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Слайд 1 Vacuum tubes were the first active elements and they had a tremendous role in the development of the field of electronics Слайд 2 • The English physicist John Ambrose Fleming was the inventor of the first rectifying tube which was developed in 1904. It was essentially an incandescent light bulb with an added electrode inside. When the bulb's filament is heated white-hot, electrons are "boiled" off its surface and into the vacuum inside the bulb. If the electrode -- called a "plate" or "anode" -- is made more positive than the hot filament, a direct current flows through the vacuum to the electrode (a demonstration of the Edison effect). • The first amplifying tube was invented by the American electrical engineer Lee De Forest in 1906. It differs form the diode only in the third electrode called the grid. Слайд 3 Later was invented the tetrode to overcome stability problems and limited voltage gain due to the Miller effect. One more grid was added between the grid and the anode, known as the screen grid. The pentode was invented to solve a new problem in the tetrode called "tetrode kink" which caused instability. The solution was to add another grid between the screen grid and the main anode, called the suppressor grid. Слайд 4 Vacuum tubes suffered a slow death during the 1950s and '60s thanks to the invention of the transistor— specifically, the ability to mass-produce transistors by chemically engraving, or etching, pieces of silicon. Transistors were smaller, cheaper, and longer lasting. They could also be packed into microchips to switch on and off according to different, complex inputs, paving the way for smaller, more powerful computers. Слайд 5 Why transistors are better Usually lower cost than tubes, especially in small-signal circuits Smaller than equivalent tubes Can be combined in one die to make integrated circuit Lower power consumption than equivalent tubes, especially in small-signal circuits Less waste heat than equivalent tubes Can operate on low-voltage supplies, greater safety, lower component costs, smaller clearances Matching transformers not required for low-impedance loads more physical ruggedness than tubes (depends on chassis construction) Слайд 6 Tube advantages Highly linear without negative feedback, specially some small-signal types Clipping is smooth, which is widely considered more musical than transistors Tolerant of overloads and voltage spikes Characteristics highly independent of temperature, greatly simplifies biasing Wider dynamic range than typical transistor circuits, thanks to higher operating voltages Device capacitances vary only slightly with signal voltages Capacitive coupling can be done with low-value, high-quality film capacitors Circuit designs tend to be simpler than semiconductor equivalents Operation is usually in Class A or AB, which minimizes crossover distortion Output transformer in power amp protects speaker from tube failure Maintenance tends to be easier because user can replace tubes Слайд 7 Tube sound Audiophiles may agree or disagree on the relative merits of tube vs solid state amplification. Some say they prefer the sound produced from tube amplifiers on the grounds that it is more natural and satisfying than the sound from transistor amplifiers. The key is in the harmonics distortion prodused by the active element. The tubes produce more low-order even harmonics distortion which is perceived as pleasant by the listener. On the other hand the transistor produces more higher order uneven harmonics which that are perceived as unpleasant. Слайд 8 Modern vacuum tube application One of the most popular applications is in the audio equipment. Слайд 9 Vacuum fluorescent display is another popular application VFDs have the advantages of being rugged, inexpensive, and easily configured to display a wide variety of customized messages, and unlike LCDs, VFDs are not limited by the response time of rearranging liquid crystals and are thus able to function normally in cold, even sub-zero, temperatures, making them ideal for outdoor devices in cold climates. Early on, the main disadvantage of such displays was their use of significantly more power (0.2 watts) than a simple LCD. This was considered a significant drawback for battery-operated equipment like calculators, so VFDs ended up being used mainly in equipment powered by an AC supply or heavy-duty rechargeable batteries. Слайд 10 The cavity magnetron is a high-powered vacuum tube that generates microwaves using the interaction of a stream of electrons with a magnetic field. The high power of pulses from the cavity magnetron made centimeter-band radar practical, with shorter wavelength radars allowing detection of smaller objects. At present, cavity magnetrons are commonly used in microwave ovens and in various radar applications. Слайд 11 A klystron is a specialized used as an amplifier for high frequencies, from UHF radio frequencies up into the microwave range. Klystron amplifiers have the advantage (over the magnetron) of coherently amplifying a reference signal so its output may be precisely controlled in amplitude, frequency and phase. Klystrons can produce far higher microwave power outputs than solid state microwave devices such as Gunn diodes. In modern systems, they are used from UHF (hundreds of MHz) up through hundreds of gigahertz. Klystrons can be found at work in radar, satellite and wideband high-power communication (very common in television broadcasting and EHF satellite terminals), medicine (radiation oncology), and highenergy physics (particle accelerators and experimental reactors). At SLAC, for example, klystrons are routinely employed which have outputs in the range of 50 megawatts (pulse) and 50 kilowatts (timeaveraged) at 2856MHz. Слайд 12 A traveling-wave tube (TWT) is a specialised vacuum tube that is used in electronics to amplify radio frequency (RF) signals to high power. The bandwidth of a broadband TWT can be as high as one octave, although tuned (narrowband) versions exist, and operating frequencies range from 300 MHz to 50 GHz. The power gain of the tube is on the order of 70 decibels. TWTAs are commonly used as amplifiers in satellite transponders, where the input signal is very weak and the output needs to be high power. A TWTA whose output drives an antenna is a type of transmitter. TWTA transmitters are used extensively in radar, particularly in airborne fire-control radar systems, and in electronic warfare and self-protection systems. Слайд13 CRT No native resolution; No input lag No ghosting and smearing artifacts during fast motion due to submillisecond response time Near zero color, saturation, contrast or brightness distortion. Excellent viewing angle. Can be used or stored in both extreme hot and cold temperature conditions without harm to the system. CRTs are still popular in the printing and broadcasting industries as well as in the professional video, photography, and graphics fields due to their greater color fidelity, contrast, and better viewing from offaxis. CRT monitors are still widely used in the study of the brain's visual processing (e.g. in psychophysics). The speed and fidelity of their response, combined with the simplicity of their design, makes them well-suited for experiments where scientists need to have very fine control over stimuli which are presented to an observer.