- Triode
A triode is an electronic amplification device having three active electrodes. The term most commonly applies to a
vacuum tube (or "valve" in British English) with three elements: the filament orcathode , the grid, and the plate oranode . The triode vacuum tube is often viewed as the first electrical amplification device, although therelay (which contained mechanical parts) is usually viewed, in a broad sense, as the first actual electricalamplifier .Invention
The original three-element device was patented in 1908 by
Lee De Forest who developed it from his original two-element 1906 Audion. TheAudion did incorporate, in a crude form, the key principle of allowing amplification. However it was not until around 1912 that other researchers, while attempting to improve the service life of the audion, stumbled on the principle of the true vacuum tube. The name triode appeared later, when it became necessary to distinguish it from other generic kinds of vacuum tubes with more or less elements (egdiode s,tetrode s,pentode s etc.). The original Audion tubes were not vacuum tubes however, as they deliberately contained some gas at low pressure. The name triode is only applied to vacuum tubes.Operation
The principle of its operation is that, as with a thermionic
diode , the heated filament causes a flow ofelectron s that are attracted to the plate and create a current. Applying a negative charge to the control grid will tend to repel some of the (also negatively charged) electrons back towards the filament: the larger the charge on the grid, the smaller the current to the plate. If an AC signal is superimposed on the DC bias of the grid, an amplified version of the AC signal appears in the plate circuit.Applications
Although triodes are now largely obsolete in
consumer electronics , having been replaced by thetransistor , triodes continue to be used in certain high-end andprofessional audio applications, as well as in microphonepreamplifier s and electricguitar amplifier s.Some guitarists routinely drive their amplifiers to the point of saturation, in order to produce a desired distortion tone. Many people prefer the sound of triodes in such an application, since the distortion of a tube amplifier, which has a "soft" saturation characteristic, can be more pleasing to the ear than that of a typical solid-state amplifier, which is linear up to the limits of its supply voltage and then clips abruptly. However, this typically only applied to the power stage of a tube amplifier.
ee also
*
Vacuum tube
*List of vacuum tubes
*European triode festival External links
* [http://paillard.claude.free.fr/ _fr. "Les lampes radio"] — A French page on thermionic valves. Of particular interest is the 17 minute video showing the manual production of triodes.
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