Everything about Thyratron totally explained
A
thyratron is a type of
gas filled tube used as a high
energy electrical
switch and controlled
rectifier.
Triode,
Tetrode and
Pentode variations of the thyratron have been manufactured in the past, though most are of the triode design. Gases used include
mercury vapor,
xenon,
neon, and (in special high-voltage applications or applications requiring very short switching times)
hydrogen. Unlike a
vacuum tube, a thyratron can't be used to
amplify signals linearly.
In the 1920s Thyratrons were derived from early
vacuum tubes such as the UV-200, which contained a small amount of argon gas to increase its
sensitivity as a
radio signal detector; and the German LRS Relay tube, which also contained argon gas. Gas
rectifiers which predated vacuum tubes, such as the argon-filled General Electric "
Tungar bulb" and the
Cooper-Hewitt mercury pool rectifier, also provided an influence. A thyratron is basically a "controlled gas rectifier".
Irving Langmuir and G. S. Meikle of GE are usually cited as the first investigators to study controlled rectification in gas tubes, about 1914. The first commercial thyratrons didn't appear until around 1928.
Construction
A typical hot-cathode thyratron uses a heated
filament cathode, completely contained within a shield assembly with a
control grid on one open side, which faces the plate-shaped
anode. When positive
voltage is applied to the anode, if the control electrode is kept at cathode potential, no current flows. When the control electrode is made slightly positive, gas between the anode and cathode ionizes and conducts current. The shield prevents ionized current paths that might form within other parts of the tube. The gas in a thyratron is typically at a fraction of the pressure of air at sea level; 15 to 30 millibars (1.5 to 3 kPa) is typical.
Both
hot- and
cold-cathode versions are encountered. A hot cathode is an advantage, as ionization of the gas is made easier; thus, the tube's control electrode is more sensitive. Once turned on, the thyratron will remain on (conducting) as long as there's a significant current flowing through it. When the anode voltage or current falls to zero, the device switches off.
Applications
Small thyratrons were manufactured in the past for controlling electromechanical relays and for industrial applications such as motor and arc-welding controllers. Large thyratrons are still manufactured, and are capable of operation up to tens of
kiloamperes (kA) and tens of
kilovolts (kV).
Modern applications include pulse drivers for pulsed
radar equipment, high-energy
gas lasers,
radiotherapy devices,
particle accelerators and in
Tesla coils and similar devices.
Thyratrons are also used in high-power
UHF television transmitters, to protect
inductive output tubes from internal
shorts, by grounding the incoming high-voltage supply during the time it takes for a
circuit breaker to open and reactive components to drain their stored charges. This is commonly called a "
crowbar" circuit.
Thyratrons have been replaced in most low and medium-power applications by corresponding semiconductor devices known as
thyristors (sometimes called
silicon-controlled rectifiers, or SCRs) and
triacs. However, switching service requiring voltages above 20 kV and involving very short risetimes remains within the domain of the thyratron. Variations of the thyratron idea are the
krytron, the
sprytron, the
ignitron, and the triggered
spark gap, all still used today in special applications.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Thyratron'.
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