US2279872A - Diode oscillator - Google Patents
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- US2279872A US2279872A US319415A US31941540A US2279872A US 2279872 A US2279872 A US 2279872A US 319415 A US319415 A US 319415A US 31941540 A US31941540 A US 31941540A US 2279872 A US2279872 A US 2279872A
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J25/00—Transit-time tubes, e.g. klystrons, travelling-wave tubes, magnetrons
- H01J25/74—Tubes specially designed to act as transit-time diode oscillators, e.g. monotrons
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H03—ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
- H03B—GENERATION 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
- H03B9/00—Generation of oscillations using transit-time effects
- H03B9/01—Generation of oscillations using transit-time effects using discharge tubes
Definitions
- This invention relates to oscillators where the Wave-lengths contemplated may be as short as 10 centimeters and under when desired, therefore extending to a wave-length range in which, before the advent of the principle here utilized, it has been impracticable to operate. More specifically, the invention relates to what are known in the ultra-short wave art as diode oscillators and therefore to the configuration of two electrodes in an evacuated space and the relative mechanical and electrical design of an associated resonating system whereby the organization as a whole is adapted to generate stable waves of the type above indicated.
- the principal object of the invention is to provide a stable frequency oscillator capable of generating waves of the order of 10 centimeters and less long.
- Subsidiary objects of the invention are to improve the operational characteristics of pre-existing diode oscillators to the extent of providing greaterfrequency stability, increased energy out put and better modulation, and to improve their structures in the interest of increased facility of manufacture, longer life, and adaptability, by extension of the principle to variant alternative forms, to a greater variety of uses.
- An object of the invention specific to the species of the parent application here to be dis closed, namely, that illustrated by Fig. 6 of said parent application, is the utilization of an associated resonating system, as characterized in the opening paragraph of this specification, having the characteristics of a wave guide, to the extent that the two electrodes which give the name to the invention are efiectively the terminal elements of such a wave guide, this specific form of resonating system being alternative to other forms of resonating systems and cavity resonators disclosed in the parent application and having the specific advantages which characterize generally the use of a wave guide in Whatever environment it may be used.
- resonant wave guide and "cavity resonator is not to be construed as indicating a fundamental distinction between them for practically either may with propriety be substituted for the other in the lan uage of the specification and appended claims.
- Cavity resonators may take various shapes and one is that of a section of wave guide which is made short or is partitioned off from the balance of a long guide so that it has resonant properties.
- the more general term cavity resonator is often applied to cavity type structures not obviously in the form of a portion of wave guide or other distinctively named device.
- a resonant wave guide may not necessarily appear to be of the cavity type.
- the order of wave-length within the contemplation of the present invention is such as effectively to annul the operation of the regenerative principle on which most electron discharge oscillators have depended in the past. Neither is the ultra-short wave diode principle analagous to that underlying the operation of negative resistances of the common arc, or the ionized discharge, or the secondary emission type, nor may such prior art types of negative resistance be utilized for the short wave-lengths here in mind. Still further, the principle of the invention is not strictly comparable even with those of the so-called Barkhausen and magnetron oscillators or their variants and derivatives although such types of oscillators perhaps most nearly approximate that of the invention as to order of Wavelengths generated.
- a diode oscillator of the invention could be thought of as the end product of a radical evolution beginning with the Barkhausen oscillator and involving an avoidance of the usual negative plate thereof and a violent reorganization of the resultant two electrodes and the electrical and mechanical dimensions of their immediately associated structures.
- the diode oscillator of the invention comprises two electrodes in an evacuated space, the negative resistance imputed to the space therebetween being a function of certain precise conditions affecting the electrodes. For instance, there must be a uniform flow of electrons from one such electrode, which simulates to that extent the function of the usual electron. tube cathode, to the other electrode on which a positive potential is impressed relatively smooth, relatively flat surfaces. To promote fur,
- the anode surface should be very closely equidistant at all points from that of the cathode, that the two surfaces should be uniformly spaced.
- the interelectrode space, above cited as the negative resistance strictly partakes of the electrical characteristics of a circuit constituted by a negative resistance and a capacitance in series; therefore, the perpetuation of the oscillations implied by the negative resistance, per se, requires that this capacitance be constituted a part of a series resonant circuit the resistance of which, that is, the positive resistance of which, is less than the negative resistance imputed to the electrode space.
- the consummation of the invention results from the design of an inductive reactance so electrically dimensioned as to resonate with the interelectrode capacitance and which is almost wholly devoid of resistance.
- the inductor of said reactance because of this necessary condition, that is, because of its very high ratio of reactance to resistance at the oscillation frequency which ratio is sometimes denominated "62, tends to be very distinctive not only in its design but also in its physical appearance.
- the diode electrodes are constituted by the uniformly spaced opposed end surfaces of a closed hollow disc-like structure, the remaining structure of which is constituted by the connecting sidewall of the disc.
- the structure is here characterized as fdisc-like," consistently with the specific illustration, Fig. 6 of the parent application.
- the axial length of the disc thatis, the uniform spacing of the electrodes, is not critical except as it must conform with the enunciated a little later. Therefore such axial 'physical laws prescribing the transit time to be length might be such as to change the appearance of the structure from disc-like to that more nearly approaching an electrical conduit or rigid transmission line and therefore a conventionalized wave guide.
- the structure does have the electrical characteristic of a wave guide so that, to all intent and purposes the invention, according to this species, is a diode orcillator in which the electrodes constitute the terminal elements of the wave guide, the wave guide providing the requisite resonating system.
- an electron stream flows through an evacuated region in a conducting cavity (effectively a wave guide) which is resonant at the desired frequency, and the electron speed is such that the time. which is required for the electrons to traverse the wave guide is approximately l 2 3%, etc. cycles.
- Fig. l is a duplicate of Fig. 6 of the parent application and illustrates, partially diagrammatically and in section, the above characterized embodiment of the invention as expressed in a diode oscillator of the type in which the resonating system comprises effectively a resonant wave guide with the diode electrodes constituting the opposed end surfaces whereby the electrons traverse the waveguide in a direction parallel to its axis; and
- Fig. 2 is an alternative disclosure of the wave guide portion of the structure of Fig. 1 extended in an axial direction to indicate that, without any change in essential function or structure, the
- resonating system may have relative dimensions more nearly approximating the conventional idea of a wave guide although, as has been indicated, there is nothing in the theory or application of wave guides limiting its relative dimensions in any way.
- this Fig. 2 distinctly does not constitutenew matter or affect the characterization as above of this application as a division of the parent application from which Fig. 1 has been bodily taken.
- the general method of attack in the development of a diode within which a negative resistance oc :urs, and the relative development of associated circuits and structure so as to perpetuate the oscillations implied by the negative re sistance involves, as a first. step, the finding of the power generated by the negative resistance, assuming an arbitrary magnitude for the high frequency current through it, and then'the computing of the power dissipated in all of the positive resistances of the system by the currents flowing through them. For the production of oscillations this latter power must,,of course, be less than the former. There are other necessary conditions and necessary steps in the development.
- the electrodes in the present disclosed species constituting opposed end surfaces of a resonant wave guide structure, do not have to be other than uniformly spaced, although the simplest expression of the principle of uniform spacing is a system of parallel plane electrodes.
- Fig. 1 of the parent application is one instance of this plane electrode type of diode oscillator and the analysis used in the parent application, as illusconvenience adapted for this particular type of diode, is applicable to the like type of diode oscillator here disclosed except as will be indicated later and therefore need not be repeated here except in summary.
- the inductance tends to assume the characteristics of a rigid tank or capsule structure; in the particular species to be here disclosed, it has more nearly the form of a hollow disc or resonant wave guide. As has been pointed out it has all of the electrical characteristics of such a wave guide or wave guide section, which it is in fact. While ideally, the resultant structure is completely closed, so as to avoid wastage. of energy by radiation into space, for practical reasons there must be a division to enable a difference of potential to be set up between portions of the structure constituting the diode electrodes.
- an output circuit may be provided to receive the energy of the diode oscillator alternatively to the radiation of energy from the openings implied by such break in the continuity.
- Fig. 1 shows diagrammatically a form of par-- allel plane diode which, as a class, may be considered distinctive from the class to which belong the modifications illustrated by the early numbered figures of the parent application (which, however, belong to the same broad class of diode oscillators) in that there is less of an appearance, but not less of an actuality, of an effective resonant circuit or cavity comprising the electrodes and their immediately associated structure.
- This class of diode oscillator has sometimes been denominated disc diode oscillator, signifying that in their simple forms these diode oscillators consist merely of two parallel discs, one of which constitutes the electron emitting cathode and the other the anode. As before, the electron discharge occurs between the cathode surface C and the opposing anode surface A, so that there exists a negative resistance in series with a capacitance between the two surfaces.
- This impedance configuration is continuous for each and every element of area of the electron discharge and, taken in conjunction with the impedance properties which the surfaces themselves present to tangential current flow, forms the admittance and impedance elements of an electrical transmission line, having in this instance extension in two dimensions as distinguished from the more familiar transmission line having its extension in one dimension only.
- Fig. 1 the significance. of the structure of the various other parts is believed to be. obvious from a consideration of the specification of the parent application, except as to be pointed out.
- Fig. 2 is introduced into this drawing as tending to show the proportions of the structure above denominated disc may be varied without violation of any teaching of the invention.
- the disc structure of Fig. 1 extended in axial length to approximate the appearance of a wave guide as the public tends to mentally picture such wave guide.
- the two figures taken together therefore indicate the complete independence from rigid limitations of physical proportions within the limitations imposed by theoretical considerations that have been pointed out. As a matter of fact these theoretical considerations may very easily make possible a structure having the approximate proportions 'of those shown in this Fig. 2.
- the details of both figures will now be explained, with particular reference to Fig. 1 because the labeling is confined thereto.
- disc or wave guide is constituted by the above described cathode and anode surfaces. Necessarily, the diameters of these two surfaces are equal, although there is nothing very critical governing this relation.
- the diameter of the discs is a certain proportion of the free-space wave-length A
- the discs themselves in view of the extended properties of transmission lines in two dimensions as described in the above paragraph, constitute a resonant system and determine the oscillation frequency.
- the diameter may be either 0.766, 1.757, 2.755, etc.
- the gap 1 which efiectively conductively isolates the cathode and anode shown in Fig. 1, is remote from the rim of the capsule or disc and is therefore located where the lines of force are substantially perpendicular to the gap, so that only asmall amount of radiation can escape.
- Another distinctive feature of the diode oscillator of Fig. l is the half wave-length line constituted by the structure 45 which surrounds the emitting cathode surface. This insures that only the coated portion of the lower disc operates at high temperature and hence that electron emission can take place only in the region intended so that the electron stream tends to possess the uniform characteristics that are favorable to the production of stable diode oscillations.
- the purpose of making the line exactly a half wave-length long, rather than some other dimension in terms of wave-length is to prevent this line from introducing reactance into the circuit and thereby upsetting the reasonance calculations based on the disc diameters. This is in accordance with now well-known theory of transmission lines of this order of length.
- a diode oscillator comprising two uniformly spaced plane surfaces in an evacuated space and at least in part constituting cathode and anode elements, said surfaces also in efiect constituting the opposed end surfaces of a cavity resonator otherwise constituted by a connecting single cylindrical surface, means insulatingly dividing said resonator whereby a difference of potential may be maintained between said cathode and anode elements, said endsurfaces of the resonator being so dimensionedthat it tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said end surfaces in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance between said end surfaces, the positive resistance therebetween being less than said negative resistance.
- a diode oscillator comprising a cavity resonator of a single cylinder form, uniformly spaced, opposed, planar end closure elements for said resonator, and means electrically segregating desired portions of said end members from the remaining portions thereof and further means constituting said segregated portions the cathode and anode elements of a diode oscillator.
- a diode oscillator comprising a cylindrical surface bounded by plane end surfaces normal to the generatrix of said surface, means constituting said end surfaces at least in part cathode and anode surfaces, whereby said end surfaces with the cylindrical connecting surface constitute a resonant wave guide structure, means enclosing said structure in an evacuated space, means insulatingly dividing said wave guide structure whereby a difference of potential may be maintained between said cathode and anode surfaces, said wave guide end surfaces being so dimensioned that the wave guide tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said surfaces in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance between said surfaces, the positive resistance of the wave guide structure being less than said negative resistance.
- a diode oscillator comprising two conductive elements each in turn comprising at least in part a planar portion uniformly spaced from the corresponding portion of the other said element, means constituting said planar portions, at least in part, anode and cathode elements, said planar portions being so dimensioned with reference to a desired frequency, exclusively of all other dimensions, that the resultant structure tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said anode and cathode elements in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance therebetween, the positive resistance therebetween being less than said negative resistance.
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Description
April 14, 1942. F. B. LLEWELLYN DIODE OSCILLATOR Original Filed July 31, 1937 lNVENTOR By EB. LLEWELLy/V ATTORNEY Patented Apr. 14, 1942 DIODE OSCILLATOR Frederick Llewellyn, Verona, N. J., assignor to Bell Telephone Laboratories, Incorporated, New York, N. Y., a corporation of New York Original application July 31, 1937, Serial No.
156,647, now Patent No. 2,190,668, dated February 20, 1940. Divided and this application February 17, 1940, Serial No. 319,415
7 Claims.
This invention relates to oscillators where the Wave-lengths contemplated may be as short as 10 centimeters and under when desired, therefore extending to a wave-length range in which, before the advent of the principle here utilized, it has been impracticable to operate. More specifically, the invention relates to what are known in the ultra-short wave art as diode oscillators and therefore to the configuration of two electrodes in an evacuated space and the relative mechanical and electrical design of an associated resonating system whereby the organization as a whole is adapted to generate stable waves of the type above indicated.
This application is a division of copending application Serial No. 156,647, filed July 31, 1937, now Patent 2,190,668, issued February 20, 1940.
It is believed that applicants invention illustrates a maturity of development of diode oscillators not heretofore approximated in the art. The uniqueness and distinctive characterof his invention results from his having been able to combine an electron discharge with low-loss circuit configurations and to analyze the prior art circuits and provide quantitative electrical and mechanical dimensions, configurations, etc. as above, so as to be able to predetermine the characteristics of operation of his oscillator.
Accordingly, the principal object of the invention is to provide a stable frequency oscillator capable of generating waves of the order of 10 centimeters and less long.
Subsidiary objects of the invention are to improve the operational characteristics of pre-existing diode oscillators to the extent of providing greaterfrequency stability, increased energy out put and better modulation, and to improve their structures in the interest of increased facility of manufacture, longer life, and adaptability, by extension of the principle to variant alternative forms, to a greater variety of uses.
An object of the invention specific to the species of the parent application here to be dis closed, namely, that illustrated by Fig. 6 of said parent application, is the utilization of an associated resonating system, as characterized in the opening paragraph of this specification, having the characteristics of a wave guide, to the extent that the two electrodes which give the name to the invention are efiectively the terminal elements of such a wave guide, this specific form of resonating system being alternative to other forms of resonating systems and cavity resonators disclosed in the parent application and having the specific advantages which characterize generally the use of a wave guide in Whatever environment it may be used.
The use, such as above, of the two terms resonant wave guide and "cavity resonator is not to be construed as indicating a fundamental distinction between them for practically either may with propriety be substituted for the other in the lan uage of the specification and appended claims. Cavity resonators may take various shapes and one is that of a section of wave guide which is made short or is partitioned off from the balance of a long guide so that it has resonant properties. The more general term cavity resonator is often applied to cavity type structures not obviously in the form of a portion of wave guide or other distinctively named device. However, a resonant wave guide may not necessarily appear to be of the cavity type. This is exemplified by a relatively short wave guide with open ends. It is apparent that all resonant circuits whether of the cavity type termed cavity resonator, a resonant Wave guide, a tuned Leoher system, a tuned coaxial line or a combination of lumped inductance and capacity may function similarly in an electric circuit. The wave guide or cavity type of structure possesses several advantages over other forms of resonant circuit,
among which are: that radiation is more readily controlled or prevented and that the conducting material is more favorably distributed to minimize circuit resistance.
The order of wave-length within the contemplation of the present invention is such as effectively to annul the operation of the regenerative principle on which most electron discharge oscillators have depended in the past. Neither is the ultra-short wave diode principle analagous to that underlying the operation of negative resistances of the common arc, or the ionized discharge, or the secondary emission type, nor may such prior art types of negative resistance be utilized for the short wave-lengths here in mind. Still further, the principle of the invention is not strictly comparable even with those of the so-called Barkhausen and magnetron oscillators or their variants and derivatives although such types of oscillators perhaps most nearly approximate that of the invention as to order of Wavelengths generated. In a certain aspect of the invention, a diode oscillator of the invention could be thought of as the end product of a radical evolution beginning with the Barkhausen oscillator and involving an avoidance of the usual negative plate thereof and a violent reorganization of the resultant two electrodes and the electrical and mechanical dimensions of their immediately associated structures.
More specifically, the diode oscillator of the invention comprises two electrodes in an evacuated space, the negative resistance imputed to the space therebetween being a function of certain precise conditions affecting the electrodes. For instance, there must be a uniform flow of electrons from one such electrode, which simulates to that extent the function of the usual electron. tube cathode, to the other electrode on which a positive potential is impressed relatively smooth, relatively flat surfaces. To promote fur,
ther the uniform flow, the anode surface should be very closely equidistant at all points from that of the cathode, that the two surfaces should be uniformly spaced.
Concomitantly with the above purely structural requisites there must be the condition, brought about by the appropriate relative design of said structure and the potentials applied thereto, that the transit time of the electrons between the two electrodes is approximately 5, 9,13, 1'7, etc. quarter-cycles of the high frequency current which it is intended to produce.
A negative resistance being provided by the satisfaction of the above considerations, a selfcontained, or self-excited oscillator results from the further extension of the principle to the design of a cooperating external circuit and structure. For instance, the interelectrode space, above cited as the negative resistance, strictly partakes of the electrical characteristics of a circuit constituted by a negative resistance and a capacitance in series; therefore, the perpetuation of the oscillations implied by the negative resistance, per se, requires that this capacitance be constituted a part of a series resonant circuit the resistance of which, that is, the positive resistance of which, is less than the negative resistance imputed to the electrode space.
The consummation of the invention, therefore, results from the design of an inductive reactance so electrically dimensioned as to resonate with the interelectrode capacitance and which is almost wholly devoid of resistance. The inductor of said reactance, because of this necessary condition, that is, because of its very high ratio of reactance to resistance at the oscillation frequency which ratio is sometimes denominated "62, tends to be very distinctive not only in its design but also in its physical appearance. In
the form of the invention here to be disclosed,
the diode electrodes are constituted by the uniformly spaced opposed end surfaces of a closed hollow disc-like structure, the remaining structure of which is constituted by the connecting sidewall of the disc. The structure is here characterized as fdisc-like," consistently with the specific illustration, Fig. 6 of the parent application. However, the axial length of the disc, thatis, the uniform spacing of the electrodes, is not critical except as it must conform with the enunciated a little later. Therefore such axial 'physical laws prescribing the transit time to be length might be such as to change the appearance of the structure from disc-like to that more nearly approaching an electrical conduit or rigid transmission line and therefore a conventionalized wave guide. Regardless of the spacing or the precise configuration, the structure does have the electrical characteristic of a wave guide so that, to all intent and purposes the invention, according to this species, is a diode orcillator in which the electrodes constitute the terminal elements of the wave guide, the wave guide providing the requisite resonating system.
Inthe broadest aspect of the invention, an electron stream flows through an evacuated region in a conducting cavity (effectively a wave guide) which is resonant at the desired frequency, and the electron speed is such that the time. which is required for the electrons to traverse the wave guide is approximately l 2 3%, etc. cycles.
Other features of the invention are illustrated in the accompanying drawings in-which:
Fig. l is a duplicate of Fig. 6 of the parent application and illustrates, partially diagrammatically and in section, the above characterized embodiment of the invention as expressed in a diode oscillator of the type in which the resonating system comprises effectively a resonant wave guide with the diode electrodes constituting the opposed end surfaces whereby the electrons traverse the waveguide in a direction parallel to its axis; and
Fig. 2 is an alternative disclosure of the wave guide portion of the structure of Fig. 1 extended in an axial direction to indicate that, without any change in essential function or structure, the
resonating system may have relative dimensions more nearly approximating the conventional idea of a wave guide although, as has been indicated, there is nothing in the theory or application of wave guides limiting its relative dimensions in any way. For the above indicated reasons this Fig. 2 distinctly does not constitutenew matter or affect the characterization as above of this application as a division of the parent application from which Fig. 1 has been bodily taken.
The general method of attack in the development of a diode within which a negative resistance oc :urs, and the relative development of associated circuits and structure so as to perpetuate the oscillations implied by the negative re sistance involves, as a first. step, the finding of the power generated by the negative resistance, assuming an arbitrary magnitude for the high frequency current through it, and then'the computing of the power dissipated in all of the positive resistances of the system by the currents flowing through them. For the production of oscillations this latter power must,,of course, be less than the former. There are other necessary conditions and necessary steps in the development.
Preliminarily to a detailed description of the species of invention here to be discl:sed, and in order to simplify the disclosure and economize the bulk of its presentation it will be related to such partsof the parent application as apply to the fundamental aspects of diode oscillators without regard'to a particular species and also to the type of diode oscillatorhere disclosed and also disclosed in several other specific forms in the parent application, namely, the plane electrode type. parent case by the term. "plane electrode}? as distinguished, for instance, from the cylindrical This type has been denominated in the electrode species, although as is evident from the parent application disclosure, it is not so important that the electrodes individually be plane as it is that they should be uniformly spaced. The electrodes in the present disclosed species, constituting opposed end surfaces of a resonant wave guide structure, do not have to be other than uniformly spaced, although the simplest expression of the principle of uniform spacing is a system of parallel plane electrodes. Fig. 1 of the parent application is one instance of this plane electrode type of diode oscillator and the analysis used in the parent application, as illusconvenience adapted for this particular type of diode, is applicable to the like type of diode oscillator here disclosed except as will be indicated later and therefore need not be repeated here except in summary.
It has been found that a uniform stream of electrons moving between two equidistant or uniformly spaced surfaces, one of which is an effective cathode element and the other an effective anode element, may exhibit the property of negative resistance within a series of high frequency bands. An essential condition has been pointed out in the statement of invention having to do with a critical value of transit time in terms of the cycle time of the resultant generated wave.
This property has been used by applicant for the a Between these two surfaces, constituting the diode electrodes, there is, of course, a capacitance besides the negative resistance above described, the value of this capacitance being determined by the dimensions and spacing of the electrodes. The existence of the negative resistance implies the possibility of developing oscillations, it being further required therefore that there be a cooperating inductance effectively constituting with the capacitance between said electrodes a tuned or resonant circuit. This circuit would, of course, tend to have some resistance but it must be sufficiently small as not to annul the effective negative resistance of the diode space. The matter of so constituting this eifective inductance so as to have this attribute and to cooperate in the constitution of an effective tuned circuit of the requisite high frequency, is a matter of considerable difiiculty. The inductance tends to assume the characteristics of a rigid tank or capsule structure; in the particular species to be here disclosed, it has more nearly the form of a hollow disc or resonant wave guide. As has been pointed out it has all of the electrical characteristics of such a wave guide or wave guide section, which it is in fact. While ideally, the resultant structure is completely closed, so as to avoid wastage. of energy by radiation into space, for practical reasons there must be a division to enable a difference of potential to be set up between portions of the structure constituting the diode electrodes. By particular design the effect .of so breaking the continuity of the physical structure may be minimized or, as in certain species of the invention not to be disclosed herein, an output circuit may be provided to receive the energy of the diode oscillator alternatively to the radiation of energy from the openings implied by such break in the continuity.
The complete analysis of the Plane electrode diode oscillator leading up to the determination trative of diode oscillators as a whole, while for of the requisite physical and electrical dimensions of the diode oscillator is given in the parent application. Accordingly it will not be ,repeated Fig. 1 shows diagrammatically a form of par-- allel plane diode which, as a class, may be considered distinctive from the class to which belong the modifications illustrated by the early numbered figures of the parent application (which, however, belong to the same broad class of diode oscillators) in that there is less of an appearance, but not less of an actuality, of an effective resonant circuit or cavity comprising the electrodes and their immediately associated structure. This class of diode oscillator has sometimes been denominated disc diode oscillator, signifying that in their simple forms these diode oscillators consist merely of two parallel discs, one of which constitutes the electron emitting cathode and the other the anode. As before, the electron discharge occurs between the cathode surface C and the opposing anode surface A, so that there exists a negative resistance in series with a capacitance between the two surfaces. This impedance configuration is continuous for each and every element of area of the electron discharge and, taken in conjunction with the impedance properties which the surfaces themselves present to tangential current flow, forms the admittance and impedance elements of an electrical transmission line, having in this instance extension in two dimensions as distinguished from the more familiar transmission line having its extension in one dimension only. In Fig. 1 the significance. of the structure of the various other parts is believed to be. obvious from a consideration of the specification of the parent application, except as to be pointed out.
Fig. 2 is introduced into this drawing as tending to show the proportions of the structure above denominated disc may be varied without violation of any teaching of the invention. In this figure there is reproduced, without labeling, the disc structure of Fig. 1 extended in axial length to approximate the appearance of a wave guide as the public tends to mentally picture such wave guide. The two figures taken together therefore indicate the complete independence from rigid limitations of physical proportions within the limitations imposed by theoretical considerations that have been pointed out. As a matter of fact these theoretical considerations may very easily make possible a structure having the approximate proportions 'of those shown in this Fig. 2. The details of both figures will now be explained, with particular reference to Fig. 1 because the labeling is confined thereto.
What is here termed disc or wave guide is constituted by the above described cathode and anode surfaces. Necessarily, the diameters of these two surfaces are equal, although there is nothing very critical governing this relation. When the diameter of the discs is a certain proportion of the free-space wave-length A, the discs themselves, in view of the extended properties of transmission lines in two dimensions as described in the above paragraph, constitute a resonant system and determine the oscillation frequency. In the specific example illustrated the root of the Bessel function application for the tuning relation, so that the diameter may be either 0.766, 1.757, 2.755, etc.
times the wave-length. A table which shows the first 12 roots of 'Jo is given on page 286 of Fouriers Series and Spherical Harmonics" by W. E. Byerly, Ginn and Co. 1893. It ls quite practicable to employ open-circuited discs instead of the near short-circuited discs disclosed in Fig, l, as by using the structure comprising effectively merely the opposed cathode and anode members, by use of a slightly different Bessel function to determine the diameter in terms of wave-length, but in this case the radiation must be confined by a wave guide or other shielding shell, as otherwise the radiation resistance may be so high as to stop oscillations. Because the losses are relatively smaller for small discs the diameter, in-the form as shown in Fig. 1, is
usually made 0.766 times the wave-length.
It is noted that the gap 1, which efiectively conductively isolates the cathode and anode shown in Fig. 1, is remote from the rim of the capsule or disc and is therefore located where the lines of force are substantially perpendicular to the gap, so that only asmall amount of radiation can escape.
Another distinctive feature of the diode oscillator of Fig. l is the half wave-length line constituted by the structure 45 which surrounds the emitting cathode surface. This insures that only the coated portion of the lower disc operates at high temperature and hence that electron emission can take place only in the region intended so that the electron stream tends to possess the uniform characteristics that are favorable to the production of stable diode oscillations. The purpose of making the line exactly a half wave-length long, rather than some other dimension in terms of wave-length is to prevent this line from introducing reactance into the circuit and thereby upsetting the reasonance calculations based on the disc diameters. This is in accordance with now well-known theory of transmission lines of this order of length. Some resistance is unavoidably introduced into the circuit by the line, but can be reduced by making the emitting surface as large in diameter as possible. This has the twofold advantage of reducing the resistance which is introduced by the half wave line, the introduced resistance, as is well known, being less when the diameter ratio of a concentric line is nearly unity, and increasing the drive from the electrons. I
In the disc diode of Fig. 1. the design formulas, (6) to (11) of the parent specification naturally require modification because of the obvious extensiveness of the dimensions in Fig. 1 in comparison with the free-space wave-length. As those who are used to dealing with the solution of the fundamental field equations as applied to cylindrical structures may readily verify, the oscillation conditions for the structure of Fig. 1 are given by the equation where a is the disc radius, c is the cathode radius,
I 8,279,872 in this Fig. 1, the disc diameter is determined by p is 211)., and Jo and J1 are the usual Bessel functions of zero and first order, respectively, as defined on page 219 in the Byerly reference given above, all dimensions being in centimeters. The
quantity In] is merely themagnitude of the negative resistance, Equation 6 of the parent specification, reckoned per unit area, namely,
the equation no allowance has been made for radiation resistance which may perform the function of a load resistance, and should then be proportioned to absorb the maximum power.
These algebraic relations apply particularly to the structure of the approximate geometry of Fig. l, and under the restriction that the axial height (that is the height along the electron discharge path) of the cavity is small compared with the wave length. As explained above, this is not necessarily so, and in Fig. 2 which is drawn to emphasize the more general shape, a simple relation expresses the total electron current needed to produce oscillations. Thus, letting I1- represent this total electron current in amperes, and h represent the axial height in centimeters, and disregarding losses in the cathode coaxial sleeve, and assuming the entire structure to be composed of metallic conducting material at the same temperature, we have the following convenient ex-, press1on:
What is claimed is: v
1. A diode oscillator comprising two uniformly spaced plane surfaces in an evacuated space and at least in part constituting cathode and anode elements, said surfaces also in efiect constituting the opposed end surfaces of a cavity resonator otherwise constituted by a connecting single cylindrical surface, means insulatingly dividing said resonator whereby a difference of potential may be maintained between said cathode and anode elements, said endsurfaces of the resonator being so dimensionedthat it tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said end surfaces in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance between said end surfaces, the positive resistance therebetween being less than said negative resistance.
2. The diode oscillator specified in claim 1 in which said diode surfaces are circular and each has a diameter determined by a root of the Bessel function 3. A diode oscillator comprising a cavity resonator of a single cylinder form, uniformly spaced, opposed, planar end closure elements for said resonator, and means electrically segregating desired portions of said end members from the remaining portions thereof and further means constituting said segregated portions the cathode and anode elements of a diode oscillator.
4. The diode oscillator specified in claim 3 in which the means for segregating the anode electrode from the remaining portion of the" corresponding end element is, in electrical effect, a closed gap extending through said end element and remote from the edge thereof where the lines of force are substantially perpendicular to the gap, whereby to minimize rediation.
5. The diode oscillator specified in claim 3 in which the means for segregating the cathode element from the remaining portion of the corresponding resonator end element comprises a closed gap extending through said end element, the portions of said end element separated by said gap being connected by an effective half wave-length transmission line.
6. A diode oscillator comprising a cylindrical surface bounded by plane end surfaces normal to the generatrix of said surface, means constituting said end surfaces at least in part cathode and anode surfaces, whereby said end surfaces with the cylindrical connecting surface constitute a resonant wave guide structure, means enclosing said structure in an evacuated space, means insulatingly dividing said wave guide structure whereby a difference of potential may be maintained between said cathode and anode surfaces, said wave guide end surfaces being so dimensioned that the wave guide tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said surfaces in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance between said surfaces, the positive resistance of the wave guide structure being less than said negative resistance.
'7. A diode oscillator comprising two conductive elements each in turn comprising at least in part a planar portion uniformly spaced from the corresponding portion of the other said element, means constituting said planar portions, at least in part, anode and cathode elements, said planar portions being so dimensioned with reference to a desired frequency, exclusively of all other dimensions, that the resultant structure tends to resonate at such a periodicity that the electron transit time between said anode and cathode elements in relation to said periodicity is appropriate to produce negative resistance therebetween, the positive resistance therebetween being less than said negative resistance.
FREDERICK B. LLEWELLYN.
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US319415A US2279872A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1940-02-17 | Diode oscillator |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US156647A US2190668A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1937-07-31 | Diode oscillator |
| US319415A US2279872A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1940-02-17 | Diode oscillator |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US2279872A true US2279872A (en) | 1942-04-14 |
Family
ID=22560437
Family Applications (4)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US156647A Expired - Lifetime US2190668A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1937-07-31 | Diode oscillator |
| US319415A Expired - Lifetime US2279872A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1940-02-17 | Diode oscillator |
| US319416A Expired - Lifetime US2270638A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1940-02-17 | Diode oscillator |
| US43160742 Expired USRE23369E (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1942-02-19 | Diode oscillator |
Family Applications Before (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US156647A Expired - Lifetime US2190668A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1937-07-31 | Diode oscillator |
Family Applications After (2)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US319416A Expired - Lifetime US2270638A (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1940-02-17 | Diode oscillator |
| US43160742 Expired USRE23369E (en) | 1937-07-31 | 1942-02-19 | Diode oscillator |
Country Status (6)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (4) | US2190668A (en) |
| BE (1) | BE429443A (en) |
| CH (1) | CH234228A (en) |
| FR (1) | FR841456A (en) |
| GB (1) | GB516750A (en) |
| NL (1) | NL65991C (en) |
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2514428A (en) * | 1943-01-06 | 1950-07-11 | Sperry Corp | Electronic apparatus of the cavity resonator type |
| US2539210A (en) * | 1946-01-12 | 1951-01-23 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Electronic tube apparatus embodying a cavity resonator |
| US3025428A (en) * | 1959-10-15 | 1962-03-13 | Kuthe Lab Inc | Cathode structure |
Families Citing this family (64)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2899646A (en) * | 1959-08-11 | Tread | ||
| BE433819A (en) * | 1937-07-14 | |||
| US2616038A (en) * | 1947-09-23 | 1952-10-28 | Univ Leland Stanford Junior | Frequency converter |
| US2757312A (en) * | 1938-01-17 | 1956-07-31 | Univ Leland Stanford Junior | Tuning means for cavity resonator devices |
| US2511886A (en) * | 1938-06-18 | 1950-06-20 | varfan | |
| US2558021A (en) * | 1939-03-08 | 1951-06-26 | Univ Leland Stanford Junior | Thermionic vacuum tube and circuit |
| NL80761C (en) * | 1939-08-24 | |||
| US2424002A (en) * | 1940-11-04 | 1947-07-15 | Research Corp | High-frequency electronic tube |
| US2416303A (en) * | 1941-02-05 | 1947-02-25 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Secondary emissive shell resonator tube |
| BE468391A (en) * | 1941-03-11 | |||
| US2458556A (en) * | 1941-04-08 | 1949-01-11 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Coupled cavity resonator and wave guide apparatus |
| FR874552A (en) * | 1941-05-16 | 1942-08-11 | Csf | Reflection Velocity Modulated Tube |
| DE910812C (en) * | 1941-10-19 | 1954-05-06 | Aeg | Ultra-short wave tubes whose resonance circuit is arranged in a vacuum |
| US2464230A (en) * | 1941-10-23 | 1949-03-15 | Sperry Corp | High-frequency apparatus |
| US2506590A (en) * | 1941-10-31 | 1950-05-09 | Sperry Corp | High-frequency tube structure |
| US2439387A (en) * | 1941-11-28 | 1948-04-13 | Sperry Corp | Electronic tuning control |
| US2445784A (en) * | 1942-03-11 | 1948-07-27 | Int Standard Electric Corp | Cavity resonator electric wave generator |
| US2611079A (en) * | 1942-07-27 | 1952-09-16 | Arthur A Verela | Duplexing device for transceiver antenna systems |
| DE971141C (en) * | 1942-10-01 | 1958-12-18 | Siemens Ag | Electron tubes for generating or amplifying very short electrical waves |
| FR962868A (en) * | 1942-10-02 | 1950-06-22 | ||
| US2415962A (en) * | 1942-10-16 | 1947-02-18 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Automatic switch for ultra high frequency |
| DE896393C (en) * | 1942-10-16 | 1953-11-12 | Lorenz C Ag | Run-time tube |
| US2476621A (en) * | 1942-11-06 | 1949-07-19 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Cavity joint |
| US2462877A (en) * | 1942-11-23 | 1949-03-01 | Standard Telephones Cables Ltd | Electron discharge device |
| US2466067A (en) * | 1942-12-07 | 1949-04-05 | Sperry Corp | High-frequency apparatus |
| US2425345A (en) * | 1942-12-23 | 1947-08-12 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Microwave transmission system |
| US2522557A (en) * | 1943-01-25 | 1950-09-19 | Harold A Zahl | Electronic tube |
| US2503256A (en) * | 1943-01-29 | 1950-04-11 | Sperry Corp | Ultra high frequency wavemeter |
| US2429760A (en) * | 1943-01-30 | 1947-10-28 | Standard Telephones Cables Ltd | High-frequency amplifier |
| US2466063A (en) * | 1943-02-03 | 1949-04-05 | Sperry Corp | High-power high-frequency electron discharge apparatus |
| US2660667A (en) * | 1943-02-23 | 1953-11-24 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Ultrahigh frequency resonator |
| BE455111A (en) * | 1943-03-06 | |||
| US2420342A (en) * | 1943-03-18 | 1947-05-13 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | High frequency continuous amplifier |
| US2423998A (en) * | 1943-04-30 | 1947-07-15 | Farnsworth Television & Radio | Electron discharge device |
| US2451876A (en) * | 1943-06-05 | 1948-10-19 | Winfield W Salisbury | Radio-frequency joint |
| US2434509A (en) * | 1943-06-19 | 1948-01-13 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Ultra high frequency conductor |
| US2445754A (en) * | 1943-06-19 | 1948-07-27 | Melvin D Baller | Vacuum tube |
| US2488320A (en) * | 1943-06-30 | 1949-11-15 | Rca Corp | Electron discharge device employing cavity resonators |
| FR964838A (en) * | 1943-08-12 | 1950-08-25 | ||
| US2421790A (en) * | 1943-08-19 | 1947-06-10 | Rca Corp | Ultra high frequency ignition device |
| US2482452A (en) * | 1943-08-19 | 1949-09-20 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Concentric line cavity resonator device |
| US2472378A (en) * | 1943-08-27 | 1949-06-07 | James L Lawson | Detection of high-frequency electric oscillations |
| DE890066C (en) * | 1943-11-27 | 1953-09-17 | Lorenz C Ag | Tunable, speed-controlled transit time tube that acts as a reflection generator |
| US2482495A (en) * | 1943-11-27 | 1949-09-20 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Magnetron |
| US2481151A (en) * | 1944-04-13 | 1949-09-06 | Raytheon Mfg Co | Electron discharge device |
| US2611110A (en) * | 1944-04-19 | 1952-09-16 | Raytheon Mfg Co | Electronic discharge device of the cavity resonator type |
| US2561130A (en) * | 1944-08-02 | 1951-07-17 | Cyril E Mcclellan | Wave guide coupling |
| US2698923A (en) * | 1944-12-28 | 1955-01-04 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Electromagnetic cavity resonator |
| US2502530A (en) * | 1945-01-13 | 1950-04-04 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Electron discharge device for ultra high frequencies |
| US2520220A (en) * | 1945-01-24 | 1950-08-29 | Rca Corp | Electron discharge device and associated cavity resonator |
| US2497707A (en) * | 1945-02-21 | 1950-02-14 | Gen Electric | Method for making high-frequency cable joints |
| US2475646A (en) * | 1945-02-22 | 1949-07-12 | Raytheon Mfg Co | Electron discharge device of the magnetron type |
| US2747137A (en) * | 1945-05-12 | 1956-05-22 | Gen Electric | High frequency electrical apparatus |
| BE476855A (en) * | 1946-08-31 | |||
| US2565585A (en) * | 1946-09-24 | 1951-08-28 | Raytheon Mfg Co | Electron-discharge device of the magnetron type |
| US2469843A (en) * | 1946-11-15 | 1949-05-10 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Electron transit time tube |
| US2630545A (en) * | 1950-08-14 | 1953-03-03 | Rothstein Jerome | Electron discharge device |
| US2716199A (en) * | 1951-01-26 | 1955-08-23 | Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co | Electric discharge tube for short waves |
| US2782341A (en) * | 1952-12-22 | 1957-02-19 | Bell Telephone Labor Inc | Coaxial noise diode |
| DE1101622B (en) * | 1956-01-03 | 1961-03-09 | Csf | Semiconductor diode with a PI or NI transition in the semiconductor body |
| US3278788A (en) * | 1962-07-16 | 1966-10-11 | Gen Electric | Internal feedback electric discharge device |
| CA1222563A (en) * | 1982-05-06 | 1987-06-02 | George D. Craig | Emitron: microwave diode |
| US5320701A (en) * | 1992-11-04 | 1994-06-14 | Illinois Tool Works Inc. | Tire building drum |
| US11094493B2 (en) * | 2019-08-01 | 2021-08-17 | Lockheed Martin Corporation | Emitter structures for enhanced thermionic emission |
-
1937
- 1937-07-31 US US156647A patent/US2190668A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1938
- 1938-07-08 GB GB20285/38A patent/GB516750A/en not_active Expired
- 1938-07-29 BE BE429443D patent/BE429443A/xx unknown
- 1938-07-29 FR FR841456D patent/FR841456A/en not_active Expired
- 1938-07-29 NL NL89079A patent/NL65991C/xx active
- 1938-07-30 CH CH234228D patent/CH234228A/en unknown
-
1940
- 1940-02-17 US US319415A patent/US2279872A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1940-02-17 US US319416A patent/US2270638A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
-
1942
- 1942-02-19 US US43160742 patent/USRE23369E/en not_active Expired
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US2514428A (en) * | 1943-01-06 | 1950-07-11 | Sperry Corp | Electronic apparatus of the cavity resonator type |
| US2539210A (en) * | 1946-01-12 | 1951-01-23 | Westinghouse Electric Corp | Electronic tube apparatus embodying a cavity resonator |
| US3025428A (en) * | 1959-10-15 | 1962-03-13 | Kuthe Lab Inc | Cathode structure |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US2190668A (en) | 1940-02-20 |
| US2270638A (en) | 1942-01-20 |
| CH234228A (en) | 1944-09-15 |
| FR841456A (en) | 1939-05-22 |
| BE429443A (en) | 1938-08-31 |
| GB516750A (en) | 1940-01-10 |
| NL65991C (en) | 1950-07-15 |
| USRE23369E (en) | 1951-05-22 |
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