US3346766A - Microwave cold cathode magnetron with internal magnet - Google Patents

Microwave cold cathode magnetron with internal magnet Download PDF

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US3346766A
US3346766A US351749A US35174964A US3346766A US 3346766 A US3346766 A US 3346766A US 351749 A US351749 A US 351749A US 35174964 A US35174964 A US 35174964A US 3346766 A US3346766 A US 3346766A
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circuit
cathode electrode
cathode
magnetron
magnet
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Feinstein Joseph
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SFD LAB Inc
S-F-D LABORATORIES Inc
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J25/00Transit-time tubes, e.g. klystrons, travelling-wave tubes, magnetrons
    • H01J25/34Travelling-wave tubes; Tubes in which a travelling wave is simulated at spaced gaps
    • H01J25/42Tubes in which an electron stream interacts with a wave travelling along a delay line or equivalent sequence of impedance elements, and with a magnet system producing an H-field crossing the E-field
    • H01J25/44Tubes in which an electron stream interacts with a wave travelling along a delay line or equivalent sequence of impedance elements, and with a magnet system producing an H-field crossing the E-field the forward travelling wave being utilised
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J23/00Details of transit-time tubes of the types covered by group H01J25/00
    • H01J23/02Electrodes; Magnetic control means; Screens
    • H01J23/10Magnet systems for directing or deflecting the discharge along a desired path, e.g. a spiral path

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  • a cold cathode magnetron tube wherein a permanent magnet is disposed inside the cold cathode structure.
  • a pair of pole pieces are disposed at the ends of the permanent magnet and arranged such that they overhang the sides of the magnet to improve the uniformity of the axial magnetic field in the magnetron interaction region.
  • the pole pieces also overhang the cathode emitter to form the end hats for the cold cathode.
  • the cold cathode is radially spaced apart from the permanent magnet to inhibit heat transfer from the cathode to the permanent magnet in use.
  • cold cathode means the cathode electrode is operated at a temperature in use below the typical thermionic emission temperature for the cathode electrode material such that if the cathode electrode is also the emitter the predominant emission mechanism is other than thermionic such as secondary emission, or high field emission, etc.
  • These prior cold cathode magnetrons have included permanent magnets for generating the magnetic field in the beam field interaction region of space or gap. These permanent magnets have heretofore been disposed externally to the tube envelope spanning the interaction gap. Some of these mag nets have been cylindrical, some have been C-shaped, and others have been bowl-shaped completely surrounding the interaction gap. Because of high flux leakage, all such magnets have been relatively heavy and bulky usually constituting the major size and weight factor for the entire tube assembly.
  • the permanent magnet for producing the magnetic field in the interaction space of a cold cathode magnetron is disposed within the cold cathode electrode whereby the size and weight of the permanent magnet is substantially reduced as by, for example, a factor of 10.
  • the magnet includes a pair of pole pieces at the ends which project outwardly over the outer surface of the magnet to improve the uniformity of the field.
  • the overhanging pole pieces also provide end hats for the cathode.
  • the principal object of the present invention is to provide an improved magnetron tube with magnet having reduced size and weight.
  • One feature of the present invention is the provision of a permanent magnet disposed within a hollow of the cathode electrode of a cold cathode magnetron oscillator or amplifier and including pole pieces at the ends of the magnet which overhang the sides of the magnet for generating the static magnetic field in the beam field interaction space whereby the size and weight of the tube is greatly reduced.
  • the tube apparatus is a noise generator, the anode circuit of which serves to amplify and couple out noise signals, over a broadband of frequencies, which are generated in the space charge spokes internally of the magnetron tube.
  • FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a magnetron incorporating the features of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional View of the tube structure of FIG. 1 taken along lines 22 in the direction of the arrows;
  • FIG. 3 is an enlarged view of a portion of the structure of FIG. 2 taken along lines 3-3 in the direction of the arrows;
  • FIG. 4 is a LIP-18 diagram showing the dispersion characteristics for the slow wave circuit of the tube of FIGS. 1 and 2;
  • FIG. 5 is a plot of magnetic field intensity H versus distance along the axial centerline of the interaction gap and also showing the relative position and shapes of anode, cathode, magnet H-field lines for the tube of FIGS. 1 and 2.
  • FIGS. 1 and 2 there is shown the novel amplifier tube apparatus of the present invention. More particularly, there is shown a hollow cylindrical main body member 1 as of copper having end closing walls as of copper and forming the vacuum wall of the tube.
  • the slow wave circuit 2 comprises a pair of interdigitated conductive comb structures including a pair of axially spaced mutually opposed conductive backbone portions A and B forming a two wire line (see FIG. 3) and an array of interdigitated conductive plate-like teeth 3.
  • the teeth 3 are bifurcated at 4 to introduce an inductive reactive loading in series with the two conductors A and B, whereas the space between adjacent teeth 3 of opposed conductors develops a capacitive voltage in shunt with the conductors A and B.
  • the anode electrode structure comprises the cylinder 1 and anode circuit 2.
  • the slow wave circuit 2 has a fundamental forward wave space harmonic mode of operation as seen by curve 5 in the w;8 diagram of FIG. 4 and forms the subject matter of and is claimed in copending US. patent application 637,007, filed May 8, 1967, as a continuation application of US. 350,504, filed Mar. 9, 1964, both applications being assigned to the same assignee as the present invention.
  • the parent application is now abandoned in favor of the continuation.
  • a hollow cylindrical cold cathode emitter electrode 6 as of beryllium-copper or aluminum is coaxially disposed of the slow wave circuit 2 to define an annular electronic interaction region 7 in the space between the cathode 6 and the slow wave circuit 2.
  • the stem 9 is threaded at its end and the cold cathode with its end hats 8 are captured on the stem by nut 12.
  • a low pressure gas fill as of H A, or Xe gas at 10- mm. Hg pressure is employed in the interaction space to start the cold cathode discharge when the tube is operated as a noise generator.
  • Cold cathode gas filled magnetron oscillators are described in Crossed-Field Microwave Devices, vol. 2, Okress, page 301-313 (1961). This mode of operation will be more fully described below.
  • the RF. drive power is sufiicient to start the electron build-up for the cold cathode under high vacuum conditions.
  • the cathode electrode structure includes emitter 6 together with end hats 8.
  • RF. power output is extracted from the tube via coaxial line 18 for transmission to a suitable utilization device, not shown.
  • the coaxial line 18 enters the tube body 1 at 19 and is formed in the side wall of the main body by means of an axially directed bore 21 which serves as the outer conductor for the coaxial line 18 within the tube body 1.
  • the center conductor 22 of the coaxial line 18 passes axially through the bore 21 and is electrically connected to the outer conductor at the bottom of the bore 21 thereby providing a short.
  • a conductive finger 23 extends radially inwardly of the tube body from the center conductor 22.
  • the finger 23 is located a quarter wavelength away from the shorted end of the coaxial line 18 forming a coaxial T section to refiect a high impedance to wave energy which is propagating toward the shorted end of the coaxial line at the finger 23.
  • An aperture 24 is provided in the side wall of the outer conductor of the coaxial line to accommodate passage of the finger 23 therethrough.
  • the finger 23 connects to slow wave circuit 2 via the intermediary of a matching quarter wave section as shown in FIG. 3.
  • the coaxial line 18 has a certain characteristic impedance such as 509.
  • the interdigital line 2 has a certain characteristic impedance such as 8552.
  • the matching section 25 is made a quarter electrical wavelength long, along path I, including the efifect of the reactive loading of section 26.
  • the characteristic guide impedance Z of the quarter Wave section 25 is dimensioned to equal the square root of the product of the slow circuit characteristic impedance Z and the coaxial line impedance Z that is Z /Z Z With this condition for section 25 and the provision of the quarter wave choke support at the T section of coaxial line 18, there is obtained a substantially refiectionless flow of power from the slow wave circuit 2 to the coaxial line 18.
  • a circuit sever 27 is provided at the terminal end of the slow wave circuit and matching section 25.
  • the sever 27 subtends approximately 45 of arc.
  • the slow wave circuit 2 has its beginning at the other end of the sever 27.
  • a lossy member 28 as of carbon impregnated alumina is disposed adjacent the first half section (period) of the slow wave circuit inbetween the circuit 2 and the inside wall of the envelope 1 for absorbing wave energy traveling in the backward direction on the slow wave circuit 2 to prevent reflection thereof which might otherwise produce unwanted oscillations of the tube.
  • a hollow cylindrical permanent magnet 29 is coaxially mounted within the cathode emitter electrode 6 inbetween the cathode stem 9 and the emitter 6.
  • the permanent magnet 29, as of Alnico VIII is axially magnetized to provide a north pole N at one end and a south pole S at the other end of the magnet cylinder.
  • the magnet 29 is preferably radially spaced away from the inside wall of the emitter 6 to reduce thermal conduction from the cathode to the magnet 29.
  • the magnet 29 preferably makes good thermal contact with the cathode stem 9 to enhance conduction of heat from the magnet to a heat sink external of the tube envelope 1 via the stem 9.
  • the cylindrical internal magnet 29 with magnet pole pieces 8 produces an axial magnetic field intensity H in the electronic interaction gap 7 as shown in FIG. 5.
  • the field intensity is (for example) 900 gauss in the transverse center plane of the gap and increases to approximately 1000 gauss at the ends of the gap 7 adjacent the end hats 8.
  • the dip in the center of the field helps to confine the space charge to the center interaction region of the slow wave circuit 2 where the electronic interaction voltages of the slow wave circuit 2 are most in- I tense.
  • the end hat pole pieces 8 substantially overhang radially outwardly over the outer perimeter of the magnet 29 and cathode 6 to guide the magnetic flux lines H for minimizing stray field and for shaping the field in the interaction region 7.
  • the end hat pole pieces 8 substantially straighten the field lines as they pass through the interaction region 7 thereby preventing excessive beam interception on the circuit 2.
  • a cold cathode electrode to anode electrode voltage is applied via power supply 31 and leads 32.
  • the applied D.C. voltage is of sufiicient amplitude to cause a breakdown in the gas fill to produce space charge which initiates operation of the tube.
  • Steady state operation occurs due to the secondary emission from the cathode 6.
  • Space charge noise signals present in the interaction gap excite a wave on the slow wave circuit 2.
  • the noise wave energy on the circuit with frequencies in the band of m to 0 as shown in FIG. 4- are amplified by cumulative electronic interaction with the space charge to produce rotating spokes of space charge rotating with a synchronous velocity corresponding to electron energy of 500 v.
  • the amplified noise energy over a broad band of frequencies such as an octave of bandwidth is extracted from the circuit 2 via output matching section 25 and coaxial line 18 and trans mitted to a suitable utilization device, not shown.
  • the electronic interaction produces electron back/bombardment of the cold cathode 6 to produce secondary emission therefrom to replenish the space charge collected on the anode structure.
  • the space charge is trapped in equipotentials in the presence of the axial magnetic field and continues to recirculate around the cathode 6 until collected.
  • the sever 27 subtends sufficient arc to produce debunching of the space charge passing through the drift space adjacent the sever 27 thereby preventing electronic feed-back oscillations.
  • a typical noise generator tube of the above-described type produces noise over an octave of bandwidth centered at 1.5 go.
  • the tube may also be operated as a conventional two port forward or backward wave amplifier. jl'n this case, the tube would be essentially the same tube as above-described except that the gas fill need not be used, it being replaced by a high vacuum and except for the provision of an input coaxial line, not shown, identical to line 18.
  • the input line in this case, is connected to the beginning of the slow wave circuit 2, via a quarter -Wave stub section, as above-described, and quarter wave "impedance matching section 25, as above-described.
  • the RF. signal to be amplified produces sufficient cathode back/bombardment and secondary emission to sustain amplification and power output.
  • 20 db gain is obtained over an octave of bandwidth at a power output of 1 kw.
  • a conventional external magnet for such a tube would weigh approximately 10 pounds, whereas, for the above-described L band tube, the magnet weight is 1 pound, thereby effecting an order of magnitude reduction in magnet size and weight.
  • the present invention has been described with regard to a particular magnetron type wherein the cold cathode electrode was also the cathode emitter. This is not a requirement of the present invention.
  • the cold cathode electrode i.e., the electrode structure operating at cathode potential, could be non-emissive and electron emission supplied entirely from a separate thermionic emitter and injected into the annular electron stream in the conventional manner.
  • the tube may be operated as an oscillator by judicious choice of wave circuit such as conventional strapped vanes and deletion of the sever 27 Since many changes could be made in the above construction and many apparently widely different embodi men-ts 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.
  • a magnetron microwave tube apparatus means forming a generally cylindrical cathode electrode structure; means for producing an arcuate stream of electrons adjacent said cold cathode electrode; means forming an anode electrode structure coaxially disposed of said cathode electrode in spaced apart relationship and defining an electronic interaction region therebetween, said anode electrode including an arcuate wave circuit facing said cylindrical cathode electrode structure for electronic interaction between waves on said circuit and the stream of electrons; means forming a permanent magnet disposed within said cathode electrode for generating an axially directed magnetic field in said interaction region to cause the electron stream to move tangentially to said wave circuit to effect cumulative electronic interaction between the electron stream and waves on said anode circuit; means for extracting microwave energy from said circuit, means forming an evacuable envelope enclosing said magnet, said cathode and the magnetron interaction region, the improvement comprising, means forming a pair of magnetic pole pieces disposed Within said evacuable envelope at the ends of said permanent
  • said cathode electrode includes an arcuate cold cathode emitter member made of a material having a secondary emission ratio substantially greater than 1, said emitter also serving as said means for producing the electrons of said arcuate stream.
  • pole pieces also overhang the emitting surface of said cylindrical cathode electrode to serve as end hats for said cathode electrode.
  • the tube apparatus is a noise generator
  • said wave circuit is a slow wave circuit, said circuit being dimensioned to amplify space charge noise signals internally generated within the tube apparatus.
  • said slow wave circuit includes a pair of interdigitated conductive comb structures with interdigitated teeth portions, and wherein said teeth portions are bifurcated to provide an interdigital slow wave circuit having a fundamental forward wave space harmonic for cumulative electronic interaction with said electron stream over a broad band of frequencies.
  • the tube includes a crossed-field interaction region filled with a gas which ionizes during operation of the tube to produce free electrons and ions to enhance starting of the electronic discharge within the tube.

Description

Oct. 10, 1967 J. FEINSTEIN 3,346,755
MICROWAVE COLD CATHODE MAGNETRON WITH INTERNAL MAGNET Filed March 13, 1964 FIG-3 Z 23 I 4 i i 2 l 3 i I 3 f i 1 B-t "T x 1 21 4 I 25 0M q a I 1 6 I 11, n =!IaI!= I F w 900 2 INVENTOR. s2 JOSEPH FEINSTEIN I l I" I @{dx ID'STANCEQ ATTORNEY United States Patent 3,346,766 MICROWAVE COLD CATHODE MAGNETRON WITH INTERNAL MAGNET Joseph Feinstein, Livingston, N.J., assignor to S-F-D Laboratories, Inc., Union, N.J., a corporation of New Jersey Filed Mar. 13, 1964, Ser. No. 351,749 7 Claims. (Cl. SIS-39.71)
ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE A cold cathode magnetron tube is disclosed wherein a permanent magnet is disposed inside the cold cathode structure. A pair of pole pieces are disposed at the ends of the permanent magnet and arranged such that they overhang the sides of the magnet to improve the uniformity of the axial magnetic field in the magnetron interaction region.
In a preferred embodiment, the pole pieces also overhang the cathode emitter to form the end hats for the cold cathode. In the preferred embodiment, the cold cathode is radially spaced apart from the permanent magnet to inhibit heat transfer from the cathode to the permanent magnet in use.
Heretofore cold cathode crossed field amplifier or oscillator tubes of circular geometry, hereinafter called magnetrons, have been built. As used herein, cold cathode means the cathode electrode is operated at a temperature in use below the typical thermionic emission temperature for the cathode electrode material such that if the cathode electrode is also the emitter the predominant emission mechanism is other than thermionic such as secondary emission, or high field emission, etc. These prior cold cathode magnetrons have included permanent magnets for generating the magnetic field in the beam field interaction region of space or gap. These permanent magnets have heretofore been disposed externally to the tube envelope spanning the interaction gap. Some of these mag nets have been cylindrical, some have been C-shaped, and others have been bowl-shaped completely surrounding the interaction gap. Because of high flux leakage, all such magnets have been relatively heavy and bulky usually constituting the major size and weight factor for the entire tube assembly.
In the present invention, the permanent magnet for producing the magnetic field in the interaction space of a cold cathode magnetron is disposed within the cold cathode electrode whereby the size and weight of the permanent magnet is substantially reduced as by, for example, a factor of 10. The magnet includes a pair of pole pieces at the ends which project outwardly over the outer surface of the magnet to improve the uniformity of the field. The overhanging pole pieces also provide end hats for the cathode.
The principal object of the present invention is to provide an improved magnetron tube with magnet having reduced size and weight.
One feature of the present invention is the provision of a permanent magnet disposed within a hollow of the cathode electrode of a cold cathode magnetron oscillator or amplifier and including pole pieces at the ends of the magnet which overhang the sides of the magnet for generating the static magnetic field in the beam field interaction space whereby the size and weight of the tube is greatly reduced.
Another feature of the present invention is the same as the preceding feature wherein the tube apparatus is a noise generator, the anode circuit of which serves to amplify and couple out noise signals, over a broadband of frequencies, which are generated in the space charge spokes internally of the magnetron tube.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent upon a perusal of the following specification taken in connection with the accompanying drawings wherein:
FIG. 1 is a longitudinal sectional view of a magnetron incorporating the features of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a transverse sectional View of the tube structure of FIG. 1 taken along lines 22 in the direction of the arrows;
FIG. 3 is an enlarged view of a portion of the structure of FIG. 2 taken along lines 3-3 in the direction of the arrows;
FIG. 4 is a LIP-18 diagram showing the dispersion characteristics for the slow wave circuit of the tube of FIGS. 1 and 2; and,
FIG. 5 is a plot of magnetic field intensity H versus distance along the axial centerline of the interaction gap and also showing the relative position and shapes of anode, cathode, magnet H-field lines for the tube of FIGS. 1 and 2.
Referring now to FIGS. 1 and 2, there is shown the novel amplifier tube apparatus of the present invention. More particularly, there is shown a hollow cylindrical main body member 1 as of copper having end closing walls as of copper and forming the vacuum wall of the tube.
An arcuate severed interdigital slow wave circuit 2 is coaxially disposed of the main body 1. The slow wave circuit 2 comprises a pair of interdigitated conductive comb structures including a pair of axially spaced mutually opposed conductive backbone portions A and B forming a two wire line (see FIG. 3) and an array of interdigitated conductive plate-like teeth 3. The teeth 3 are bifurcated at 4 to introduce an inductive reactive loading in series with the two conductors A and B, whereas the space between adjacent teeth 3 of opposed conductors develops a capacitive voltage in shunt with the conductors A and B. The anode electrode structure comprises the cylinder 1 and anode circuit 2.
The slow wave circuit 2 has a fundamental forward wave space harmonic mode of operation as seen by curve 5 in the w;8 diagram of FIG. 4 and forms the subject matter of and is claimed in copending US. patent application 637,007, filed May 8, 1967, as a continuation application of US. 350,504, filed Mar. 9, 1964, both applications being assigned to the same assignee as the present invention. The parent application is now abandoned in favor of the continuation.
A hollow cylindrical cold cathode emitter electrode 6 as of beryllium-copper or aluminum is coaxially disposed of the slow wave circuit 2 to define an annular electronic interaction region 7 in the space between the cathode 6 and the slow wave circuit 2.
A pair of cathode pole pieces 8 as of iron, close off the open ends of the cathode emitter 6 and also serve as cathode end hats. A cylindrical cathode support stem 9, as of nonmagnetic stainless steel, extends axially of and through the tube envelope via high voltage insulator assembly 11 of the conventional design for supporting the cathode emitter coaxially thereof. The stem 9 is threaded at its end and the cold cathode with its end hats 8 are captured on the stem by nut 12.
A low pressure gas fill as of H A, or Xe gas at 10- mm. Hg pressure is employed in the interaction space to start the cold cathode discharge when the tube is operated as a noise generator. Cold cathode gas filled magnetron oscillators are described in Crossed-Field Microwave Devices, vol. 2, Okress, page 301-313 (1961). This mode of operation will be more fully described below. When operated as an amplifier, the RF. drive power is sufiicient to start the electron build-up for the cold cathode under high vacuum conditions. The cathode electrode structure includes emitter 6 together with end hats 8.
RF. power output is extracted from the tube via coaxial line 18 for transmission to a suitable utilization device, not shown. The coaxial line 18 enters the tube body 1 at 19 and is formed in the side wall of the main body by means of an axially directed bore 21 which serves as the outer conductor for the coaxial line 18 within the tube body 1. The center conductor 22 of the coaxial line 18 passes axially through the bore 21 and is electrically connected to the outer conductor at the bottom of the bore 21 thereby providing a short.
A conductive finger 23 extends radially inwardly of the tube body from the center conductor 22. The finger 23 is located a quarter wavelength away from the shorted end of the coaxial line 18 forming a coaxial T section to refiect a high impedance to wave energy which is propagating toward the shorted end of the coaxial line at the finger 23. An aperture 24 is provided in the side wall of the outer conductor of the coaxial line to accommodate passage of the finger 23 therethrough. The finger 23 connects to slow wave circuit 2 via the intermediary of a matching quarter wave section as shown in FIG. 3.
The coaxial line 18 has a certain characteristic impedance such as 509. The interdigital line 2 has a certain characteristic impedance such as 8552. The matching section 25 is made a quarter electrical wavelength long, along path I, including the efifect of the reactive loading of section 26. The characteristic guide impedance Z of the quarter Wave section 25 is dimensioned to equal the square root of the product of the slow circuit characteristic impedance Z and the coaxial line impedance Z that is Z /Z Z With this condition for section 25 and the provision of the quarter wave choke support at the T section of coaxial line 18, there is obtained a substantially refiectionless flow of power from the slow wave circuit 2 to the coaxial line 18.
A circuit sever 27 is provided at the terminal end of the slow wave circuit and matching section 25. The sever 27 subtends approximately 45 of arc. The slow wave circuit 2 has its beginning at the other end of the sever 27. A lossy member 28 as of carbon impregnated alumina is disposed adjacent the first half section (period) of the slow wave circuit inbetween the circuit 2 and the inside wall of the envelope 1 for absorbing wave energy traveling in the backward direction on the slow wave circuit 2 to prevent reflection thereof which might otherwise produce unwanted oscillations of the tube.
A hollow cylindrical permanent magnet 29 is coaxially mounted within the cathode emitter electrode 6 inbetween the cathode stem 9 and the emitter 6. The permanent magnet 29, as of Alnico VIII is axially magnetized to provide a north pole N at one end and a south pole S at the other end of the magnet cylinder. The magnet 29 is preferably radially spaced away from the inside wall of the emitter 6 to reduce thermal conduction from the cathode to the magnet 29. However, at its inside diameter the magnet 29 preferably makes good thermal contact with the cathode stem 9 to enhance conduction of heat from the magnet to a heat sink external of the tube envelope 1 via the stem 9.
The cylindrical internal magnet 29 with magnet pole pieces 8 produces an axial magnetic field intensity H in the electronic interaction gap 7 as shown in FIG. 5. The field intensity is (for example) 900 gauss in the transverse center plane of the gap and increases to approximately 1000 gauss at the ends of the gap 7 adjacent the end hats 8. The dip in the center of the field helps to confine the space charge to the center interaction region of the slow wave circuit 2 where the electronic interaction voltages of the slow wave circuit 2 are most in- I tense.
The end hat pole pieces 8 substantially overhang radially outwardly over the outer perimeter of the magnet 29 and cathode 6 to guide the magnetic flux lines H for minimizing stray field and for shaping the field in the interaction region 7. The end hat pole pieces 8 substantially straighten the field lines as they pass through the interaction region 7 thereby preventing excessive beam interception on the circuit 2.
In operation, a cold cathode electrode to anode electrode voltage, as of 3 kv., is applied via power supply 31 and leads 32. The applied D.C. voltage is of sufiicient amplitude to cause a breakdown in the gas fill to produce space charge which initiates operation of the tube. Steady state operation occurs due to the secondary emission from the cathode 6. Space charge noise signals present in the interaction gap excite a wave on the slow wave circuit 2. The noise wave energy on the circuit with frequencies in the band of m to 0 as shown in FIG. 4-, are amplified by cumulative electronic interaction with the space charge to produce rotating spokes of space charge rotating with a synchronous velocity corresponding to electron energy of 500 v. The amplified noise energy over a broad band of frequencies such as an octave of bandwidth is extracted from the circuit 2 via output matching section 25 and coaxial line 18 and trans mitted to a suitable utilization device, not shown. The electronic interaction produces electron back/bombardment of the cold cathode 6 to produce secondary emission therefrom to replenish the space charge collected on the anode structure. The space charge is trapped in equipotentials in the presence of the axial magnetic field and continues to recirculate around the cathode 6 until collected. The sever 27 subtends sufficient arc to produce debunching of the space charge passing through the drift space adjacent the sever 27 thereby preventing electronic feed-back oscillations.
A typical noise generator tube of the above-described type produces noise over an octave of bandwidth centered at 1.5 go. The tube may also be operated as a conventional two port forward or backward wave amplifier. jl'n this case, the tube would be essentially the same tube as above-described except that the gas fill need not be used, it being replaced by a high vacuum and except for the provision of an input coaxial line, not shown, identical to line 18. The input line, in this case, is connected to the beginning of the slow wave circuit 2, via a quarter -Wave stub section, as above-described, and quarter wave "impedance matching section 25, as above-described.
The RF. signal to be amplified produces sufficient cathode back/bombardment and secondary emission to sustain amplification and power output. In such a tube at L band, 20 db gain is obtained over an octave of bandwidth at a power output of 1 kw. A conventional external magnet for such a tube would weigh approximately 10 pounds, whereas, for the above-described L band tube, the magnet weight is 1 pound, thereby effecting an order of magnitude reduction in magnet size and weight.
The present invention has been described with regard to a particular magnetron type wherein the cold cathode electrode was also the cathode emitter. This is not a requirement of the present invention. The cold cathode electrode, i.e., the electrode structure operating at cathode potential, could be non-emissive and electron emission supplied entirely from a separate thermionic emitter and injected into the annular electron stream in the conventional manner. Also, the tube may be operated as an oscillator by judicious choice of wave circuit such as conventional strapped vanes and deletion of the sever 27 Since many changes could be made in the above construction and many apparently widely different embodi men-ts 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 isi 1. In a magnetron microwave tube apparatus; means forming a generally cylindrical cathode electrode structure; means for producing an arcuate stream of electrons adjacent said cold cathode electrode; means forming an anode electrode structure coaxially disposed of said cathode electrode in spaced apart relationship and defining an electronic interaction region therebetween, said anode electrode including an arcuate wave circuit facing said cylindrical cathode electrode structure for electronic interaction between waves on said circuit and the stream of electrons; means forming a permanent magnet disposed within said cathode electrode for generating an axially directed magnetic field in said interaction region to cause the electron stream to move tangentially to said wave circuit to effect cumulative electronic interaction between the electron stream and waves on said anode circuit; means for extracting microwave energy from said circuit, means forming an evacuable envelope enclosing said magnet, said cathode and the magnetron interaction region, the improvement comprising, means forming a pair of magnetic pole pieces disposed Within said evacuable envelope at the ends of said permanent magnet, said pole pieces projecting toward said anode electrode structure and overhanging the sides of said permanent magnet to improve the uniformity of the magnetic field in the magnetron interaction region.
2. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said cathode electrode includes an arcuate cold cathode emitter member made of a material having a secondary emission ratio substantially greater than 1, said emitter also serving as said means for producing the electrons of said arcuate stream.
3. The apparatus according to claim 2 wherein said evacuable envelope is partially evacuated and wherein said permanent magnet means is disposed inside said envelope and is radially spaced from said cold cathode emitter member to create at least a partially evacuated void therebetween to reduce conduction of heat from said emitter to said magnet in use.
4. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein said pole pieces also overhang the emitting surface of said cylindrical cathode electrode to serve as end hats for said cathode electrode.
5. The apparatus according to claim 1 wherein the tube apparatus is a noise generator, and said wave circuit is a slow wave circuit, said circuit being dimensioned to amplify space charge noise signals internally generated within the tube apparatus.
6. The apparatus according to claim 5 wherein said slow wave circuit includes a pair of interdigitated conductive comb structures with interdigitated teeth portions, and wherein said teeth portions are bifurcated to provide an interdigital slow wave circuit having a fundamental forward wave space harmonic for cumulative electronic interaction with said electron stream over a broad band of frequencies.
7. The apparatus according to claim 5 wherein the tube includes a crossed-field interaction region filled with a gas which ionizes during operation of the tube to produce free electrons and ions to enhance starting of the electronic discharge within the tube.
References Cited UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,235,517 3/1941 Espe 313-157 X 2,658,149 11/1953 Gallagher et al. 331-78 2,881,348 4/1959 Palluel 315-35 3,096,457 7/1963 Smith et a1. 313-157 X HERMAN KARL SAALBACH, Primary Examiner.
S. CHATMON, Assistant Examiner.

Claims (1)

1. IN A MAGNETRON MICROWAVE TUBE APPARATUS; MEANS FORMING A GENERALLY CYLINDRICAL CATHODE ELECTRODE STRUCTURE; MEANS FOR PRODUCING AN ARCUATE STREAM OF ELECTRONS ADJACENT SAID COLD CATHODE ELECTRODE; MEANS FORMING AN ANODE ELECTRODE STRUCTURE COAXIALLY DISPOSED OF SAID CATHODE ELECTRODE IN SPACE APART RELATIONSHIP AND DEFINING AN ELECTRONIC INTERACTION REGION THEREBETWEEN, SAID ANODE ELECTRODE INCLUDING AN ARCUATE WAVE CIRCUIT FACING SAID CYLINDRICAL CATHODE ELECTRODE STRUCTURE FOR ELECTRONIC INTERACTION BETWEEN WAVES ON SAID CIRCUIT AND THE STREAM OF ELECTRONS; MEANS FORMING A PERMANENT MAGNET DISPOSED WITHIN SAID CATHODE ELECTRODE FOR GENERATING AN AXIALLY DIRECTED MAGNETIC FIELD IN SAID INTERACTION REGION TO CAUSE THE ELECTRON STREAM TO MOVE TANGENTIALLY TO SAID WAVE CIRCUIT TO EFFECT CUMULATIVE ELECTRONIC INTERACTION BETWEEN THE ELECTRON STREAM AND WAVES ON SAID ANODE CIRCUIT; MEANS FOR EXTRACTING MICROWAVE ENERGY FROM SAID CIRCUIT, MEANS FORMING AN EVACUABLE ENVELOPE ENCLOSING SAID MAGNET, SAID CATHODE AND THE MAGNETRON INTERACTION REGION, THE IMPROVEMENT COMPRISING, MEANS FORMING A PAIR OF MAGNETIC POLE PIECES DISPOSED WITHIN SAID EVACUABLE ENVELOPE AT THE ENDS OF SAID PERMANENT MAGNET, SAID POLE PIECES PROJECTING TOWARD SAID ANODE ELECTRODE STRUCTURE AND OVERHANGING THE SIDES OF SAID PERMANENT MAGNET TO IMPROVE THE UNIFORMITY OF THE MAGNETIC FIELD IN THE MAGNETRON INTERACTION REGION.
US351749A 1964-03-13 1964-03-13 Microwave cold cathode magnetron with internal magnet Expired - Lifetime US3346766A (en)

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US351749A US3346766A (en) 1964-03-13 1964-03-13 Microwave cold cathode magnetron with internal magnet
GB10393/65A GB1065945A (en) 1964-03-13 1965-03-15 Improvements in or relating to magnetrons
DE19691491446 DE1491446A1 (en) 1964-03-13 1969-06-11 Magnetron with internal magnet

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Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3562579A (en) * 1968-06-11 1971-02-09 Nippon Electric Co Electron discharge device employing inexpensive permanent magnets if significantly reduced size
US3599032A (en) * 1968-07-16 1971-08-10 Thomson Csf Crossed-fields traveling wave tubes
US3679993A (en) * 1967-09-27 1972-07-25 Varian Associates Crossed-field noise generator tube employing a high magnetic field intensity
US3843904A (en) * 1973-08-01 1974-10-22 Us Navy Magnetic field geometry for crossed-field devices
US3855498A (en) * 1973-11-01 1974-12-17 Us Navy Center-pole magnetic circuit
US3881127A (en) * 1973-11-01 1975-04-29 Us Navy Bucking samarium cobalt magnets for crossed field devices
JPS5124170A (en) * 1974-08-03 1976-02-26 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd MAGUNETORON
US3984725A (en) * 1975-05-19 1976-10-05 Varian Associates Permanent magnet structure for crossed-field tubes
US4027194A (en) * 1974-10-25 1977-05-31 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Core magnetron magnetic circuit having a temperature coefficient approximately zero and permeance related
US4042851A (en) * 1975-07-30 1977-08-16 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Magnetron
CN103151230A (en) * 2012-12-11 2013-06-12 中国人民解放军国防科学技术大学 Long-pulse high conversion efficiency negative pole used for magnetron
US20130241407A1 (en) * 2012-03-09 2013-09-19 L-3 Communications Corporation Harmonic mode magnetron

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2235517A (en) * 1937-11-25 1941-03-18 Fides Gmbh Magnetron
US2658149A (en) * 1946-03-04 1953-11-03 Charles J Gallagher Gas tube noise generator
US2881348A (en) * 1952-12-19 1959-04-07 Csf Delay line for traveling wave tubes
US3096457A (en) * 1959-03-31 1963-07-02 Raytheon Co Traveling wave tube utilizing a secondary emissive cathode

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2235517A (en) * 1937-11-25 1941-03-18 Fides Gmbh Magnetron
US2658149A (en) * 1946-03-04 1953-11-03 Charles J Gallagher Gas tube noise generator
US2881348A (en) * 1952-12-19 1959-04-07 Csf Delay line for traveling wave tubes
US3096457A (en) * 1959-03-31 1963-07-02 Raytheon Co Traveling wave tube utilizing a secondary emissive cathode

Cited By (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3679993A (en) * 1967-09-27 1972-07-25 Varian Associates Crossed-field noise generator tube employing a high magnetic field intensity
US3562579A (en) * 1968-06-11 1971-02-09 Nippon Electric Co Electron discharge device employing inexpensive permanent magnets if significantly reduced size
US3599032A (en) * 1968-07-16 1971-08-10 Thomson Csf Crossed-fields traveling wave tubes
US3843904A (en) * 1973-08-01 1974-10-22 Us Navy Magnetic field geometry for crossed-field devices
US3855498A (en) * 1973-11-01 1974-12-17 Us Navy Center-pole magnetic circuit
US3881127A (en) * 1973-11-01 1975-04-29 Us Navy Bucking samarium cobalt magnets for crossed field devices
JPS5124170A (en) * 1974-08-03 1976-02-26 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd MAGUNETORON
JPS5515828B2 (en) * 1974-08-03 1980-04-26
US4027194A (en) * 1974-10-25 1977-05-31 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Core magnetron magnetic circuit having a temperature coefficient approximately zero and permeance related
US3984725A (en) * 1975-05-19 1976-10-05 Varian Associates Permanent magnet structure for crossed-field tubes
US4042851A (en) * 1975-07-30 1977-08-16 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Magnetron
US20130241407A1 (en) * 2012-03-09 2013-09-19 L-3 Communications Corporation Harmonic mode magnetron
US9000670B2 (en) * 2012-03-09 2015-04-07 L-3 Communications Corporation Harmonic mode magnetron
CN103151230A (en) * 2012-12-11 2013-06-12 中国人民解放军国防科学技术大学 Long-pulse high conversion efficiency negative pole used for magnetron

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE1491446A1 (en) 1969-06-12
GB1065945A (en) 1967-04-19

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