Tetrode

As the name suggests, the tetrode tube contained four elements: cathode (with the implicit filament, or “heater”), grid, plate, and a new element called the screen.

Similar in construction to the grid, the screen was a wire mesh or coil positioned between the grid and plate, connected to a source of positive DC potential (with respect to the cathode, as usual) equal to a fraction of the plate voltage.

When connected to ground through an external capacitor, the screen had the effect of electrostatically shielding the grid from the plate.

Without the screen, the capacitive linking between the plate and the grid could cause significant signal feedback at high frequencies, resulting in unwanted oscillations.

Tetrode Amplifier Circuit

The screen, being of less surface area and lower positive potential than the plate, didn\’t attract many of the electrons passing through the grid from the cathode, so the vast majority of electrons in the tube still flew by the screen to be collected by the plate:

Tetrode

With a constant DC screen voltage, electron flow from cathode to plate became almost exclusively dependent upon grid voltage, meaning the plate voltage could vary over a wide range with little effect on plate current. This made for more stable gains in amplifier circuits, and better linearity for more accurate reproduction of the input signal waveform.

Despite the advantages realized by the addition of a screen, there were some disadvantages as well. The most significant disadvantage was related to something known as secondary emission.

When electrons from the cathode strike the plate at high velocity, they can cause free electrons to be jarred loose from atoms in the metal of the plate.

These electrons, knocked off the plate by the impact of the cathode electrons, are said to be “secondarily emitted.”

Problems

In a triode tube, secondary emission is not that great a problem, but in a tetrode with a positively-charged screen grid in close proximity, these secondary electrons will be attracted to the screen rather than the plate from which they came, resulting in a loss of plate current. Less plate current means less gain for the amplifier, which is not good.

Two different strategies were developed to address this problem of the tetrode tube: beam power tubes and pentodes. Both solutions resulted in new tube designs with approximately the same electrical characteristics.

You've successfully subscribed !
Share

Recent Articles

Introduction to AC Motors

Initially, AC motors were constructed like DC motors. Numerous problems were encountered due to changing…

4 years ago

AC Instrumentation Transducers

Learn about the AC Instrumentation Transducers like Potentiometer, LVDT, RVDT, Synchro, and Capacitive Transducers.

4 years ago

AC Bridge Circuits

AC bridge circuit unknown impedance is balanced by a standard impedance of similar type on…

4 years ago

Power Quality Measurement

Power Quality is the general term given to represent an AC power system freedom from harmonic…

4 years ago

Power Measurement

Hall effect - Voltage is proportional to current and strength of the perpendicular magnetic field.…

4 years ago

Frequency and Phase Measurement

Learn about the Frequency and Phase Measurement from our free online electronics and electrical engineering…

4 years ago