[go: up one dir, main page]

US2008545A - Electrical oscillation circuits - Google Patents

Electrical oscillation circuits Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2008545A
US2008545A US621470A US62147032A US2008545A US 2008545 A US2008545 A US 2008545A US 621470 A US621470 A US 621470A US 62147032 A US62147032 A US 62147032A US 2008545 A US2008545 A US 2008545A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
electrodes
source
discharge device
cathode
negative glow
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
US621470A
Inventor
Dobke Gunther
Kotowski Paul
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.)
General Electric Co
Original Assignee
General Electric Co
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 General Electric Co filed Critical General Electric Co
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2008545A publication Critical patent/US2008545A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03BGENERATION OF OSCILLATIONS, DIRECTLY OR BY FREQUENCY-CHANGING, BY CIRCUITS EMPLOYING ACTIVE ELEMENTS WHICH OPERATE IN A NON-SWITCHING MANNER; GENERATION OF NOISE BY SUCH CIRCUITS
    • H03B7/00Generation of oscillations using active element having a negative resistance between two of its electrodes
    • H03B7/02Generation of oscillations using active element having a negative resistance between two of its electrodes with frequency-determining element comprising lumped inductance and capacitance
    • H03B7/10Generation of oscillations using active element having a negative resistance between two of its electrodes with frequency-determining element comprising lumped inductance and capacitance active element being gas-discharge or arc-discharge tube
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S84/00Music
    • Y10S84/20Monophonic

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to electrical oscillation circuits adapted to generate waves of the frequency corresponding or similar to the frequency of the sound waves generated by various musical instruments and more particularly the invention relates to such circuits comprising an electric discharge device in which the electric discharge is of the negative glow type.
  • the object of the present invention is to provide a gaseous electric discharge device of the negative glow type useful in electrical'oscillation circuits adapted to generate waves of the frequency corresponding to the frequency of the sound waves produced by a musical instrument in which the negative glow discharge has substanotially constant electrical characteristics.
  • the invention comprises an electric discharge device of the negative glow type in which the electrodes are concentric, the cathode is the electrode of greater diameter and the discharge path between said electrodes is completely surrounded by electrically conducting material.
  • the maximum frequency of the waves generated by an electrical oscillation circuit comprising an electric discharge device of the negative glow type, which may be satisfactorily employed for tone production, is increased from 5,000 cycles, which has been the maximum heretofore, to 15,000 cycles, when the negative glow lamp is made in accordance with this invention.
  • FIG. 1 is a sectional front elevational view of the negative glow electric discharge device the oscillation circuit incorporating said device being shown schematically, a
  • Fig 2. is an elevational view of a negative glow electric discharge device having a different structure useful in the present invention and Fig. 3 is a similar view of another electric discharge device useful in the invention.
  • the oscillation circuit comprises a negative glow electric discharge device and a condenser 2 connected in parallel therewith.
  • Leads 1 and 8 connect the electrodes 9 and III of said electric discharge device to the terminals 3 and 4 of a or 220 volt direct current source.
  • An audio-transformer 6 is connected into said lead 1 and a variable resistance 5 is connected into said lead 8.
  • the above oscillation circuit is more or less standard and the electrical characteristics and values of the electric discharge device, the condenser 2 and the audio-transformer 6 are constant; the adjustment of variable resistance 5 controlling the generation of the electrical frequency desired.
  • a jack II is connected to leads i2 and it of the audio-transformer 6 and the above oscillation circuit, adapted to generate waves of the desired frequency, is connected to a standard audio-circuit by jack H.
  • the negative discharge device illustrated in Fig. 1 comprises a glass container I having a filling of discharge conducting gas therein, such as neon, and a rod shaped anode I0 and a cylindrical cathode 9 sealed therein, said electrodes 9 and III are concentric.
  • the inner wall of said container I has a coating ll of getter material, such as magnesium, and said coating H is electrically connected to said cathode 9 by lead l5. Having this structure the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge in said device are substantial constant which eliminates the scratching sound heretofore characteristic of such oscillation circuits when connected to an audio-circuit and the circuit is capable of generating waves of a frequency up to about 15,000 cycles, which are of satisfactory character for musical tone production.
  • the negative glow electric discharge device illustrated in Fig. 2 is used in the oscillation circuit when desired.
  • a cage I 'l of electrically conducting material completely surrounds the discharge path between said electrodes 9 and i0 and said cage I! is electrically grounded by lead l8.
  • a tab i9 containing getter material such as magnesium is attached to said cage H.
  • the structure of this electric discharge device is in other respects similar to that shown in Fig. l and its electrical operating characteristics are the same.
  • Fig. 3 another type of negative glow useful in the invention is shown.
  • the coating ll of "getter material, such as magnesium. is connected by lead 20 as the cathode.
  • a possible explanation of the substantially constant electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge in the devices illustrated and described is that their mechanical resonance is so high that it does not disturb the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge.
  • Another possible explanation is that the path of the electric discharge in the device is entirely surrounded by metal coating II or cage it so that wall charges on the inner walls of the container do not affect the starting voltage of the-negative glow discharge. Wall or space charges of this nature have a very disturbing effect on the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge as is shown by touching an oscillating tube in which the discharge is not surrounded by metal; this invariably changes the tone produced by the audio-circuit.
  • the acceleration of the deionization of the gas by the metal wall l l or cage ll contributes to the extension upward of the frequency bands of the waves generated by the oscillation circuit while the mechanical rigidity of the electrodes contributes to the purity of tone of the notes generated by the audio-circuit connected to the oscillation circuit.
  • a negative glow electric discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potential and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load, each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes,- said load including a musical sound producing device, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, and means within said discharge device to reduce the production of undesired sounds by said musical sound producing device.
  • a negative glow electron discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potential, and a second electrode connected to.
  • said electrodes said load including a musical sound producing deviceja condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, and means within said discharge device to reduce the production of undesired sounds by said musical sound producing device, said means comprising a body of electrically conducting material connected to said cathode and completely enclosing the discharge between said electrodes.
  • an oscillation generator the combination of a source of unidirectional potential, a negative glow electron discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source, and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load device each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said glow discharge device comprising a body of electrically conducting ma.- terial having the form of a coating on an envelope enclosing the electrodes of said discharge device, and a connection between said coating and one of said electrodes whereby said oscillation generator produces frequencies over a wide continuous band with'a minimum of undesired scratching noises.
  • a source of unidirectional potential 9. negative glow electron discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source of unidirectional potential, and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load device each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising a cathode and an anode, and a coating of electricalLv conductingrnaterial applied to and completely covering the inner walls of an envelope enclosing said electrodes, said anode being surrounded by said coating.
  • a resistance and a load device each connected in circuit with said source and said cathode and anode, said anode being concentrically arranged within said cathode and said cathode and anode being surrounded by a body of conducting material conductively connected with Said cathode.

Landscapes

  • Lasers (AREA)

Description

J 6, 1935. e. DOBKE ET AL ELECTRICAL OSCILLATI ON CIRCUITS 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Filed July 8, 1932 INVENTORS WM WW BY M00660 ATTORNEY .Iuly l6,' 1935.
G. DOBKE ET AL 2,008,545
ELECTRICAL OSCILLATION CIRCUITS Filed July 8, 1932 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 INVENTORS M 06 ATTORNEY Patented July 16, 1935 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE Kotowski, Berlin,
York
Germany, eral Electric Company,
asaignors to Gena corporation of New Application July 8, 1932, Serial No. 621,470 In Germany July 8, 1931 'IClalms.
The present invention relates generally to electrical oscillation circuits adapted to generate waves of the frequency corresponding or similar to the frequency of the sound waves generated by various musical instruments and more particularly the invention relates to such circuits comprising an electric discharge device in which the electric discharge is of the negative glow type.
It has been found difficult heretofore in such oscillation circuits comprising a negative glow electric discharge device to generate waves of such frequency that high, medium or low notes of pure tone were produced by the audio-circuit to which the oscillation circuit is connected. A scratching sound was generated which was caused by the continual changes taking place in the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge and large gaps appeared in the frequency band of the oscillation circuit, these being partlcularly noticeable in the high frequency end of the band.
The object of the present invention is to provide a gaseous electric discharge device of the negative glow type useful in electrical'oscillation circuits adapted to generate waves of the frequency corresponding to the frequency of the sound waves produced by a musical instrument in which the negative glow discharge has substanotially constant electrical characteristics. Further objects and advantages attaching to the device and to its use and operation will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the following particular description and from the appended claims.
In accordance with these objects the invention comprises an electric discharge device of the negative glow type in which the electrodes are concentric, the cathode is the electrode of greater diameter and the discharge path between said electrodes is completely surrounded by electrically conducting material. The maximum frequency of the waves generated by an electrical oscillation circuit comprising an electric discharge device of the negative glow type, which may be satisfactorily employed for tone production, is increased from 5,000 cycles, which has been the maximum heretofore, to 15,000 cycles, when the negative glow lamp is made in accordance with this invention.
In the drawings accompanying and forming part of this specification an embodiment of the invention is shown in which Fig. 1 is a sectional front elevational view of the negative glow electric discharge device the oscillation circuit incorporating said device being shown schematically, a
Fig 2. is an elevational view of a negative glow electric discharge device having a different structure useful in the present invention and Fig. 3 is a similar view of another electric discharge device useful in the invention.
Like numbers denote like parts in all views of the device. The circuit connections are indicated as the same in each of the different figures.
Referring to Fig. 1 of the drawings the oscillation circuit comprises a negative glow electric discharge device and a condenser 2 connected in parallel therewith. Leads 1 and 8 connect the electrodes 9 and III of said electric discharge device to the terminals 3 and 4 of a or 220 volt direct current source. An audio-transformer 6 is connected into said lead 1 and a variable resistance 5 is connected into said lead 8. The above oscillation circuit is more or less standard and the electrical characteristics and values of the electric discharge device, the condenser 2 and the audio-transformer 6 are constant; the adjustment of variable resistance 5 controlling the generation of the electrical frequency desired. A jack II is connected to leads i2 and it of the audio-transformer 6 and the above oscillation circuit, adapted to generate waves of the desired frequency, is connected to a standard audio-circuit by jack H.
The negative discharge device illustrated in Fig. 1 comprises a glass container I having a filling of discharge conducting gas therein, such as neon, and a rod shaped anode I0 and a cylindrical cathode 9 sealed therein, said electrodes 9 and III are concentric. The inner wall of said container I has a coating ll of getter material, such as magnesium, and said coating H is electrically connected to said cathode 9 by lead l5. Having this structure the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge in said device are substantial constant which eliminates the scratching sound heretofore characteristic of such oscillation circuits when connected to an audio-circuit and the circuit is capable of generating waves of a frequency up to about 15,000 cycles, which are of satisfactory character for musical tone production.
The negative glow electric discharge device illustrated in Fig. 2 is used in the oscillation circuit when desired. In this electric discharge device a cage I 'l of electrically conducting material completely surrounds the discharge path between said electrodes 9 and i0 and said cage I! is electrically grounded by lead l8. A tab i9 containing getter material such as magnesium is attached to said cage H. The structure of this electric discharge device is in other respects similar to that shown in Fig. l and its electrical operating characteristics are the same.
In Fig. 3 another type of negative glow useful in the invention is shown. In the device illustrated the coating ll of "getter material, such as magnesium. is connected by lead 20 as the cathode.
A possible explanation of the substantially constant electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge in the devices illustrated and described is that their mechanical resonance is so high that it does not disturb the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge. Another possible explanation is that the path of the electric discharge in the device is entirely surrounded by metal coating II or cage it so that wall charges on the inner walls of the container do not affect the starting voltage of the-negative glow discharge. Wall or space charges of this nature have a very disturbing effect on the electrical characteristics of the negative glow discharge as is shown by touching an oscillating tube in which the discharge is not surrounded by metal; this invariably changes the tone produced by the audio-circuit. The acceleration of the deionization of the gas by the metal wall l l or cage ll contributes to the extension upward of the frequency bands of the waves generated by the oscillation circuit while the mechanical rigidity of the electrodes contributes to the purity of tone of the notes generated by the audio-circuit connected to the oscillation circuit.
While we have shown and described and have pointed out in theiannexed claims certain novel features of the invention, it will be understood that various omissions, substitutions and changes in the forms and details of the devices illustrated and in their use and operation may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the broad spirit and scope of the invention.
What we claim as new and desire to secure by Letters Patent of the United States is:-
1. The combination, in an oscillation generator adapted to generate frequencies corresponding to high, medium, and low notes in the musical scale, of a source ofunidirectional potential, a negative glow electron discharge device'having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potcntial and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source of potential, a resistance and a load device each included in ciredit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, and means within said discharge device comprising a surface of conducting material completely surrounding the space between said electrodes to render said oscillation generator operative over a continuous range of frequencies including frequencies'corresponding to said high, medium, and low notes in the musical scale, and to remove undesired scratching sounds during the production of said notes.
2. The combination, in an oscillation generator adapted to generate frequencies corresponding to high, medium, and low notes in the musical scale, of a source of unidirectional potential", a nega= tive glow electric discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potential and an electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load device each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, means within said discharge device to render said oscillation generator operative over a continuous range of frequencies including frequencies corresponding to said high, medium, and low notes in the musical scale, and to reduce the production of undesired sounds during the production otdesired frequencies corresponding to said notes, said means comprising a body of electrically conducting material connected with said cathode and completely enclosing the discharge between said electrodes.
3. The combination, in an oscillation generator of a source of unidirectional potential, a negative glow electric discharge device, having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potential and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load, each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes,- said load including a musical sound producing device, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, and means within said discharge device to reduce the production of undesired sounds by said musical sound producing device. q
4. The combination, in an oscillation generator of a source of unidirectional potential, a negative glow electron discharge device, having an electrode connected to one side of said source of potential, and a second electrode connected to.
the opposite side of said source of potential, a resistance, and a load, each included in circuit with said source and. said electrodes, said load including a musical sound producing deviceja condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising concentrically arranged cathode and anode, said cathode having greater diameter than said anode, and means within said discharge device to reduce the production of undesired sounds by said musical sound producing device, said means comprising a body of electrically conducting material connected to said cathode and completely enclosing the discharge between said electrodes.
5. In an oscillation generator, the combination of a source of unidirectional potential, a negative glow electron discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source, and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load device each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said glow discharge device comprising a body of electrically conducting ma.- terial having the form of a coating on an envelope enclosing the electrodes of said discharge device, and a connection between said coating and one of said electrodes whereby said oscillation generator produces frequencies over a wide continuous band with'a minimum of undesired scratching noises.
6.. In an oscillation generator, the combination of a source of unidirectional potential, 9. negative glow electron discharge device having an electrode connected to one side of said source of unidirectional potential, and a second electrode connected to the opposite side of said source, a resistance and a load device each included in circuit with said source and said electrodes, a condenser connected between said electrodes, said electrodes comprising a cathode and an anode, and a coating of electricalLv conductingrnaterial applied to and completely covering the inner walls of an envelope enclosing said electrodes, said anode being surrounded by said coating.
7. In an oscillation generator, the combination of a source of unidirectional potential, a negative glow electron discharge device having a cathode connected to one side of said source, and
an anode connected to the opposite side of said.
source, a resistance and a load device each connected in circuit with said source and said cathode and anode, said anode being concentrically arranged within said cathode and said cathode and anode being surrounded by a body of conducting material conductively connected with Said cathode.
GUNTHER DOBKE. PAUL KO'I'OWSKI.
US621470A 1931-07-08 1932-07-08 Electrical oscillation circuits Expired - Lifetime US2008545A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
DE2008545X 1931-07-08

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2008545A true US2008545A (en) 1935-07-16

Family

ID=7951093

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US621470A Expired - Lifetime US2008545A (en) 1931-07-08 1932-07-08 Electrical oscillation circuits

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2008545A (en)

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2462919A (en) * 1944-08-23 1949-03-01 Robert W Stolzenbach Method of corona measurement
US2523287A (en) * 1947-11-21 1950-09-26 Friedman Herbert Voltage regulator
US2701849A (en) * 1944-04-22 1955-02-08 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Glow discharge tube
US2801389A (en) * 1952-11-18 1957-07-30 Ernest G Linder High energy bombardment-inducedconductivity control of electrical circuits
US3162741A (en) * 1960-03-11 1964-12-22 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Overvoltage arrestor having a light dispersion of fine metallic dust on its inside walls
US3209197A (en) * 1959-08-14 1965-09-28 Philips Corp Gaseous glow-discharge tube with monocrystalline metal cathode

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2701849A (en) * 1944-04-22 1955-02-08 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Glow discharge tube
US2462919A (en) * 1944-08-23 1949-03-01 Robert W Stolzenbach Method of corona measurement
US2523287A (en) * 1947-11-21 1950-09-26 Friedman Herbert Voltage regulator
US2801389A (en) * 1952-11-18 1957-07-30 Ernest G Linder High energy bombardment-inducedconductivity control of electrical circuits
US3209197A (en) * 1959-08-14 1965-09-28 Philips Corp Gaseous glow-discharge tube with monocrystalline metal cathode
US3162741A (en) * 1960-03-11 1964-12-22 Ericsson Telefon Ab L M Overvoltage arrestor having a light dispersion of fine metallic dust on its inside walls

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2571019A (en) Electrical coupling system for magnetostrictive elements
US2008545A (en) Electrical oscillation circuits
US2032620A (en) Electron discharge apparatus
US2692350A (en) Discharge lamp and electrode
US1629009A (en) Low-impedance electric discharge device
US2465801A (en) Ultra high frequency apparatus
US2847516A (en) Transducer
US2228276A (en) Electrical gaseous discharge device
US2168924A (en) Oscillator system
US1986397A (en) Space discharge tube having a negative resistance characteristic
US2443907A (en) High-frequency cavity resonator apparatus
US1289823A (en) Electric-discharge-controlling device and method of operating the same.
US2027073A (en) Electricity-controlled musical instrument
US2200330A (en) Ultra short wave frequency multiplier
US2397701A (en) Frequency control in ultra high frequency circuit
US2240788A (en) Electric oscillation generator
US2491391A (en) Electronic transducer
US2745011A (en) Very high frequency gas discharge noise source
US1986599A (en) Frequency stabilizing means
US2813997A (en) Electron discharge device
US1604986A (en) Alternating-current generator
US2456422A (en) High-frequency oscillator
US1871537A (en) Electron discharge device
US1998091A (en) Electron discharge device
US1661830A (en) Electron-discharge device