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[Amps] Arc Damage to Grid Wires

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Subject: [Amps] Arc Damage to Grid Wires
From: jtml at lanl.gov (John T. M. Lyles)
Date: Thu Feb 20 16:11:47 2003
In the paper "Evaluation of Arc Damage to Power Triode Grid Wires" by 
G. Bronner, J. Murray, and J. Sorrentino (Plasma Physics Lab, 
Princeton), in Dec 1966 IEEE Trans on Electron Devices, a test setup 
was made using thin aluminum foil (0.0008 inch thick) and a source of 
high voltage, switched through a vacuum switch. Various circuit 
components were installed (R and C) to simulate real power supplies 
connected to a tube. The use of a 0.5 uF shunt capacitor for stored 
energy, and a series R resulted in a damped ringing at 50 KHz. 
Raising the series R to 9 ohms resulted in critical damping. There 
was no RF magic and no parasitics - just oscillatory response from 
the distributed and lumped L and C  of the layout.

It does explain one of the curious things about arcs inside vacuum 
tubes, as to "where is the pecker track" or arc damage on the 
elements.

Abstract:
Experiments involving aluminum foil damage tests and a simulated grid 
structure were performed to relate such tests to the minimum energy 
required to damage the grid structure of a type A-15186C (RCA?) tube. 
In the case of foil tests conducted in air, it was shown that the 
energy in a particular fault is related to the foil hole size and is 
in close agreement with engineering calculations and published data. 
In a vacuum arc gap the damage is much less than indicated by the air 
foil test. The arc becomes mobile and the energy dissipation appears 
widespread over the surface area rather than being concentrated or 
anchored in a spot. The damage or hole size was much smaller than 
obtained from engineering calculations. With energies up to 100 
Joules and charges up to 0.25 Coulombs, more than 100 pulses were 
required to damage simulated grid wires to the extent where breakage 
occurred. On a single shot basis, energies in excess of 3 kJ were 
required to produce damage.
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