The present invention relates to the glass working arts. It finds particular application in conjunction with feedthroughs for high power x-ray tubes and will be described with particular reference thereto. However, it is to be appreciated that the invention will also find application in conjunction with other vacuum tubes, glass pressure or vacuum vessels, and the like.
Typically, x-ray tubes include an anode and a cathode mounted inside of an evacuated glass envelope or frame. Electrical power is usually provided to the cathode by way of a feedthrough which feeds a plurality of electrical conductors through the glass frame.
In one prior feedthrough implementation, a Kovar sleeve which is flared at the top to be welded and sealed to portions of a metallic cathode assembly. Kovar, of course, is a high temperature conductive alloy which has an expansion of coefficient like that of glass and which fuses to glass at glass-softening temperatures. A plurality of leads extends through the Kovar cylinder from the atmospheric exterior to the interior of the tube. In order to form a vacuum-tight seal, a glass plug is provided which has an outer diameter which permits it to fit snugly inside the Kovar cylinder and axial, interior bores through which the leads are received. Each lead is spliced with a Kovar segment for the portion which passes through the glass cylinder. The assembly of the Kovar sleeve with the glass cylinder inserted into it and the Kovar sections of the leads received in the bores of the glass cylinder is then placed in an oven of about 1000° C. to fuse the glass cylinder to the interior surface of the Kovar sleeve and around the exterior surfaces of the Kovar segments of the leads.
Although this technique forms an effective vacuum seal, a small percentage of the seals fail after the flange of the Kovar sleeve is welded to other portions of the cathode assembly. The present inventor theorizes that the heating of the flange to about 200° C. during welding heats the conductive Kovar sleeve which heats and expands more rapidly than the more thermally insulative glass cylinder, occasionally causing a slight flaw in the glass cylinder to Kovar sleeve seal. Unfortunately, this leak is typically so slight that it is not detected until assembly of the tube has been completed and the tube evacuated, i.e., substantially at the end of the manufacturing process. Leaking tubes are scrapped.
The present invention provides a new and improved sealing technique which overcomes the above-referenced problems and others.
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a feedthrough for a vacuum or pressure vessel is provided. The feedthrough includes a sleeve with a tubular end made of a conductive material which thermally fuses to glass. A glass plug defines a recess in one face which is dimensioned to receive the tubular end of the sleeve. The glass plug further defines at least one bore which is sized to receive a segment of a conductive material which thermally fuses to glass of an electrical lead. The glass plug is thermally fused to the tubular end of the sleeve and the segment of the electrical lead.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a vacuum tube is provided which includes a vacuum-tight frame, an anode and cathode mounted in the frame, and a feedthrough as set forth above.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a glass plug is provided for use in manufacturing the feedthrough presented above.
In accordance with another aspect, a method of manufacturing a feedthrough for a pressure or vacuum vessel is provided. A glass plug which has a bore extending through it and a recess defined in one face leaving a peripheral annular ring is formed. An electrical lead with a segment of a conductive material which thermally fuses to glass is passed through the bore and positioned with the segment in the bore. The glass plug and a sleeve of a conductive material which thermally fuses to the glass are positioned relative to each other such that a tubular end of the sleeve is received in the recess. Inserting the segment of the electrical leads into the bore and the positioning of the tubular end of the sleeve in the recess are performed in either order. The glass plug, the sleeve, and the electrical leads are heated at a sufficient temperature and for a sufficient duration to fuse the glass plug to the electrical lead segment and the tubular end of the sleeve in a vacuum-tight relationship.
In accordance with another aspect, a feedthrough made by the above-method is provided.
In accordance with another aspect, a vacuum tube is provided which includes a feedthrough manufactured by the above method.
One advantage of the present invention is that it provides feedthroughs with more reliable vacuum seals.
Another advantage of the present invention resides in an improved technique for sealing glass plugs to Kovar sleeves.
Still further advantages of the present invention will be appreciated to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understand the following detailed description.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
With reference to
With continuing reference to
The wires 32 each include a Kovar segment 40 having a length comparable to a length of a glass plug or cylinder 42. The Kovar segments 40 are connected with more flexible, bendable, and potentially better conductive leads on either end for interconnection with the cathode cup and optionally the getter on the vacuum side and with connection points for interconnecting the vacuum tube with sources of power and control at the atmosphere side. In the embodiment of
The glass plug 42 includes bores 44 which are sized to receive the electrical leads and particularly the Kovar segments 40 slidably but snugly therein. At an end toward the Kovar sleeve 34, the glass plug includes an annular recess such as a groove or channel 46 of a diameter and width to match a corresponding end 36a of the Kovar sleeve tubular section 36. The groove is dimensioned such that the Kovar sleeve is received slidably, but snugly therein. When the end of the Kovar sleeve is received in the groove, a peripheral portion of the glass plug forms a ring 48 around the outer periphery of the Kovar sleeve cylindrical portion. Once fused together, the ring 48 functions as a peripheral restraint that controls expansion of the end of the tubular section 36. In the groove or channel embodiment, the glass plug also fuses to an inner surface of the Kovar sleeve. In an exemplary embodiment, the groove or channel 46 is about 1.5 mm deep and about 0.75 mm wide. The annular ring 48 is also about 1.5 mm wide. Of course, the channel and ring can have other dimensions. For example, the ring can be 1 mm wide or 2 mm side and the groove could be 2 mm deep. Of course, the sleeve tubular portion 36 and the annular recess 46 can be circular, elliptical, hexagonal, or the like.
During assembly, the leads 32 are fed through the bores 44 in the glass plug 42 until the Kovar sections 40 are received in and span the bores. The glass plug with the leads in place is positioned on the Kovar sleeve with the Kovar sleeve received in the groove or channel 46. This assembly is then heated to a sufficient temperature and for a sufficient duration, e.g., about 900-1000° C. for about 30-60 minutes, to fuse the glass plug 42 to the Kovar sections 40 and to the Kovar sleeve 34, all in a vacuum-tight relationship. The feedthrough assembly 30 is subsequently positioned on the cathode header 26 and welded in place. After all of the cathode and anode parts are assembled and sealed into the glass frame, a vacuum is drawn through a tubular extension 50. Once the tube is fully degassed, the tube 50 is heated and sealed. The getter 28 is flashed, optionally through power applied through one of the leads 32, which activates it to absorb any residual gas present or which may develop in the frame.
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations may occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be constructed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2007/061593 | 2/5/2007 | WO | 00 | 8/18/2008 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60775253 | Feb 2006 | US |