Cathode heater

Cathode heater

A cathode heater is a filament used to heat the cathode in a vacuum tube or cathode ray tube. Before transistors and integrated circuits came into widespread use, electronic devices used vacuum tubes. The cathode element had to achieve the required temperature in order for these tubes to function properly. This is why older electronics often needed some time to "warm up" after being powered on; this phenomenon can be observed in the cathode ray tubes of modern televisions and computer monitors.

The simplest type of vacuum tube operates as a diode: that is, it allows current to flow in only one direction. The cathode heater is used to raise the temperature of the cathode filament, permitting thermionic emission of electrons into the evacuated tube. The other element inside the tube is called the "plate", or anode. If the anode is positively charged relative to the cathode, the emitted electrons will be attracted to it, and current will flow. This exhibits the characteristics of a diode as current flow in the reverse direction is not possible (the anode is not heated, prevention thermionic emission.) More complex vacuum tubes operated as triodes (the predecessor to the modern transistor) or other circuit elements, but all tubes required some type of cathode heater in order to trigger electron emissions.

The purpose of the cathode heater is to heat the cathode to a temperature that causes electrons to be 'boiled out' of its surface into the evacuated space in the tube, a process called thermionic emission. The temperature required for modern cathodes is around 800-1000°C (1500-1800°F)

Construction

The cathode is usually in the form of a long narrow sheet metal cylinder at the center of the tube. The heater consists of a fine wire or ribbon, made of a high resistance metal alloy like nichrome, similar to the heating element in a toaster but finer. It runs through the center of the cathode, often being coiled on tiny insulating supports or bent into hairpin-like shapes to give enough surface area to produce the required heat. The ends of the wire are electrically connected to two pins protruding from the end of the tube. When current passes through the wire it becomes red hot, and the radiated heat strikes the inside surface of the cathode, heating it. The red or orange glow seen coming from operating vacuum tubes is produced by the heater.

There is not much room in the cathode, and the cathode is often built with the heater wire touching it. The inside of the cathode is insulated by a coating of alumina (aluminum oxide). This is not a very good insulator at high temperatures, therefore tubes have a rating for maximum voltage between cathode and heater, usually only 200 - 300 V.

Heaters require a low voltage, high current source of power. The voltage required was usually 5 or 6 volts AC. In older electronic devices this was supplied by a separate 'heater winding' on the device's power supply transformer that also supplied the higher voltages required by the tubes' plates and other electrodes.

ee also

*Hot cathode

External links

* [http://www.john-a-harper.com/tubes201/ John Harper (2003) "Tubes 201 - How vacuum tubes really work", John Harper's home page]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • cathode heater — katodo kaitintuvas statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. cathode heater; cathode heater assembly vok. Katodenheizer, m rus. нагреватель катода, m; подогреватель катода, m pranc. chauffeur de cathode, m …   Radioelektronikos terminų žodynas

  • cathode-heater assembly — katodo kaitintuvas statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. cathode heater; cathode heater assembly vok. Katodenheizer, m rus. нагреватель катода, m; подогреватель катода, m pranc. chauffeur de cathode, m …   Radioelektronikos terminų žodynas

  • Heater (disambiguation) — Heater is an object that emits heat.Heater may also refer to:In electronics: * Filament in a vacuum tube that heats the cathode to aid in thermionic emission of electronsIn music: * Heater (Muttonbirds song), a song by Muttonbirds * Heater (Samim …   Wikipedia

  • heater — [hēt′ər] n. 1. an apparatus for heating or warming a room, car, water, etc.; stove, furnace, radiator, etc. 2. a person whose work is to heat something 3. in an electron tube, an element set inside the cathode and heated by an electric current so …   English World dictionary

  • heater — /hee teuhr/, n. 1. any of various apparatus for heating, esp. for heating water or the air in a room. 2. Electronics. the element of a vacuum tube that carries the current for heating a cathode. 3. Slang. a pistol, revolver, or other firearm.… …   Universalium

  • heater — /ˈhitə/ (say heetuh) noun 1. an apparatus for heating, as a furnace. 2. Electronics a resistive element in an electrical circuit carrying current to provide a source of heat, as in a heated cathode. 3. US Colloquial a pistol or revolver …  

  • chauffeur de cathode — katodo kaitintuvas statusas T sritis radioelektronika atitikmenys: angl. cathode heater; cathode heater assembly vok. Katodenheizer, m rus. нагреватель катода, m; подогреватель катода, m pranc. chauffeur de cathode, m …   Radioelektronikos terminų žodynas

  • Hot cathode — is also a name for a hot filament ionization gauge, a vacuum measuring device.In vacuum tubes, a hot cathode is a cathode electrode which emits electrons due to thermionic emission. ( Cf. cold cathodes, where field emission is used and which do… …   Wikipedia

  • electric heater —       device for heating rooms that converts electric current to heat by means of resistors (resistor) that emit radiant energy. Resistors may be composed of metal alloy wire, nonmetallic carbon compounds, or printed circuits. Heating elements… …   Universalium

  • Vacuum tube — This article is about the electronic device. For experiments in an evacuated pipe, see free fall. For the transport system, see pneumatic tube. Modern vacuum tubes, mostly miniature style In electronics, a vacuum tube, electron tube (in North… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”