The present invention relates to the cooling of X-ray or E-beam generators. In particular, but not exclusively, the invention relates to vacuum-tube type devices having a ceramic or other high-voltage electrical insulator which is cooled by means of a fluid coolant circuit.
Vacuum X-ray or E-beam generator devices comprise components which generate large quantities of heat during operation, and this heat must be removed in order for the device to continue to function. However, such devices also require a high vacuum in order to function efficiently, and it is undesirable to introduce cooling circuits into the vacuum chamber itself in order to cool the components which are operating inside the vacuum (for example the cathode assembly of an X-ray tube).
It has been proposed in international application WO2009/083534 to dissipate heat from the cathode of an X-ray tube by cooling the ceramic insulator on which the cathode assembly is mounted. An omega-shaped copper yoke is arranged around the outer surface of the insulator and tightened. The yoke acts as a heat-sink for cooling the outer surface of the insulator. The mode coolant tubes pass perpendicularly through the copper, so that beat from the copper yoke is conveyed away by the anode coolant passing through the tubes.
In the prior art cooling arrangement described above, the yoke must he secured tightly around the insulator in order to ensure a good thermal contact between the copper of the yoke and the outer surface of the insulator. This tightness can however lead to a build-up of potentially damaging mechanical stresses as the insulator warms up and expands during operation. A copper mesh or felt can be placed between the yoke and the insulator in order to enhance thermal conductivity while allowing a certain margin for expansion and contraction. The prior art arrangement also suffers from the disadvantage that the omega-shaped yoke occupies a significant volume at the end of the insulator. Since the yoke must be fitted outside the vacuum chamber, it also follows that the cooling effect of the yoke is spatially remote from the source of the heat (the cathode).
It is desirable to address some of the above and other problems with the prior art devices and methods.
Amongst other advantages of the device and method of aspects of the invention are one or more of the cooling efficiency is greatly increased, the cooling elements take up less space. the cooling elements are located closer to the source of heat to be dissipated, reduced stress on the insulator element, and/or the cooling elements can be incorporated into the existing construction of the vacuum housing.
The method offers a way of creating a cooling conduit which is thermally effective and which occupies little more space than that required for the vacuum enclosure seal, for example.
The invention and its advantages will become apparent in the following description, together with illustrations of example embodiments and implementations given in the accompanying drawings. The drawings are intended merely as illustrations of the present invention, and are not to be construed as limiting the scope of the invention.
Where the same reference signs have been used in different drawings, these are intended to refer to the same or corresponding features.
FIGS. 1,2 and 3 are schematic sectional representations of the same example X-ray tube which will be used as an example to illustrate the principles of the invention.
Referring now to
Reference 12 indicates an X-ray window where X-rays generated by electrons hitting the target (not shown) can exit the vacuum tube 1.
In the illustrated example, insulator element 3 is formed as a hollow cone having thick walls made of a ceramic material. The shape of the inner space inside the cone is designed to correspond to the shape of a high-voltage connector which can be connected to supply the high voltage required for accelerating elections emitted from the cathode towards the anode. Such connectors are generally covered with an elastic insulating material, such as a polymeric material, in order to ensure a close mechanical fit between the connector and the insulator, while still reducing the possibility of electrical discharge through the body of the connector.
Heat generated in the cathode is conducted away through the body of the insulator element 3, and it is important to ensure that this heat does not adversely affect the mechanical or insulating properties of the cover of the connector. The connector may be insulated with a thick polymeric insulator, for example, which may be damaged, or whose insulating properties may be adversely affected at high temperatures. For this reason, cooling is provided on or near the outer surface of the insulator 3, to draw heat away from the inner surface facing the connector (the polymer/ceramic interface, for example), and to reduce the temperature of the connector insulation during operation of the X-ray tube.
The cooling is achieved in this example by means of a coolant conduit 8 formed between the collar element 7 and the insulator element 3. In this simple example, the coolant conduit 8 is formed as a channel in the inner surface of the collar element 7. In other words, the walls of the coolant conduit are integral with the collar element 7. The collar element thus serves to provide not only the vacuum seal between the enclosure wall 10 and the insulator 3, but also some (in this case three) of the walls of the coolant conduit 8. The collar element 7 is tightly sealed to the insulator element 3 and to the vacuum wall in order to protect the high vacuum 2 inside the tube, and in order to retain the coolant within the coolant conduit 8.
The coolant conduit may alternatively be constructed as a yoke, in a similar manner to that described in prior art document WO2009/083534, except that the yoke is hollow, and the coolant flows through the hollow space within the yoke, circumferentially around the outside (the outer surface) of the insulator. The coolant conduit may also be constructed as a passage or tunnel through the insulator material itself, for example in a region near to the surface of the outer periphery of the insulator, at the region (referred to as the second region) of the insulator remote from the electron emitter. In this variant, the coolant can passing through the passage and take heat directly from contact with the insulator material.
In this specification, we describe the coolant as flowing in contact with the insulator, or with the material of the insulator. This description should be understood to include the possibility of any intermediate layer or coating which may in practice be present between the coolant fluid, and the insulator material itself.
Similarly, reference is made to ring-shaped elements and ring flange elements, and it should be understood that such elements are not limited, to elements having a circular cross-section. Such terms are to be understood, in a broader sense of a flange (for example) which extends around the insulator, following the outer profile of the insulator, whatever cross-sectional profile the insulator has.
Also shown in
The conduit 8 is shown with a rectangular cross-section and parallel side-walls 18, although it could also be formed with other profiles. In the specific case where the thermal expansion properties of the collar 7 and insulator 3 are well matched, this kind of joint may suffice, since no significant movement would be expected between the collar 7 and insulator 3 as the former heats up and cools down.
However, the collar 7 and the insulator 3 may be made of materials having different thermal-mechanical behaviours, in which case some relative radial movement may be expected between the collar 7 and the insulator 3. In this case, to avoid the build-up of stresses between the collar 7 and the insulator 3, one or both of them can be made of material which is sufficiently elastic to expand or contract as required to allow for the relative radial movement.
Such relative radial movements may alternatively be accommodated by implementing the cooling conduit 8 with separate walls extending between the insulator 3 and the collar 7, the walls being sufficiently elastic to extend or contract radially (relative to the central longitudinal axis of the insulator) to absorb the relative radial movements. An example of such an implementation is shown in
The vacuum-side flange ring (the left-hand one of the flange rings 9 in
The flange ring elements 9 can be formed at least in part from a spring material, and may be held in compression between the collar element 7 a Id the insulator element 3. This arrangement has the advantage of giving a more reliable and longer-lasting seal, and providing mechanical support between the collar element and the insulator element.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2012/063589 | 7/11/2012 | WO | 00 | 4/16/2015 |