said axis.
8. A slow wave circuit for high frequency traveling electromagnetic wave energy comprising, a plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators disposed along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy, inductive coupling means between at least two adjacent coaxial cavity resonators of said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators being defined by spaced conductive walls disposed along said axis, the center conductors of at least two adjacent coaxial cavity resonators of said plurality of coaxial cavity resonators being a conductive bar disposed within each said coaxial cavity resonator, said bars being disposed within each of said cavity resonators with respect to said inductive coupling means so as to cause perturbation of the 1r mode of operation of said cavity resonators while substantially unaifecting the 0 mode of operation of said cavity resonators.
9. A slow-wave circuit for high frequency electromagnetic waves comprising, a plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators each having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, said coaxial cavity resonators, having negative mutual inductive coupling means between adjacent coaxial cavity resonators, said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators being coupled together in a manner such as to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy emanating from a source of traveling electromagnetic wave energy coupled to said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators forming said slow wave circuit, said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators forming said slow wave circuit being further coupled together in a manner such that an electron beam can be directed through said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators in a manner such that an energy exchange between traveling electromagnetic wave energy supported on said slow wave circuit and an electron beam directed through said slow wave circuit can occur.
10. A high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support electromagnetic traveling wave energy thereon comprising, a plurality of coaxial cavities, said coaxial cavities each having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, said coaxial cavities being successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said electromagnetic traveling wave energy and negative mutual inductive coupling means electrically coupling at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coaxial cavities whereby the 7:" mode of operation is perturbed thus lowering the frequency at the 1r mode of operation.
11. The slow-wave structure of claim 9 wherein the outer conductors of said coaxial cavities are partially defined by spaced conducting walls having axially aligned apertures therein and the center conductors of said coaxial cavities being conducting bars having axially aligned apertures therein.
12. The slow-wave structure of claim 10 wherein the outer conductors of said coaxial cavities are partially defined by spaced conducting walls having apertures therein and the center conductors of said coaxial cavities being conducting bars having apertures therein.
13. The slow-wave structure of claim 11 wherein said conducting bars are conductively connected to said spaced conductive walls partially defining each of said cavities.
14. The slow-wave structure of claim 12 wherein said conducting bars are conductively connected to said spaced conductive walls partially defining each of said cavities.
15. The slow-wave structure of claim 11 wherein at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coaxial cavities are coupled by means of an inverted coupling loop extending through an aperture in said conducting wall between said at least two adjacent coaxial cavities.
16. The slow-wave structure of claim 12 wherein at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coaxial cavities are coupled by means of an inverted coupling loop extending through an aperture in said con ducting wall between said at least two adjacent coaxial cavities.
17. A high frequency slow-wave structure comprising a plurality of coupled cavity resonators disposed along an elongated axis, said cavity resonators being defined by spaced conductive walls transversely oriented with respect to said elongated axis, said conductive walls having both axial and axially displaced apertures therein, said resonators having conductive bars disposed therein, each of said conductive bars having an axial aperture therein, said axial apertures in said conducting walls and said bars being aligned along said elongated axis, said conductive bars and said axially displaced apertures in said conducting walls being so oriented whereby 7r mode currents in said conductive walls are displaced around said axially displaced apertures in said conductive walls thus increasing the inductance for the 1r mode of operation and resulting in a lowering of the frequency for the 11' mode of operation.
18. A high-frequency slow-wave structure adapted and arranged to support electromagnetic traveling wave energy comprising, a plurality of successively coupled coaxial cavity resonators said coaxial cavity resonators having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, at least two adjacent ones of said plurality of coaxial cavity resonators having negative mutual inductive coupling means therebetween whereby 1r mode currents in common walls which partially define said adjacent coaxial cavity resonators are perturbed and thereby caused to flow around apertures within said common walls thus lengthening the current paths for 1r mode currents in said walls.
19. A high frequency electron discharge device comprising an electron gun, slow wave circuit and collector assembly operatively connected to form a traveling wave tube, said slow wave circuit comprising, a plurality of successively coupled coaxial cavity resonators, said coaxial cavity resonators having an inner conductor disposed within an outer conductor, at least two adjacent coaxial cavities of said plurality of coupled coaxial cavity resonators being intercoupled by negative mutual inductive coupling means.
20. A high frequency slow wave circuit adapted and arranged to support traveling electromagnetic wave energy thereon including resonator means forming at least two coaxial cavity resonators successively arranged along and defining an axis of propagation for said traveling electromagnetic wave energy and wherein said axis is substantially a straight line forming the axis of the slow wave circuit, said resonator means being physically oriented with respect to said axis to substantially align at least a portion of the in-phase mode of operation electric field lines within said means with said axis, the center conductor of each of said coaxial cavity resonators having an axially aligned aperture therein disposed within each of said coaxial cavity resonators and crossing said axis, means for coupling high frequency electromagnetic wave energy into and out of said resonator means, said resonator means being partially defined by transverse conduct- 8 ing walls having axially aligned apertures therein, and negative mutual inductive coupling means intercoupling said at least two adjacentcoaxial cavity resonators whereby the cut-oif frequency in the 1r mode of operation is lowered without substantially perturbing the 0 mode cutoif frequency.
References Cited by the Examiner UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,411,535 11/1946 Fremlin 315-5.51 2,423,327 7/ 1947 Laiferty 3 155 .44 2,636,948 4/1953 Pierce 315--3.6 2,827,589 3/1958 Hines 3153.5 2,842,705 7/ 1958 Chodorow 3 15-5 .42 2,967,968 1 /1961 Nalos 315-539 3,015,750 1/ 1962 Skowron et al. 3153.5
FOREIGN PATENTS 994,143 8/1951 France.
GEORGE N. WESTBY, Primary Examiner.
ARTHUR GAUSS, ROBERT SEGAL, Examiners.
Claims (1)
19. A HIGH FREQUENCY ELECTRON DISCHARGE DEVICE COMPRISING AN ELECTRON GUN, SLOW WAVE CIRCUIT AND COLLECTOR ASSEMBLY OPERATIVELY CONNECTED TO FORM A TRAVELING WAVE TUBE, SAID SLOW WAVE CIRCUIT COMPRISING, A PLURALITY OF SUCCESSIVELY COUPLED COAXIAL CAVITY RESONATORS, SAID COAXIAL CAVITY RESONATORS HAVING AN INNER CONDUCTOR DISPOSED WITHIN AN OUTER CONDUCTOR, AT LEAST TWO ADJACENT COAXIAL CAVITIES OF SAID PLURALITY OF COUPLED COAXIAL CAVITY RESONATORS BEING INTERCOUPLED BY NEGATIVE MUTUAL INDUCTIVE COUPLING MEANS.
Priority Applications (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US92082A US3230413A (en) | 1961-02-27 | 1961-02-27 | Coaxial cavity slow wave structure with negative mutual inductive coupling |
| GB1105/62A GB987284A (en) | 1961-02-27 | 1962-01-11 | High frequency apparatus |
| FR889142A FR1316181A (en) | 1961-02-27 | 1962-02-26 | Delay line circuit for devices working at high frequency |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US92082A US3230413A (en) | 1961-02-27 | 1961-02-27 | Coaxial cavity slow wave structure with negative mutual inductive coupling |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US3230413A true US3230413A (en) | 1966-01-18 |
Family
ID=22231410
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US92082A Expired - Lifetime US3230413A (en) | 1961-02-27 | 1961-02-27 | Coaxial cavity slow wave structure with negative mutual inductive coupling |
Country Status (2)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US3230413A (en) |
| GB (1) | GB987284A (en) |
Cited By (4)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3517347A (en) * | 1967-12-27 | 1970-06-23 | Nippon Electric Co | Broad-band coupled cavity slow-wave structure |
| US3668459A (en) * | 1970-09-08 | 1972-06-06 | Varian Associates | Coupled cavity slow wave circuit and tube using same |
| DE3011480A1 (en) * | 1979-03-26 | 1980-10-09 | Varian Associates | DELAY LINE FOR WALKING PIPES |
| US4733132A (en) * | 1985-03-29 | 1988-03-22 | Hitachi, Ltd. | High energy accelerator |
Citations (8)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2411535A (en) * | 1940-08-02 | 1946-11-26 | Standard Telephones Cables Ltd | High-frequency electron discharge apparatus |
| US2423327A (en) * | 1942-10-02 | 1947-07-01 | Gen Electric | Ultra high frequency oscillator of the cavity resonator type |
| FR994143A (en) * | 1944-12-30 | 1951-11-12 | Materiel Telephonique | Vacuum tubes for very short wavelengths |
| US2636948A (en) * | 1946-01-11 | 1953-04-28 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | High-frequency amplifier |
| US2827589A (en) * | 1952-05-17 | 1958-03-18 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Electron discharge device |
| US2842705A (en) * | 1955-06-13 | 1958-07-08 | Univ Leland Stanford Junior | Particle accelerator |
| US2967968A (en) * | 1957-06-24 | 1961-01-10 | Gen Electric | Electron discharge device |
| US3015750A (en) * | 1959-10-01 | 1962-01-02 | Raytheon Co | Traveling wave electron discharge devices |
-
1961
- 1961-02-27 US US92082A patent/US3230413A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1962
- 1962-01-11 GB GB1105/62A patent/GB987284A/en not_active Expired
Patent Citations (8)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2411535A (en) * | 1940-08-02 | 1946-11-26 | Standard Telephones Cables Ltd | High-frequency electron discharge apparatus |
| US2423327A (en) * | 1942-10-02 | 1947-07-01 | Gen Electric | Ultra high frequency oscillator of the cavity resonator type |
| FR994143A (en) * | 1944-12-30 | 1951-11-12 | Materiel Telephonique | Vacuum tubes for very short wavelengths |
| US2636948A (en) * | 1946-01-11 | 1953-04-28 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | High-frequency amplifier |
| US2827589A (en) * | 1952-05-17 | 1958-03-18 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Electron discharge device |
| US2842705A (en) * | 1955-06-13 | 1958-07-08 | Univ Leland Stanford Junior | Particle accelerator |
| US2967968A (en) * | 1957-06-24 | 1961-01-10 | Gen Electric | Electron discharge device |
| US3015750A (en) * | 1959-10-01 | 1962-01-02 | Raytheon Co | Traveling wave electron discharge devices |
Cited By (4)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3517347A (en) * | 1967-12-27 | 1970-06-23 | Nippon Electric Co | Broad-band coupled cavity slow-wave structure |
| US3668459A (en) * | 1970-09-08 | 1972-06-06 | Varian Associates | Coupled cavity slow wave circuit and tube using same |
| DE3011480A1 (en) * | 1979-03-26 | 1980-10-09 | Varian Associates | DELAY LINE FOR WALKING PIPES |
| US4733132A (en) * | 1985-03-29 | 1988-03-22 | Hitachi, Ltd. | High energy accelerator |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| GB987284A (en) | 1965-03-24 |
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