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Vacuum tubes' new image: Too small to see.


In the lilliputian realm of modern electronics, old-style vacuum tubes This is a list of vacuum tubes: American designation (with European equivalents)
RETMA tube designation
0
  • 0Z4 Full-Wave Gas Rectifier
2 volt heater/filament tubes
 have all the charm of hulking hulk·ing   also hulk·y
adj.
Unwieldy or bulky; massive.


hulking
Adjective

big and ungainly

Adj. 1.
 Gullivers. However, researchers have recently been reducing these components to daintier proportions (SN: 4/20/96, p. 249). They hope to exploit ways in which vacuum tubes outperform semiconductor devices.

A team in England has now developed a vacuum tube vacuum tube: see electron tube.
vacuum tube

Electron tube consisting of a sealed glass or metal enclosure from which the air has been withdrawn. It was used in early electronic circuitry to control a flow of electrons.
 whose size rivals that of transistors in today's microcircuits. The evacuated hollow in the so-called nanotriode occupies only about a billionth the volume of a grain of salt, says Haroon Ahmed Haroon Ahmed is Professor of Microelectronics at the Cavendish Laboratory, and was Master of Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge until October 2006. He is a Fellow of the Royal Academy of Engineering and holds the degree of Doctor of Science from Cambridge University. , whose group describes the device in the Nov. 1 APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS Applied Physics Letters is a weekly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by the American Institute of Physics devoted to the publication of new experimental and theoretical papers about applications of physics to science, engineering, and modern technology. .

Capp Spindt of SRI International (company) SRI International - One of the world's largest contract research firms. Founded in 1946 in conjuction with Stanford University as the Stanford Research Institute, they later became fully independent and were incorporated as a non-profit organisation under U.S.  in Menlo Park Menlo Park.

1 Residential city (1990 pop. 28,040), San Mateo co., W Calif.; inc. 1874. Electronic equipment and aerospace products are manufactured in the city. Menlo College and a Stanford Univ. research institute are there.

2 Uninc.
, Calif., hails the article as "the first credible report of an operating vacuum diode or triode triode: see electron tube.


A type of vacuum tube that is used in audio and radio amplifiers and oscillator circuits. It is like a diode with the addition of a wire mesh control grid between the cathode and plate (anode) that controls current flow.
 on this scale." Diodes act as one-way valves for current between two electrodes; triodes control current via a third electrode.

Akintunde I. Akinwande of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  calls the results "really spectacular."

Alexander A.G. Driskill-Smith, David G. Hasko, and Ahmed, all of the University of Cambridge, fabricated the prototype device from alternating layers of metals and insulators. The inventors expect the triode to operate under conditions of radiation or heat that would make standard semiconductor components fail.

"It looked pretty exciting from that point of view," says Ahmed.

Old-fashioned vacuum tubes initiate a current by boiling electrons off heated electrodes. By contrast, in the microscopic vacuum tubes, devices called field emitters shoot electrons from the most prominent tip of an array of tiny, unheated posts or pyramids. The electrons are torn from the tip by an enormous voltage produced when an external electric field becomes concentrated there. Field-emission research has intensified in the past decade because emitters can be used in flat displays for computers and other items.

Another research team in 1991 reported sealing minuscule emitters inside an evacuated cavity, thus creating a vacuum tube, but it's not as small as the Cambridge tube, Akinwande says.

For tubes of the Cambridge type to play a role in digital circuits, their traits must improve, says Ivor Brodie of SRI. The maximum current is low--about 10 nanoamperes--and too irregular, he says. Akinwande estimates that the tube's roughly 10-volt operating voltage probably can be reduced to around 2 volts, a level at which some low-voltage semiconductor devices now function.

Vacuum tubes handle high-frequency signals better than semiconductor components do. Unlike electrons in a semiconductor, which are slowed by collisions with crystal-lattice atoms, electrons in a tube fly unobstructed through the vacuum.

Consequently, arrays of nanotriodes may find use as amplifiers and oscillators for high-frequency, high-power signals, such as those in cellular phone systems or military radar, Ahmed says.

Other possible roles include pressure and acceleration sensors and satellite microthrusters, Akinwande adds.
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Article Details
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Author:Weiss, P.
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Nov 6, 1999
Words:455
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