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A bombardment heated lanthanum-hexaboride thermionic cathode electron gun

Posted on:1990-09-13Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of MichiganCandidate:Herniter, Marc EfremFull Text:PDF
GTID:1478390017953050Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
This dissertation concerns the development and operation of a high current density Pierce-type electron gun with a 0.75-inch-diameter lanthanum hexaboride ({dollar}LaBsb6{dollar}) thermionic cathode. The objective of this research is to achieve as high a current density as possible from the lanthanum hexaboride cathode. The topics which are addressed are the cathode heating and control system, the Pierce-type electron gun design, and the high voltage pulsing and isolation system.; Lanthanum hexaboride is used as a cathode material in applications where high current density and resistance to chemical poisoning are important. Applications include free electron lasers and high power microwave generation.; A four stage Marx generator capable of producing 140-kV-peak pulses with a 16 {dollar}mu{dollar}s decay time constant is used to pulse the electron gun. The cathode is heated to temperatures greater than 1800{dollar}spcirc C{dollar} by electron bombardment from a tungsten filament. Both temperature-limited and space-charge-limited bombardment methods have been investigated. The temperature-limited method is open-loop unstable. Analog and digital control circuits have been developed to control this instability. A simple heating model has been developed and criteria for constructing a controllable system have been established.; An instability in the heating system which is caused by evaporation of lanthanum hexaboride from the cathode is discussed. This evaporation reduces the work function of the bombarding filament and makes the temperature-limited bombardment system uncontrollable.; The gun has been operated up to voltages of 115 kV achieving beam current densities of 30 A/{dollar}cmsp2{dollar}. The electron gun operated dependably up to voltages of 90 kV achieving temperature-limited currents of 50 A. Due to the high fields at the tip of the Pierce-focusing electrode the gun would usually arc at voltages greater than 90 kV. Electron gun operation has been observed in the temperature-limited and space-charge-limited regimes. The current density profile has been measured across the entire beam cross section.
Keywords/Search Tags:Electron gun, Current density, Lanthanum, Hexaboride, Cathode, Bombardment, Temperature-limited
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