1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to emission-gated electron-beam devices and more particularly to devices including an active electronically steered cathode for generating one or more electron beams that are electronically steered at their points of origin.
2. Description of Related Art
In a conventional density-modulated device, such as an inductive output tube (IOT), radio-frequency (RF) gating of electron emission is accomplished using an input cavity structure that develops a peak electric field between the cathode surface and a control grid. By biasing the control grid with respect to the cathode, the cathode can be made to emit electrons during part of the RF cycle. As a result, the electron beam is modulated at the RF drive frequency.
In some applications, it is desirable to generate a helical or deflection-modulated beam. Conventionally, such a beam is generated using bending fields that operate on the electron beam to deflect its trajectory. However, applying bending fields tends to degrade the quality of the electron beam, making it unsuitable in applications that require precise control of the beam trajectory, such as in high-frequency devices where circuit dimensions and geometries are small. In addition, because voltage ripple may cause positional deviations, exceedingly tight power-supply regulation that is difficult to achieve may be required in many applications. Accordingly, it would be desirable to provide an apparatus and method for generating an electronically steered electron beam that overcomes these and other drawbacks of the prior art.
An active electronically steered cathode (AESC) comprises a cathode having an emissive surface that is located within an enclosure. A control grid is placed in close proximity to the extended cathode, defining a G-K gap between the grid and the cathode. The enclosure is adapted to have a first input port and a second input port adapted to couple a first RF signal and a second RF signal, respectively, into the G-K gap. The first RF signal and the second RF signal interact to create an electromagnetic field within the G-K gap that has at least one field maximum located near a portion of the emissive surface of the cathode. A voltage bias is applied to the control grid and adjusted such that the cathode begins to emit electrons in the vicinity of the one or more electromagnetic field maxima. The field maxima and the grid bias thus operate to define one or more emission sites along the emissive surface of the cathode.
In an embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the first and second RF signals are adjusted such that the maxima of the electromagnetic field move along the surface of the cathode as a function of time. The RF signals may further be adapted such that the maxima of the electromagnetic field move with a substantially constant velocity.
In another embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the cathode is configured to be substantially annular in shape, and the first and second RF signals are adjusted such that the electromagnetic field maxima move along the cathode on a path that is substantially circular. When the motion along this circular path is adjusted such that its velocity is substantially constant, the electron beams emitted are substantially helical in shape.
In another embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the control grid may be adapted to comprise a series of discrete slots or windows through which the electron beam may exit the cavity. When the emission sites are moved along the emissive surface of the cathode, the emitted electron beam will thus be transmitted out of the cavity only when an emission site aligns with a slot in the grid. The resulting electron beams thus become density modulated.
In some embodiments of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the first RF signal is adapted to be orthogonal to the second RF signal. The phase of the second RF signal may further be adapted to be 90 degrees out of phase with respect to the first RF signal. Furthermore, it is possible to configure the first and second RF signals such that the electromagnetic field is either a transverse-magnetic (TM) field or a transverse-electric (TE) field.
In yet another embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the first and second RF fields are configured such that m electromagnetic field maxima are produced to define m emission sites along the emissive surface of the cathode, wherein m is a positive integer. As described above, the RF signals can be adjusted to cause the m emission sites to move along the surface of the cathode, thereby causing electronic steering of the m emitted electron beams.
In some embodiments of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the first input port and the second input port are located around an outside surface of the enclosure and separated by 360*(2N+1)/4m degrees, wherein N is a positive integer and m is the number of emission sites, as defined above.
In another embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the enclosure is substantially rectangular in shape and is adapted to act as a rectangular waveguide wherein the first RF signal is introduced at one end of the enclosure and the second RF signal is introduced from the other end. The signals interfere within the rectangular cavity to produce a standing wave that includes one or more maxima distributed along the cathode, which is substantially rectangular in shape.
In another embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, one or both of the RF signals input into the cavity are comprised of a Fourier sum of harmonic frequency components. If the cavity is designed so that these harmonic frequency components excite spatial harmonics of the corresponding order, the Fourier sum creates an electromagnetic field waveform that may be more steeply peaked than a single harmonic. This results in a potentially smaller emission site on the surface of the cathode and thus greater control over the emission sites of the electron beams.
Thus, certain benefits of an active electronically steered cathode have been achieved. Further advantages and applications of the invention will become clear to those skilled in the art by examination of the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment. Reference will be made to the attached sheets of drawing that will first be described briefly.
a-2d depict RF signal profiles adapted to electronically steer electron beams in an AESC in accordance with the present invention;
In its simplest form, an active electronically steered cathode (AESC) is similar to the input cavity of a conventional inductive output tube (IOT).
In an embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the electron beam emitted from the cathode 106 is electronically steered directly at its point of origin by creating a rotating electromagnetic mode within the input cavity that moves the electron emission site around the surface of the cathode 106. For example, a rotating electromagnetic mode may be created in the G-K gap by driving it in quadrature. To do so, a first mode, described by the expression cos(θ)cos(ωt), is combined with a second, orthogonal mode that is π/2 radians out of phase and described by the expression sin(θ)cos(ωt-π/2). The combined field is then expressed as cos(θ)cos(ωt)+sin(θ)cos(ωt-π/2). This is equivalent to cos(θ)cos(ωt)+sin(θ)sin(ωt), which can also be expressed as cos(θ−ωt). For a fixed signal amplitude, θ−ωt is equal to a constant, k, so θ=k+ωt. For modes having m azimuthal variations, θ is replaced by mθ. Changing the order of the operating mode provides electronic control of the number and rotational frequency of the electron emission sites on the surface of the cathode.
In order to couple to the orthogonal modes, it is preferred to provide plural drive ports around the input cavity, separated by 360*(2N+1)/4m degrees, where N is an integer (N=0, 1, 2, . . . ), and m is the order of the azimuthal variation of the TMmnp mode. TMmnp refers to the standard transverse-magnetic modes supported within a cylindrical cavity, where m, n, and p take on the values m=0, 1, 2, . . . ; n=1, 2, 3 . . . ; and p=0, 1, 2 . . . . When driven 90 degrees out of phase, as illustrated in
In a preferred embodiment of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the cathode is configured to have a substantially annular structure, and it is housed within a pillbox cavity that is adapted to support a rotating electromagnetic field within the G-K gap.
The AESC can also be configured to exploit travelling wave modes. For example, in a waveguide with drive ports on either end, the modal pattern generated by the interference of the two travelling waves can be controlled by changing the phase, amplitude, or frequency of one or both of the drive signals.
Positional control of the electron beam using an AESC in accordance with the present invention is beneficial in the design of transverse beam amplifiers and various deflection modulated electron tubes. Other applications that may potentially benefit from the invention include scanned x-ray sources, lithographic systems, and phased array radar transmitters. A cold test model of an AESC has been fabricated and successfully tested at 2 GHz. The desired orthogonal modes were excited, producing four emission sites that were scanned across the model cathode surface.
In various embodiments of an AESC in accordance with the present invention, the electric field within the cavity is generated by one or more standing waves, one or more travelling waves, or a combination thereof. Furthermore, the RF electric field can be arbitrarily shaped by adding a spectrum of Fourier components. For example, injection of an appropriately phased third harmonic signal will sharpen the edges of the field maxima, making the cathode emission region more localized.
Although the embodiments described herein depict an AESC used in inductive output tube applications, it should be appreciated that the AESC is equally applicable to other electron beam devices. These and other applications of the invention should be readily apparent to one skilled in the art, and such applications and adaptations would fall within the scope and spirit of the present invention. The invention is further defined by the following claims.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110050096 A1 | Mar 2011 | US |