US3751709A - Internal tube peltier cooling of image intensification photocathodes - Google Patents

Internal tube peltier cooling of image intensification photocathodes Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3751709A
US3751709A US00247313A US3751709DA US3751709A US 3751709 A US3751709 A US 3751709A US 00247313 A US00247313 A US 00247313A US 3751709D A US3751709D A US 3751709DA US 3751709 A US3751709 A US 3751709A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
photoemissive
cooling
cold junction
contact
peltier
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US00247313A
Inventor
W Gutierrez
H Wilson
H Pommerrenig
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
US Department of Army
Original Assignee
US Department of Army
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by US Department of Army filed Critical US Department of Army
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3751709A publication Critical patent/US3751709A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H10SEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES; ELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10NELECTRIC SOLID-STATE DEVICES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H10N10/00Thermoelectric devices comprising a junction of dissimilar materials, i.e. devices exhibiting Seebeck or Peltier effects
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J29/00Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
    • H01J29/02Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
    • H01J29/10Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored
    • H01J29/36Photoelectric screens; Charge-storage screens

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to the intratube cooling of an internally mounted photoemissive device of an image intensifier device.
  • Prior image intensifiers utilized a cathode coating on a face of the image intensifier device. Cooling of the device was achieved by surrounding the device with cooling structure that was in heat conducting contact with its housing. If the photocathode was separately internally mounted within the tube, additionally, an airtight housing around the tube window was required to prevent window fogging.
  • the cathode may be heated for activation, cleaning or outgassing or other particular tube operation.
  • FIG. 1 represents a longitudinal cross-section of an image intensifier tubeincorporating the intra-tube Peltier cooling means
  • FIG. 2 is a view of a modified photoemissive device- Peltier cooler combination in the image intensifier housing, 7
  • FIG. 3 is a Peltier cooler arrangement having a plural module, multiple stage configuration
  • FIGS. 4, 5 and 6 show typical test results for the disclosed Peltier cooler of single stage configuration.
  • FIG. 1 an image intensifier 11 having a sealed housing 12.
  • An optical window 13 receives input radiation that is to be transmitted through housing 12 for impingement upon a photoemissive device l5.
  • the photoemissive device 15 functions as a two-dimensional space current amplifier coupled to an output means 14 which may take the form of an electron coupler or, as specifically shown in FIG. 1, a phosphor coated element '16.
  • the Peltier cooling apparatus comprises a cold junction element 17 disc-like in shape, and having a central aperture.
  • P and N type semiconductor elements of the Peltier cooler are in the form of concentrically arranged, mutually insulated cylinders 18 and 19. One end of each of the two cylinders contacts the face of the disc-like cold junction 17 opposite that face of the cold junction that is in contact with the photoemissive element 15.
  • the hot junction of the Peltier cooling device comprises a pair of conducting elements 20 and 21 in contact with the semi-conductor cylinders 18 and 19 respectively. These hot junction elements 20 and 21 penetrate the housing 12 and form the requisite power terminal for the Peltier cooler.
  • a cold junction contact element 22 which is placed in thermal contact with the circumference of a photoemissive device 23.
  • These discs as well as the other disclosed semiconductor pairs may be fabricated from such materials as PbTe, -Bi Se Bi Te or Sb Te which have high figures of merit (z). But, should it be necessary to sacrifice these high figure of merit materials for lower figure materials having higher temperature capability, resort may be had to such materials as silicon, germanium, boron-carbon, etc.
  • the semiconductor material discs 24 and 25 areinsulated from each other. This is accomplished, for example, either by spacing them apart or by use of an insulating spacer 26. Contacting the outer perimeter of the discs 24 and 25 is the hot junction of the Peltier cooler formed from electrically and thermally conductive components 27and 28. These components extend through the walls of the sealed housing and provide the Peltier cooler with the necessary electrical power connections as well as a heat sink in the event that the housing 12 is itself not thermally conductive.
  • an internal Peltier cooler can be fabricated uti-' lizing a multi-stage arrangement in which an array of multistage modules are placed about the photoemissive device.
  • Each module can be of the well known pyramid design wherein each stage progressing from the apex of extends through the housing wall 12 of the intensifier device. If the housing 12 is made of thermally conductive material, it alone can serve as the heat sink. Electrical contacts 34 are provided to power the Peltier cooler.
  • FIGS. 4, 5, and 6 represent test results of an internal Peltier cooler of the type shown in FIG. 2.
  • the required cooling time of the cold junction for the hot junction temperature maintained variously at 40, 23 and 2 Centigrade, drops increasingly rapidly as the current supplied to the hot junction terminals is increased; the cooling times being reckoned in seconds.
  • the required cooling time for the disclosed device is therefore a small fraction of the cooling time of any known external cooler for a similar device.
  • a sealed internally cooled image intensifier device comprising:
  • photoemissive means positioned within said housing
  • intratube Peltier effect cooling means associated with said photoemissive means for direct cooling thereof;
  • optical output means in optical alignment with said window and said photoemissive means.
  • thermotier effect cooling means comprises:
  • hot junction means comprising a pair of thermally and electrically conductive elements each respectively contacting one of said semiconductor elements and passing through said sealed housing,
  • photoemissive means mounted in said housing in optical alignment with said optical window and said optical output means;
  • Peltier cooling means in heat conducting contact with said photoemissive means, said cooling means comprising conductive cold junction means peripherally contacting said photoemissive means;
  • hot junction conductive means in contact with the outer periphery of said semiconductor members and extending through said sealed housing, thereby providing electrical and thermal feed thru to produce the Peltier cooling effect at said photoemissive means when connected to an electrical source.
  • said cold junction element comprises an apertured disc in face contact with said photoemissive means; and, said semiconductor elements comprise a pair of concentric cylinders each having a base in contact with a face of said cold junction element.
  • a sealed housing having an optical window at one end of said housing and an optical output means at the opposite end thereof;

Landscapes

  • Transforming Light Signals Into Electric Signals (AREA)

Abstract

An intratube Peltier cooling device for cooling a photoemissive device mounted in a sealed housing of an image intensifier device. The cooler consists of at least a pair of N and P type material semiconductor elements having a centrally located cold junction element which surrounds the periphery of the photoemissive device. A hot junction is positioned adjacent the outer periphery of the semiconductor elements and extends through the sealed tube walls of the image intensifier device. Electrical connection is provided at the external periphery of the hot junction.

Description

United States Patent Wilson et al. 1 Aug. 7, 1973 [54] INTERNAL TUBE PELTIER COOLING OF 3,316,474 4/1967 Lode 136/204 X IMAGE INTENSIFICATON 3,273,347 9/1966 Elfving 136/204 X PHOTOCATHODES 3,635,037 1/1972 Hubert 136/204 X I [75] lnventorsz' Herbert L. Wilson, Woodbridge',
Hans D. Pommerrenig, Springfield; Primary Examiner-Roy Lake- William A. Gutierrez, Woodbridge, qsi gmtli gy ng ggh D- a r all of Va." Attorney-Harry hf Saragovitz, Edward J. Kelly [73] Assignee: The United States of America as et represented by the Secretary 01 the Army, Washington, DC. ABSTRACT [22] Filed: 1"- 1972 An intratube Peltier cooling device for cooling a photo- [21] Appl' N05 247,313 emissive device mounted in a sealed housing of an image intensifier device. The cooler consists of at least v a pair of N and P type material semiconductor elements [52] US. Cl SIS/50,625, 136/204, h i a centrally located ld junction element which 1 1 12 surrounds the periphery of the photoemissive device. A [51 I Int. Cl. H01] 7/44 junction is positionedadjacent the Omar periphery [581 Field of Search 315/50, 1 12; 313/94, of the semiconductor elements extends through the l 1; 136/203 204; 62/3 sealed tube walls of the image intensifier device. Electrical connection is provided at the external periphery [56] References Cited f h hot junction.
' UNITED STATES PATENTS 7 Claims, 6 Drawing Figures 3,515,924 6/1970 'Moegenbier 313/94 PAIEIIIEII M19 7 I973 SIIEEIEIIFQ FIG. 4
T N E R R U C N m TS MP m w98765432 l O O 6 H Y R m S w H E m T w m0 MM 0 .0 C W 2 E l mm mm .0 A T C O H 0 5 505000 0 223 4 80v msmk 29:022 0400 TIME (SEC-I CATHODE COOLING TIME HISTORY S P M A w9876543 l HOT JUNCTION CURRENT HOT JUNCTION 23 C FIG. 5
3'0 TIME (SEC) CATHODE COOLING TIME HISTORY FIG. 6
HOT JUNCTION +20 HOT JUNCTION CURRENT TIME ISEC.)
v mEmF 20:022 0400 BACKGROUND The present invention relates to the intratube cooling of an internally mounted photoemissive device of an image intensifier device.
Prior image intensifiers utilized a cathode coating on a face of the image intensifier device. Cooling of the device was achieved by surrounding the device with cooling structure that was in heat conducting contact with its housing. If the photocathode was separately internally mounted within the tube, additionally, an airtight housing around the tube window was required to prevent window fogging.
SUMMARY The advantages of the instant solution to this problem, in addition to many other benefits, arem ade evident from the following summary:
1. direct cooling of thephotoemissive device produces faster tube response;
2. extremely light weight-less than 1% of the weight of an external cooler;
3. low power requirement-less than 10% of the power required by an external cooler;
4. no air-tight housing is required around the tube window;
5. smaller heat sink required only 10% of that re-' quired by external cooler;
' 6. possible to use thin film cooling elements produced, for example, by epitaxial growth, sputtering or evaporation;
7. by reversal of potential to the cooler's electrodes, the cathode may be heated for activation, cleaning or outgassing or other particular tube operation.
It is, therefore, the purpose of this invention to provide a cooling arrangement for an internally mounted photoemissive device which will be extremely light in weight and require dramatically reduced power requirements over that of any known external cooler arrangement.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS FIG. 1 represents a longitudinal cross-section of an image intensifier tubeincorporating the intra-tube Peltier cooling means,
FIG. 2 is a view of a modified photoemissive device- Peltier cooler combination in the image intensifier housing, 7
FIG. 3 is a Peltier cooler arrangement having a plural module, multiple stage configuration,
FIGS. 4, 5 and 6 show typical test results for the disclosed Peltier cooler of single stage configuration.
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference characters correspond to like elements in the following description, there can be seen in FIG. 1 an image intensifier 11 having a sealed housing 12. An optical window 13 receives input radiation that is to be transmitted through housing 12 for impingement upon a photoemissive device l5.' The photoemissive device 15 functions as a two-dimensional space current amplifier coupled to an output means 14 which may take the form of an electron coupler or, as specifically shown in FIG. 1, a phosphor coated element '16. Internally mountedand contacting the photoemissive element 15 can be seen the Peltier cooling apparatus. In this embodiment, the Peltier cooling apparatus comprises a cold junction element 17 disc-like in shape, and having a central aperture. The surface of the disc-like element is placed in face-to-face contact with the photoemissive element 15. P and N type semiconductor elements of the Peltier cooler are in the form of concentrically arranged, mutually insulated cylinders 18 and 19. One end of each of the two cylinders contacts the face of the disc-like cold junction 17 opposite that face of the cold junction that is in contact with the photoemissive element 15. The hot junction of the Peltier cooling device comprises a pair of conducting elements 20 and 21 in contact with the semi-conductor cylinders 18 and 19 respectively. These hot junction elements 20 and 21 penetrate the housing 12 and form the requisite power terminal for the Peltier cooler.
Turningnow to the modified cooler arrangement in FIG. 2, we find in the Peltier cooling device, a cold junction contact element 22 which is placed in thermal contact with the circumference of a photoemissive device 23. Surrounding the photoemissive device 23, and in contact with the cold junction 22, are a pair of discs 24 and 25 of semiconductor P-type and N-typ'e materials respectively. These discs as well as the other disclosed semiconductor pairs may be fabricated from such materials as PbTe, -Bi Se Bi Te or Sb Te which have high figures of merit (z). But, should it be necessary to sacrifice these high figure of merit materials for lower figure materials having higher temperature capability, resort may be had to such materials as silicon, germanium, boron-carbon, etc. But, as these lower figure of merit materials result in lower cooling increments, it may be necessary to increase the number of stages necessary to achieve a particular value of net cooling. The semiconductor material discs 24 and 25 areinsulated from each other. This is accomplished, for example, either by spacing them apart or by use of an insulating spacer 26. Contacting the outer perimeter of the discs 24 and 25 is the hot junction of the Peltier cooler formed from electrically and thermally conductive components 27and 28. These components extend through the walls of the sealed housing and provide the Peltier cooler with the necessary electrical power connections as well as a heat sink in the event that the housing 12 is itself not thermally conductive.
Should it be necessary to achieve a greater degree of cooling than can be accomplished with a single stage cooler, an internal Peltier cooler can be fabricated uti-' lizing a multi-stage arrangement in which an array of multistage modules are placed about the photoemissive device. Each module can be of the well known pyramid design wherein each stage progressing from the apex of extends through the housing wall 12 of the intensifier device. If the housing 12 is made of thermally conductive material, it alone can serve as the heat sink. Electrical contacts 34 are provided to power the Peltier cooler.
FIGS. 4, 5, and 6 represent test results of an internal Peltier cooler of the type shown in FIG. 2. As can be seen from the curves of cold junction temperature versus time, the required cooling time of the cold junction for the hot junction temperature maintained variously at 40, 23 and 2 Centigrade, drops increasingly rapidly as the current supplied to the hot junction terminals is increased; the cooling times being reckoned in seconds. The required cooling time for the disclosed device is therefore a small fraction of the cooling time of any known external cooler for a similar device.
Obviously, the invention may be practiced with numerous other- Peltier cooler arrangements mounted within the sealed housing of the image intensifier described. Therefore, it is understood that various changes, modifications and alterations may be accomplished within the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.
We claim:
1. A sealed internally cooled image intensifier device comprising:
a sealed housing having an optical window;
photoemissive means positioned within said housing;
intratube Peltier effect cooling means associated with said photoemissive means for direct cooling thereof; and
optical output means in optical alignment with said window and said photoemissive means.
2. An image intensifier device as in claim 1 wherein said Peltier effect cooling means comprises:
a cold junction element in thermal contact with said photoemissive means;
at least a pair of P and N type semiconductor elements i contact with said cold junction; and,
hot junction means comprising a pair of thermally and electrically conductive elements each respectively contacting one of said semiconductor elements and passing through said sealed housing,
25 photoemissive means mounted in said housing in optical alignment with said optical window and said optical output means;
Peltier cooling means in heat conducting contact with said photoemissive means, said cooling means comprising conductive cold junction means peripherally contacting said photoemissive means;
at least a pair of mutually insulated members of P- type and N-type semiconductor materials respectively in conducting contact with said cold junction means; and,
hot junction conductive means in contact with the outer periphery of said semiconductor members and extending through said sealed housing, thereby providing electrical and thermal feed thru to produce the Peltier cooling effect at said photoemissive means when connected to an electrical source.
1 t i i thereby providing external electrical contacts for the Peltier effect cooling device. 3. The device as in claim 2 wherein said semiconductor elements are disc-shaped and have a central aper- 5 ture peripherally contacting the cold junction element.
4. The device as in claim 2 wherein: said cold junction element comprises an apertured disc in face contact with said photoemissive means; and, said semiconductor elements comprise a pair of concentric cylinders each having a base in contact with a face of said cold junction element.
5. The device as in claim 2 wherein plural Peltier cooling modules are arrayed about and in contact with said cold junction.
6. The device as in claim 5 where said plural cooling modules each comprise multiple stages; the hot junction of each stage being cooled by the cold junction of the next suceeding stage.
7. An image intensifier tube containing an internally cooled photoemissive means and comprising:
a sealed housing having an optical window at one end of said housing and an optical output means at the opposite end thereof;
LII

Claims (7)

1. A sealed internally cooled image intensifier device comprising: a sealed housing having an optical window; photoemissive means positioned within said housing; intratube Peltier effect cooling means associated with said photoemissive means for direct cooling thereof; and optical output means in optical alignment with said window and said photoemissive means.
2. An image intensifier device as in claim 1 wherein said Peltier effect cooling means comprises: a cold junction element in thermal contact with said photoemissive means; at least a pair of P and N type semiconductor elements in contact with said cold junction; and, hot junction means comprising a pair of thermally and electrically conductive elements each respectively contacting one of said semiconductor elements and passing through said sealed housing, thereby providing external electrical contacts for the Peltier effect cooling device.
3. The device as in claim 2 wherein said semiconductor elements are disc-shaped and have a central aperture peripherally contacting the cold junction element.
4. The device as in claim 2 wherein: said cold junction element comprises an apertured disc in face contact with said photoemissive means; and, said semiconductor elements comprise a pair of concentric cylinders each having a base in contact with a face of said cold junction element.
5. The device as in claim 2 wherein plural Peltier cooling modules are arrayed about and in contact with said cold junction.
6. The device as in claim 5 where said plural cooling modules each comprise multiple stages; the hot junction of each stage being cooled by the cold junction of the next suceeding stage.
7. An image intensifier tube containing an internally cooled photoemissive means and comprising: a sealed housing having an optical window at one end of said housing and an optical output means at the opposite end thereof; photoemissive means mounted in said housing in optical alignment with said optical window and said optical output means; Peltier cooling means in heat conducting contact with said photoemissive means, said cooling means comprising conductive cold junction means peripherally contacting said photoemissive means; at least a pair of mutually insulated members of P-type and N-type semiconductor materials respectively in conducting contact with said cold junction means; and, hot junction conductive means in contact with the outer periphery of said semiconductor members and extending through said sealed housing, thereby providing electrical and thermal feed thru to produce the Peltier cooling effect at said photoemissive means when connected to an electrical source.
US00247313A 1972-04-25 1972-04-25 Internal tube peltier cooling of image intensification photocathodes Expired - Lifetime US3751709A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US24731372A 1972-04-25 1972-04-25

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3751709A true US3751709A (en) 1973-08-07

Family

ID=22934438

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US00247313A Expired - Lifetime US3751709A (en) 1972-04-25 1972-04-25 Internal tube peltier cooling of image intensification photocathodes

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3751709A (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5166777A (en) * 1987-04-22 1992-11-24 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Cooling apparatus for superconducting devices using Peltier effect cooling element
US5839284A (en) * 1995-10-04 1998-11-24 Raytheon Ti Systems, Inc. Image intensifier tv integral thermal control system
US7940005B1 (en) * 2007-11-08 2011-05-10 Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. Cooled photocathode structure

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3273347A (en) * 1965-06-14 1966-09-20 Thore M Elfving Thermoelectric heat pump assembly
US3316474A (en) * 1964-05-21 1967-04-25 Rosemount Eng Co Ltd Thermoelectric transformer
US3515924A (en) * 1967-09-21 1970-06-02 Zenith Radio Corp Support structure for photocathode subassembly of image intensifier
US3635037A (en) * 1969-09-02 1972-01-18 Buderus Eisenwerk Peltier-effect heat pump

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3316474A (en) * 1964-05-21 1967-04-25 Rosemount Eng Co Ltd Thermoelectric transformer
US3273347A (en) * 1965-06-14 1966-09-20 Thore M Elfving Thermoelectric heat pump assembly
US3515924A (en) * 1967-09-21 1970-06-02 Zenith Radio Corp Support structure for photocathode subassembly of image intensifier
US3635037A (en) * 1969-09-02 1972-01-18 Buderus Eisenwerk Peltier-effect heat pump

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US5166777A (en) * 1987-04-22 1992-11-24 Sharp Kabushiki Kaisha Cooling apparatus for superconducting devices using Peltier effect cooling element
US5839284A (en) * 1995-10-04 1998-11-24 Raytheon Ti Systems, Inc. Image intensifier tv integral thermal control system
US7940005B1 (en) * 2007-11-08 2011-05-10 Itt Manufacturing Enterprises, Inc. Cooled photocathode structure

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4859250A (en) Thermoelectric pillow and blanket
US4039352A (en) High efficiency thermoelectric generator for the direct conversion of heat into electrical energy
US3129116A (en) Thermoelectric device
US3128419A (en) Semiconductor device with a thermal stress equalizing plate
WO2013129057A1 (en) Thermoelectric module, thermoelectric power generating apparatus, and thermoelectric power generator
US3326727A (en) Thermopile module with displacement permitting slotted thermojunction members
US3539399A (en) Bellows-loaded thermoelectric module
US3543842A (en) Device for elastic and heat conducting connection of thermo-couples
US3814964A (en) External photodetector cooling techniques
JPH02297857A (en) Conduction cooling microchannel plate electron multiplier
US3751709A (en) Internal tube peltier cooling of image intensification photocathodes
US3127749A (en) Thermoelectric refrigeration
US3036234A (en) Electron discharge devices employing secondary electron emission
US3289422A (en) Cooling apparatus for infrared detecting system
US3723189A (en) Thermoelectric device
US3524772A (en) Generator of electrical energy
US3176164A (en) High vacuum thermionic converter
US3757151A (en) Internal cooling for photodetectors
GB916952A (en) Thermoelectric assembly
US2977399A (en) Thermoelectric materials
US3538356A (en) Energy converter
GB1029277A (en) Improved multistage thermoelectric cooling device
US3018312A (en) Thermoelectric materials
GB1013265A (en) Thermoelectric device assembly
GB1025687A (en) Improvements in thermo-electric devices