The invention relates generally to microwave heating apparatus and more particularly to waveguide applicators for heating or drying products with microwaves.
Microwaves are often used in industrial processes to heat or dry products. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 4,497,759 describes a waveguide system for dielectrically heating a crystalline polymer drawn into a rod fed continuously through a circular waveguide applicator along its centerline. The TM01 mode is used to concentrate the heating along the centerline. The narrow waveguide applicator has an inner diameter of 95.6 mm, which limits its use to small-diameter products, such as drawn polymer rods. For continuous heating and drying processes in which individual products or a product strand is fed continuously through a waveguide applicator, openings are provided at opposite ends of the applicator for product entry and exit. But microwave radiation can also leak through the openings, especially if the openings are large to accommodate large-diameter products.
One version of a microwave heating apparatus embodying features of the invention comprises a tubular waveguide applicator forming a heating chamber between a first end and an opposite second end. The applicator has a circular cross section and an axis along its centerline. A waveguide feed connected between a microwave source and the tubular waveguide applicator at the first end propagates microwaves through the tubular waveguide applicator from the first end to the second end with a dominant TE01 field pattern in the heating chamber. A first resistive choke is connected in series with the tubular waveguide applicator at the first end. A second resistive choke is connected in series the tubular waveguide applicator at the second end. Each of the resistive chokes includes a plurality of conductive vanes covered with a microwave-absorbent material and spaced apart along the axis in a chevron pattern. The vanes have central apertures aligned with openings in the opposite ends of the resistive chokes and with the heating chamber to guide articles to be treated in the heating chamber through the resistive chokes.
Another version of a microwave heating apparatus comprises a tubular waveguide applicator that has a cylindrical outer wall terminating in a first end and an opposite second end to form a heating chamber with a circular cross section between the first and second ends with an axis along the heating chamber's centerline. A microwave source supplies microwave energy into the tubular waveguide applicator. A first reactive choke is disposed in series with the tubular waveguide applicator at the first end of the tubular waveguide applicator. A second reactive choke is disposed in series with the tubular waveguide applicator at the second end of the tubular waveguide applicator. A first resistive choke is connected in series with the tubular waveguide applicator and the first reactive choke. A second resistive choke is connected in series with the tubular waveguide applicator and the second reactive choke.
These features of the invention are described in more detail in the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, in which:
A microwave heating apparatus embodying features of the invention, including a tubular waveguide applicator, is shown in
A microwave source 17 injects microwaves 18, for example, at 915 MHz or 2540 MHz, into the waveguide applicator 10 through a rectangular waveguide feed 20 at an entrance end 22 of the applicator. The microwaves propagate along the waveguide applicator 10 from the entrance end 22 to an exit end 23. The microwaves travel through the interior of the applicator 10 in a direction of propagation 24 parallel to the axis 25 of the applicator. Microwave energy unabsorbed by the articles to be treated in the heating chamber exits the exit end 23 through a rectangular waveguide segment 21 to a dummy load 26, which prevents reflections back into the applicator. But it would also be possible to operate without a dummy load and allow the microwave energy to reflect back through the applicator 10 toward the entrance end 22 and, in that way, double the effective length of the applicator. The shorter sides 27 of the rectangular waveguide feed 20, which define the feed's E plane, are perpendicular to the axis 25 of the applicator 10 to produce an electric field pattern in which the TE01 mode is dominant.
As shown in
As shown in
The chokes 34 closer to the applicator are reactive chokes that reflect microwave energy back into the applicator. The reactive chokes 34 are positioned at the ends 22, 23 of the applicator 10. The reactive chokes 34 shown in
Because of the large opening required to accommodate large-diameter articles entering and exiting the reactive chokes 34, the reactive chokes may not reduce leakage enough. So resistive, absorbing choke boxes 42 (
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