The invention relates to a scandate dispenser cathode for electron emission and to a vacuum electron tube comprising a scandate dispenser cathode.
Scandate dispenser cathodes are known as cathodes with a very high electron emission. Document DE19828729 describes a scandate dispenser cathode which consists of a cathode body, a base layer and a cathode coating with an emitting surface. The cathode coating which is applied to the cathode body consists of one or more layers which contain rhenium and/or a rhenium alloy and of one or more layers which contain scandium oxide, said layers being arranged in an alternating manner. The cathode body consists of a matrix of at least one high-melting metal and/or one high-melting alloy and of a barium compound which is provided to supply barium to the emitting surface by means of a chemical reaction with the matrix material. The matrix preferably consists of a porous tungsten matrix produced from tungsten powder using a powder-metallurgical method. This porous matrix is impregnated with a mixture of BaO, CaO and Al2O3. To this end, a mixture of BaCO3, CaCO3 and Al2O3 is melted and the porous matrix is filled with the mixture by melt infiltration. The surface of the body is then cleaned of the oxide mixture adhering to the outside by means of ultrasound and water, and is then provided with a barium-containing base layer. Although this scandate dispenser cathode has a long service life, a high electron current density and a uniform emission over the cathode surface, the significant problem with scandate dispenser cathodes nevertheless still exists, namely the fact that, after a typical 2-hour activation phase, an additional operating time of more than 100 h at a typical operating temperature of 1033° C. is required until the maximum emission current density of more than 300 A/cm2 is reached. This problem could not be alleviated by the additional barium-containing base layer between the cathode body and the cathode coating which is described in said document. A considerable lengthening of the activation phase in order to more rapidly reach the maximum emission current density is moreover not practical on account of the high evaporation rate of the electron-emitting material at activation temperatures, since this is therefore associated with a reduction in the service life of the cathode and an increase in the risk of insulation faults on account of soiling of the means for guiding the electron beam.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide an improved scandate dispenser cathode which, under the same activation conditions, exhibits a maximum emission current density just after the activation phase has ended.
This object is achieved by a scandate dispenser cathode having a cathode support, a cathode body, a cathode coating comprising a layer system consisting of one or more alternating layers of rhenium or a rhenium alloy and of scandium oxide or a scandium alloy, and an activation acceleration layer system arranged between the cathode body and the cathode coating, said activation acceleration layer system comprising at least one release layer comprising alkaline earth metal oxide, preferably barium oxide, and an activator layer system comprising a barrier material with greater oxidation resistance than the material of the cathode body and an activator material for reducing an alkaline earth metal oxide, preferably barium oxide. By virtue of the arrangement of the activation acceleration layer system according to the invention between the cathode body and the scandium-containing layer system, an alkaline earth metal source, preferably a barium source, which is protected against oxidation is arranged in the vicinity of the scandium oxide or scandium alloy layer for the accelerated formation of an emitting alkaline earth metal/scandate complex, preferably a Ba/scandate complex. The elemental alkaline earth metal which is required, preferably barium, is released by the reducing action of the activator materials which diffuse thermally from the activator layer system into the release layer. The barrier material protects the activator material and the released alkaline earth metal, preferably barium, against oxidation by oxygen from the cathode body.
It is advantageous if the barrier material comprises at least one element from the group Re, Ir, Ru, Pt, Ni. These elements are much more inert than the material of the cathode body, typically tungsten, that is to say they oxidize much less readily than the material of the cathode body.
It is particularly advantageous if the activator material consists of at least one element from the group C, Zr, Mg, Al, Si. These elements have a high diffusion rate at cathode operating temperatures and together with the alkaline earth metal oxide, preferably barium oxide, form an activator material oxide and elemental alkaline earth metal, preferably barium.
In one advantageous embodiment, the activator layer system comprises a layer of at least one barrier material and dopings of at least one activator material.
In another advantageous embodiment, the activator layer system comprises a first layer and a second layer of at least one barrier material and an activator layer of at least one activator material which is arranged between the first and second layer, which activator layer is compact or may consist of ultrafine particles. The term “ultrafine particles” means particles having a particle diameter of between 1 nm and a few hundred nm.
In another advantageous embodiment, the activator layer system comprises one or more layers of ultrafine particles of at least one activator material and at least one barrier material, wherein the barrier material encapsulates the activator material.
It is moreover advantageous if the activation acceleration layer system has a thickness of between 30 nm and 10 μm, in order that a sufficient barrier effect is achieved for preventing oxidation of the activator materials or of the alkaline earth metal, preferably barium, which is produced, the diffusion distance of the activator materials into the release layer is not too long and thus the rate of reduction of the alkaline earth metal oxide, preferably barium oxide, is not too low, and a sufficient amount of alkaline earth metal oxide, preferably barium oxide, is available for the reduction.
It is particularly advantageous if the cathode support comprises a protective device which covers part of the layer system above the layer system, as seen in the emission direction. The material which has been evaporated from the surface of the layer system that does not contribute to the electron beam thus precipitates on the inner side of the protective device (the side which faces the surface of the layer system), and any soiling of the cathode surroundings, for example of devices for guiding the electron beam, is at least considerably reduced.
The invention also relates to a vacuum electron tube comprising at least one scandate dispenser cathode as claimed in any of the preceding claims.
The invention will be further described with reference to examples of embodiments shown in the drawings to which, however, the invention is not restricted.
Scandate dispenser cathodes are used in a large number of vacuum electron tubes, particularly as cathodes in systems for electron beam lithography, but also in CRTs, microwave tubes, high-frequency tubes, X-ray tubes or thermionic converters. At start-up, the scandate dispenser cathodes run through an activation phase at activation temperatures above the operating temperature. Typical activation times are 2 h. At typical operating temperatures of 1033° C., conventional scandate dispenser cathodes without an activation acceleration layer system 5 according to the invention exhibit a relatively slow rise in electron emission over typically 100 operating hours until a maximum saturation emission of 300 A/cm2 to 400 A/cm2 is achieved. Although the duration of the rise in the saturation emission up to the maximum value can be shortened by an extended activation phase at temperatures which are considerably above the operating temperature, this is not advantageous on account of the increased evaporation of emitter material, in particular barium, and the associated shortening of the service life. In addition, increased evaporation of emitter material causes soiling of the cathode surroundings, particularly of means for focusing and deflecting the electron beam, and this leads to impairment of the operating properties of the vacuum electron tube.
In scandate dispenser cathodes according to the prior art, the slow rise in the saturation emission once the activation phase is complete is due to the fact that the high-emitting Ba/scandate complex is formed from the deposited scandium-containing layers 62 and the atomic barium which is produced only at activation and operating temperatures (cf.
The cathode coatings 5 and 6 can be produced by means of conventional coating methods. These methods include for example powder-metallurgical methods, CVD, PCVD, sputtering, vapor deposition and laser ablation deposition (LAD) for producing and coating with ultrafine particles. The activation acceleration layer system 5 according to the invention may be formed in various ways.
In one advantageous embodiment (cf.
In another advantageous embodiment (cf.
In yet another advantageous embodiment (cf.
The aforementioned layers according to the invention are produced either via thin-layer deposition methods such as, for example, vapor deposition, sputtering or CVD, or by methods for producing ultrafine particles. The layers can be produced very easily by laser ablation deposition (LAD) by alternating the deposition mode. Compact layers such as, for example, barrier layers consisting of Pt, Zr and/or Re can be produced by low-pressure LAD at coating pressures of between 0.1 and 0.01 mbar. The same applies in respect of layers with activator material already incorporated therein. A layer of ultrafine particles is obtained for example at coating pressures of 2-5 mbar. In order to prevent oxidation of the activator material, ultrafine particles of activator material can be encapsulated by barrier material by coating the particles of activator material, which are produced at a relatively high pressure, with barrier material in a second, differentially pumped area at low pressure and in a fly-through method. Encapsulation of the ultrafine particles would also be possible by means of a subsequent wet-chemical process.
Finally, the activator layer system according to the invention can also be produced by spot-welding a sheet of barrier material which is doped with activator material onto the cathode body. To this end, however, the sheet must be perforated beforehand for the necessary diffusion of barium from the cathode body to the layer system 6.
It is particularly advantageous if the activation acceleration layer system 5 has a thickness of between 30 nm and 10 μm, depending on the embodiment.
By way of example, a scandate dispenser cathode according to the invention which has a barium-containing release layer 52 is characterized by complete activation up to an emission current density of 400 A/cm2 within the activation period of 2 h at activation temperatures between 1130° C. and 1160° C., since a much larger amount of Ba/scandate complex is formed during the activation phase on account of the activation acceleration layer system according to the invention. In addition, the scandate dispenser cathode according to the invention has a greater uniformity of emission, higher resistance to ion bombardment within the vacuum electron tube following ionization of the residual gas by the electron beam, and a longer service life.
The activation acceleration layer system according to the invention can also advantageously be applied to base layers for oxide cathodes, with double and/or triple carbonate doped with Sc2O3 or another Sc-containing compound then being applied thereto by spraying. A high-emitting Ba/scandate complex is also formed much more rapidly in the activation phase in this case.
Finally, a cathode variant can be produced with a compact (Ba scandate and rhenium) layer on a base layer which is coated with a barium oxide-containing intermediate layer and is doped with activator material, wherein there is no need for the impregnated cathode body. As a result, very flat emitters with just small surface roughnesses can advantageously be produced.
The embodiments explained with reference to the figures and the description are merely examples of a scandate dispenser cathode for electron emission or of a vacuum electron tube, and are not intended to be understood as restricting the patent claims to these examples. Alternative embodiments are also possible for the person skilled in the art, and these are also covered by the scope of protection of the patent claims. The numbering of the dependent claims is not intended to imply that other combinations of the claims do not also constitute advantageous embodiments of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04106783.6 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2005/054197 | 12/13/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/19/2007 |