Page:The Bell System Technical Journal, Volume 1, 1922.pdf/7

Rh The tube is shown in Fig. 1. The anode consists of a platinum cylinder A, 7″ long and .625″ wide, which is sealed into the center of the glass cylinder B. The end of the platinum cylinder remote from the seal is closed. The anode is surrounded by the grid C and by the filament D, which are supported by the glass arbors E. The current for the filament is led into the tube through the platinum thimbles F.

The anode is kept cool by means of a supply of water passing into the anode through the tube G and leaving by the tube H.

A number of tubes having this general type of construction were made up and it was found possible to dissipate as much as 15 in the anode.

As soon as the pressure of work more directly connected with the necessities of the war would permit, Mr. W. G. Houskeeper and Dr. M. J. Kelly undertook the further improvement of the water-cooled tube, the former assuming the task of developing the mechanical structure, and the latter that of determining the electrical design and the process of tube exhaust.

Mr. Houskeeper adopted into the construction of the tube a remarkable type of vacuum seal which he had previously developed. These seals are made between glass and metal and can be amde in any desired size. They are capable of withstanding repeated heating and cooling over wide ranges of temperature, from that of liquid air to, without cracking and without impairment of their vacuum holding properties.

It is no exaggeration to say that the invention of these seals has made possible the construction of vacuum tubes, capable of handling in single units, powers of any magnitude which may be called for in the wireless telegraph and telephone transmission.

The underlying principle connected with the making of this seal consists in obtaining an intimate connection between the glass and metal, either by chemical combination of by mere wetting, and in so proportioning the glass and metal portions of the seal that the stresses produced when the seal is heated or cooled will not be great enough to rupture either the glass or the junction between the glass and metal.

The three principal types of seals developed by Mr. Houskeeper are known as the ribbon seal, the disc seal and the tube seal.

If a copper ribbon is directly sealed through glass it is found that the glass and copper adhere along the flat faces of the seal but that ruptures occur along the edges as shown in Fig. This is due to the fact that as the seal cools after being made, the glass in contact with metal is capable of resisting the shearing and tensile stresses