Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.

Vacuum Tube

Definition: Vacuum Tube

Vacuum Tube

Noun

1. Electronic device consisting of a system of electrodes arranged in an evacuated glass or metal envelope.

Source: WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
 



Specialty Definitions: Vacuum Tube

DomainDefinitions

Computing

Vacuum tube electron tube. Source: The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing.

Aerospace

An electron tube evacuated to such a degree that its electrical characteristics are essentially unaffected by the presence of residual gas or vapor. (references)

Electrical Engineering

A device permitting current flow in one direction only. Source: European Union. (references)
 An electronic tube or device evacuated to such a degree that its electrical characteristics are essentially unaffected by the ionisation of any residual gas or vapour. Source: European Union. (references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Specialty Definition: Vacuum tube

(From Wikipedia, the free Encyclopedia)

In electronics, a vacuum tube is generally used for amplification of a signal. Once used in most electronic devices, vacuum tubes are now used only in specialized applications. For most purposes, the vacuum tube has been replaced by the much smaller and less expensive transistor, either as a discrete device or in an integrated circuit.

Vacuum tubes, or thermionic valves are arrangements of electrodes in a vacuum within an insulating, temperature-resistant envelope. Although the envelope was classically glass, power tubes often use ceramics, and military tubes often use glass-lined metal.


Diode


Triode

Vacuum tubes resemble incandescent light bulbs, in that they have a filament sealed in a glass envelope, which has been evacuated of all air. When hot, the filament releases electrons into the vacuum, a process called thermionic emission. The resulting negatively-charged cloud of electrons is called a space charge. These electrons will be drawn to a positively charged metal plate, the anode. This results in a current of electrons flowing from filament to plate.

Obviously this does not work the other way round, because the plate is not heated, so we have a diode, a device that conducts current only in one direction. This was invented in 1904 by John Ambrose Fleming, scientific adviser to the Marconi company, based on an observation by Thomas Edison.

The next innovation, due to Lee DeForest in 1907, was to place another electrode, the grid, between the filament and plate. The grid is a bent wire or screen. De Forest discovered that the current flow from filament to plate depended on the voltage applied to the grid, and that the current drawn by the grid was very low, being composed of the electrons which are intercepted by the grid. As the applied voltage of the grid varied from negative to positive, the current of electrons flowing from the filament to the plate would vary correspondingly. Thus the grid was said to "control" the plate current. The resulting three-electrode device was therefore an excellent amplifier. DeForest called his invention the audion, but it is better known as a triode. The valve equivalent of a transistor, triodes were used in early valve amplifiers.

The non-linear operating characteristic of the triode gave early valve audio amplifiers a distortion that became known as the valve sound. To remedy this problem, engineers plotted curves of the applied grid voltage and resulting plate currents, and discovered that there was a range of relatively linear operation. In order to use this range, a negative voltage had to be applied to the grid to place the tube in the "middle" of the linear area with no signal applied. This was called the idle condition, and the plate current at this point the "idle current". The controlling voltage was superimposed onto this fixed voltage, resulting in linear swings of plate current for both positive and negative swings of the input voltage. This concept was called grid bias.

Batteries were designed to provide the various voltages required. "A Batteries" provided the filament voltage. B Batteries provided the plate voltage. To this day, plate voltage is referred to as "B+". C Batteries were used to provide grid bias, although many circuits used grid leak resistors or voltage dividers to provide proper bias.

Many further innovations followed. It became common to use the filament to heat a separate electrode called the cathode, and to use the cathode as the source of electron flow in the tube rather than the filament itself. This minimized the introduction of "hum" when the filament was energized with alternating current. In such tubes, the filament is called a heater to distinguish it as an inactive element.


A two-valve home-made radio from 1958. The valves are the two glass columns with the dark tops. The leads at the bottom connect to the low-voltage filament supply and to the high-voltage anode supply.
Larger version

When triodes were first used in radio transmitters and receivers, it was found that they were often unstable and had a tendency to oscillate due to parasitic anode to grid capacitance. Many complex circuits were developed to reduce this problem (e.g. the Neutrodyne amplifier), but proved unsatisfactory over wide ranges of frequencies. It was discovered that the addition of a second grid, located between the control grid and the plate and called a screen grid could solve these problems. A positive voltage slightly lower than the plate voltage was applied, and the screen grid was bypassed (for high frequencies) to ground with a capacitor. This arrangement decoupled the anode and the first grid, completely eliminating the oscillation problem. This two-grid tube is called a tetrode, meaning four active electrodes.

However the tetrode too had a problem, especially in higher-current applications. At high instantaneous plate currents, the plate would become negative with respect to the screen grid. The positive voltage on the second grid accelerated the electrons, causing them to strike the anode hard enough to knock out secondary electrons which tended to be captured by the second grid, reducing the plate current and the amplification of the circuit. Again the solution was to add another grid and called a supressor grid. This third grid was biased at either ground or cathode voltage and its negative voltage (relative to the anode) electrostatically suppressed the secondary electrons by repelling them back toward the anode. This three-grid tube is called a pentode, meaning five electrodes.

Tubes with 4, 5, 6, or 7 grids, called hexodes, heptodes, octodes, and nonodes, were generally used for frequency conversion in superheterodyne receivers. The additional grids were all "control grids" with different signals applied to each one. In combination with each other, they create a single, combined effect on the plate current (and thus the signal output) of the tube circuit. The heptode, or pentagrid converter, was the most common of these. 6BE6 is an example of a heptode.

It was common practice in some tube types (e.g. the Compactron) to include more than one group of elements in one bulb. For instance, type 6SN7 is a "dual triode" which, for most purposes, can perform the functions of two triode tubes, while taking up half as much space and costing less.

The beam power tube is usually a tetrode with the addition of "beam forming electrodes" which take the place of the supressor grid. These angled plates focus the electron stream onto certain spots on the anode which can withstand the heat generated by the impact of massive numbers of electrons, and thus overcome some of the practical barriers to designing high-power, high-efficiency power tubes. 6L6 is a beam power tube.

The chief reliability problem of a tube is that, like a light bulb, the filament eventually burns out. To increase filament life, tube designers try to run filaments at as low a temperature as possible while still sustaining sufficient thermionic emission. To encourage electron emission at lower temperatures, filaments are coated, usually with thorium. To meet the reliability requirements of the air defense computer system SAGE, it was necessary to build special "computer vacuum tubes" with extended filament life. The problem of early filament burnout was traced to evaporation of silicon used in the tungsten alloy to make the wire easier to draw. Elimination of the silicon from the filament wire alloy (and paying extra for more frequent replacement of the wire drawing dies) allowed production of tubes that met the reliability requirements of SAGE.

Another important reliability problem is that the tube fails when air leaks into the tube. Usually oxygen in the air reacts chemically with the hot filament. Designers therefore worked hard to develop tube designs that sealed reliably. This was much of the reason why many tubes were constructed of glass. Metal alloys and glasses had been developed for light bulbs that expanded and contracted the same amounts when hot. These made it easy to construct an insulating envelope of glass, and pass wires through the glass to the electrodes and filament.

It is very important that the vacuum inside the envelope be as perfect as possible. Any gas atoms remaining will be ionized at operating voltages, and will conduct electricity between the elements in an uncontrolled manner. This can lead to erratic operation or even catastrophic destruction of the tube and associated circuitry.

To prevent any remaining gasses from remaining in a free state in the tube, modern tubes are constructed with "getters", which are usually small, circular troughs filled with reactive metals, with barium being the most common. Once the tube envelope is evacuated and sealed, the getter is heated to a high temperature (usually by means of RF induction heating) causing the material to evaporate, adsorbing/reacting with any residual gases and usually leaving a silver-colored metallic deposit on the inside of the envelope of the tube. If a tube develops a crack in the envelope, this deposit turns a white color when it reacts with atmospheric oxygen.

Some special-purpose tubes are intentionally constructed with various gasses in the envelope. For instance, voltage regulator tubes contain various inert gasses such as argon, helium or neon, and take advantage of the fact that these gasses will ionize at predictable voltages.

Tubes usually have glass envelopes, but metal, fused quartz (silica), and ceramic are possible choices. The nuvistor is a tiny tube made only of metal and ceramic. In some tubes, the metal envelope is also the anode. 4CX800 is an external anode tube of this sort.

Near the end of World War II, to make radios more rugged, some aircraft and army radios began to integrate the tube envelopes into the radio's molded aluminum or zinc chassis. The radio became just a printed circuit, with non-tube components, that was soldered to the chassis that contained all the tubes.

Tubes were ubiquitous in the early generations of electronic devices, such as radios, televisions, and early computers. They are still used for specialised audio amplifiers, notably for electric guitar amplification, and for very high-powered applications such as microwave ovens and power amplification for broadcasting.

Other vacuum tube electronic devices include the magnetron, klystron, and cathode ray tube. The magnetron is the most common type of tube in microwave ovens. Most televisions, oscilloscopes and computer monitors use cathode ray tubes.

Other tube devices

The fluorescent displays commonly used on VCRs and automotive dashboards are actually vacuum tubes, using phosphor-coated anodes to form the display characters, and a heated filamentary cathode as an electron source. These devices are properly called "VFDs", or Vacuum-Fluorescent Displays.

Specialist low-pressure gas-filled tube devices include the Nixie tube and the dekatron. These are used to display numerals.

One of the proposed designs for a fusion reactor is basically a tube, the Farnsworth-Hirsch Fusor.

A tube in which electrons move through a vacuum (or gaseous medium) within a gas-tight envelope is called an electron tube.

See also: Irving Langmuir

External links and References

Source: adapted by the editor from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia under a copyleft GNU Free Documentation License (GFDL) from the article "Vacuum tube."

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Synonyms: Vacuum Tube

Synonyms: electron tube (n), thermionic tube (n), thermionic vacuum tube (n), thermionic valve (n), tube (n). (additional references)

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Crosswords: Vacuum Tube

English words defined with "vacuum tube": A battery, acorn tube, Anticathode, atomic number 10B batteryC battery, C.P.U., Cathode ray, cathode-ray tube, control grid, CRTDe Forest, dropperelectron multiplier, eye dropperFocus tubegridLee De ForestmagnetronNe, neonplateThe Father of Radio, thermionic vacuum tube, tickler coil, triodeX-ray tube. (references)
Specialty definitions using "vacuum tube": aligned-grid tube, aligned-grid valveBayard-Alpert ionization gage, BELLOWS FILLER, bobbin fixerCATHETER BUILDER, cathode ray tube, CATHODE RAY TUBE SALVAGE PROCESSOR, cold-cathode ionization gage, cyclophonDIFFUSION FURNACE OPERATOR, SEMICONDUCTOR WAFERS, DRIER OPERATOR, drum-drier operatorelectric fish screen, electronic transducer, EVAPORATOR OPERATOR I, EXHAUST EQUIPMENT OPERATOR, exhaust operator, EXTRACTOR OPERATORfilling inspectorGenter thickener, glassfet, GLASS-LATHE OPERATOR, grind crankHolme suction grabmultiple-effect evaporator operatorpneumatic conveyorsuction-machine operatortangled-yarn-spool straightener, thermionic conversion, THERMOMETER PRODUCTION WORKERvacuum-drum-drier operator, vacuum-extractor operator, vacuum-forming-machine operator, vacuum-pan operator, variable-mu valve, variable-mutual conductance valveYARN CLEANER, yarn salvager. (references)

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Commercial Usage: Vacuum Tube

DomainTitle

Books

  • 1937 Sylvania Vacuum Tube Technical Manu (reference)

  • Communications Receivers: The Vacuum Tube Era-50 Glorious Yers, 1932-1981 (reference)

  • How to Build Your First Vacuum Tube Rege (reference)

  • Saga of the Vacuum Tube (reference)

  • The Collector's Vacuum Tube Handbook: The Non-Rma Numbered Receiving Tubes (reference)

    (more book examples)

  

Periodicals

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Expression: Vacuum Tube

Expression using "vacuum tube": thermionic vacuum tube. Additional references.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Frequency of Internet Keywords: Vacuum Tube

The following statistics estimate the number of searches per day across the major English-language search engines as identified by various trade publications. Hyperlinks lead to commercial use of the expression at Amazon.com.
 
ExpressionFrequency
per Day

vacuum tube

398

vacuum tube valley

21

vacuum tube amplifier

17

vacuum tube for sale

8

vacuum tube history

7

vacuum tube tester

7

vacuum tube audio

6

vacuum tube logic

6

vacuum tube amp

3

computer vacuum tube

3
Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

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Modern Translations: Vacuum Tube

Language Translations for "vacuum tube"; alternative meanings/domain in parentheses.

Bulgarian 

  

електронна лампа (diode, radio tube, tube, vacuum valve, valve). (various references)

   

Czech

  

výbojka (valve), elektronka (valve). (various references)

   

Danish

  

ventil (rectifier, tube, valve, vane), vacuumrør (electronic valve, vacuum valve), radioroer, radiorør (electronic valve, vacuum valve), pulsatorslange (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), luftudskillerens vakuumledning (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), luftslange (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), Geisslers roer. (various references)

   

Dutch

  

ventiel (actuator, air-valve, rectifier, relief valve, tube, valve), vacuumbuis, vacuümbuis (electronic valve, vacuum valve), pulsatieslang (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), Geisslerbuis. (various references)

   

Finnish

  

tyhjiöputki (electronic valve, vacuum valve), elektroniputki (valve), elektroninen venttiili (valve). (various references)

   

French

  

valve (disk of a swing check valve, inner tube valve, valve, valve clack of a check valve, valve flap of a check valve), tuyau long de pulsation (rubber vacuum tube), tuyau de pulsations (rubber vacuum tube), tuyau vide, tuyau air (rubber vacuum tube), tube de pulsations (rubber vacuum tube), tube de Geissler, tube vide poussé, tube vide (electronic valve, vacuum valve), soupape (valve). (various references)

   

German

  

Vakuumröhre (electronic valve, vacuum valve). (various references)

   

Greek 

  

σωλήνασ κενού, σωλήνας με αέρα (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), σωλήνας παλμών (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), βαλβίδα (air blow-out, door, heart valve, Pressure ventil, throttle, valve), λυχνία κενού, αγωγός παλμών (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube). (various references)

   

Hungarian

  

elektroncsõ. (various references)

   

Italian

  

tubo a vuoto (electronic valve, vacuum valve). (various references)

   

Japanese Kanji 

  

真空管 , 管球 . (various references)

   

Japanese Katakana 

  

し"くうか", か"きゅう (being moved to tears, government supply or issue, in case of emergency, slow pitch). (various references)

   

Pig Latin

  

acuumvay ubetay.(various references)

   

Portuguese

  

valvula (valve), válvula electrónica (electronic valve, ionic valve, vacuum valve), válvula de vácuo (breather valve, electronic valve, snifter valve, snifting valve, vacuum relief valve, vacuum valve), tubo para aspirar, tubo de vácuo (electronic valve, vacuum valve), tubo de pulsações (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), tubo de ar (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube). (various references)

   

Russian 

  

электронная лампа (tube, vacuum valve, vacuum-tube, valve). (various references)

   

Serbo-Croatian

  

vakuumska cev. (various references)

   

Spanish

  

válvula (heart valve, pallet, shutoff, tube, valve, vent), tubo vacío, tubo flexible de vacío (air hose, pulse control tube, pulse tube, rubber vacuum tube), tubo de vacío (electronic valve, vacuum valve). (various references)

   

Swedish

  

ventil (scuttle, throttle, tube, valve, ventilator), vakuumrör (electronic valve, vacuum valve, valve), elektronrör (valve). (various references)

   

Ukranian 

  

електронна лампа. (various references)

Source: compiled by the editor from various translation references.

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Misspellings: Vacuum Tube

Misspellings

"Vacuum Tube" is suggested in spellcheckers for the following: vaccum tube. (additional references)

Source: compiled by the editor, based on several corpora (additional references).

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Anagrams: Vacuum Tube

Scrabble® Enable2K-Verified Anagrams

Words within the letters "a-b-c-e-m-t-u-u-u-v"

-4 letters: acetum, vacuum.

-5 letters: acute, beaut, mauve, tubae.

Source: compiled by the editor from various references; see credits.

SCRABBLE® is a registered trademark. All intellectual property rights in and to the game are owned in the U.S.A and Canada by Hasbro Inc., and throughout the rest of the world by J.W. Spear & Sons Limited of Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, a subsidiary of Mattel Inc. Mattel and Spear are not affiliated with Hasbro.

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Alternative Orthography: Vacuum Tube


Hexadecimal (or equivalents, 770AD-1900s) (references)

56 61 63 75 75 6D      54 75 62 65

Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519; backwards) (references)

    

Binary Code (1918-1938, probably earlier) (references)

01010110 01100001 01100011 01110101 01110101 01101101 00100000 01010100 01110101 01100010 01100101

HTML Code (1990) (references)

&#86 &#97 &#99 &#117 &#117 &#109 &#32 &#84 &#117 &#98 &#101

ISO 10646 (1991-1993) (references)

0056 0061 0063 0075 0075 006D      0054 0075 0062 0065

Encryption (beginner's substitution cypher): (references)

566769878779254876871

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INDEX

1. Definition
2. Synonyms
3. Crosswords
4. Usage: Commercial
5. Expressions
6. Expressions: Internet
7. Translations: Modern
8. Derivations
9. Anagrams
10. Orthography
11. Bibliography


  

Copyright © Philip M. Parker, INSEAD. Terms of Use.