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US2396004A - High-frequency dielectric heating apparatus - Google Patents

High-frequency dielectric heating apparatus Download PDF

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US2396004A
US2396004A US511627A US51162743A US2396004A US 2396004 A US2396004 A US 2396004A US 511627 A US511627 A US 511627A US 51162743 A US51162743 A US 51162743A US 2396004 A US2396004 A US 2396004A
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circuit
heating
coupled
bridge
tank
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US511627A
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Roswell W Gilbert
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Weston Electric Instrument Corp
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Weston Electric Instrument Corp
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/46Dielectric heating
    • H05B6/48Circuits
    • H05B6/50Circuits for monitoring or control

Definitions

  • This invention relates to high frequency di-.
  • heating apparatus and particularly to heating apparatus of the type including a radio frequency driving unit or oscillator and one or more heating heads having resonant tank circuits coupled to the driving unit.
  • the size of the radio frequency driving equipment used in dielectric heating for plastic molding makes it impractical of location on the molders bench and a remote connection to a relatively small heating head unit is desirable. Whether or not dimensional considerations impose this design requirement, it is not advisable to include the material to be heated directly in the main tank circuit of the driving equipmentln view of the rather large temperature coeiilcient of dielectric constant of all thermo-setting molding materials. Government regulations require that high frequency heating equipment be maintained within allocated frequency channels because of possible stray radiations, but the oscillator frequency, particularly in the case of selfexcited oscillators, drifts prohibitively when the molding material is located directly in the main oscillator circuit.
  • An object of this invention is to provide a dielectric heating system including a high frequency oscillator, a heating circuit coupled to the oscillator, and electrical circuits forautomatically maintaining the heating circuit in resonance with the oscillator during the heating of the thermosetting. or thermo-plastic material.
  • An object is to provide a heating system of the type stated in which a phase sensitive bridge circuit develops a current for controlling a reversible tuning motor to maintain resonance of the heating circuit.
  • Another object to to provide a high frequency di electric heating system in which the heating circuit of a heating head is automatically tuned to resonance with the main tank circuit of a driving oscillator by a phase sensitive bridge, the bridge being coupled to the heating circuit and the tank circuit but aifording substantially no cross-coupling between the same.
  • Fig. 1 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of the invention
  • Fig. 2 is a curve showing the relation between the current output of the phase sensitive bridge and the tuning of the heating circuit
  • Figs. 3, 4 and 5 are circuit diagrams of different types of phase sensitive bridge networks that may be employed in the Fig. l circuit.
  • the resonant circuit Ll, Cl contains the plastic material P to be heated as the dielectric-of the condenser Cl.
  • This circuit is coupled to the high frequency output tank circuit L2, C2 of the driver oscillator O through an aperiodic transmission line TI, and
  • the circuit Ll, Cl must be kept in resonance with the driving frequency during the heating cycle for efficient energy transfer.
  • the resonant frequency of the heating circuit is controlled by a reversible motor M having an appropriate mechanical coupling to an adjustable element of one of the circuit reactances, for example to a plate of the condenser Cl.
  • the motor M is controlled automatically to maintain the heating circuit Li, CI in resonance with the driver output tank circuit L2, C2.
  • a resonant circuit L3, C3 is adjustably and loosely coupled to the heating circuit, as indicated by the arrow a, and another resonant circuit L4, C4 is coupled to the driver output circuit L2, C2 by an aperiodic transmission line T2 that is similar to the transmission line Tl but more loosely coupled to equal, approximately, the coupling factor of the LI, Cl and L3, C3 circuits.
  • a phase sensitive bridge network is connected between the circuits L3, C3 and L4, C4 to develop a direct current that varies in direction and magnitude with the sense (capacitive or inductive) and the extent of the detuning of the heating circuit, and the direct current output of the bridge energizes a polarized relay R to control the reversible motor M to correct the tuning of the heating circuit by a progressive adjustment of a continuously variable reactance.
  • the L4, Cl circuit When all circuits are in resonance, the L4, Cl circuit will be in phase with the heating circuit Ll, Cl because both are coupled to the driving circuit L2, C2 in similar manner.
  • the circuit L3, C3 is loosely coupled to circuit LI, Cl however. and will be in the quadrature phase that is characteristic of loosely coupled circuits.
  • circuit Ll, Cl when circuit Ll, Cl is in exact resonance with the driver frequency, the two inputs to the phase sensitive bridge will be in quadrature.
  • circuit Li If circuit Li, CI detunes from the driver frequency during a heating operation, it will shift in phase relative to the driver frequency and, in turn, will shift the circuit L3, C3 from its quadrature phase relationship with the circuit L4, C4, the direction of the shift being dependent upon whether the detuning of circuit Ll, Cl is capacitive or inductive in direction.
  • the phase sensitive bridge can be of any of the so-called modulator bridges or ring modulators containing non-linear elements in a balanced circuit arrangement. characteristically these devices deliver a modulation product output that is a function of the magnitude of the two input components times the cosine of their relative phase angles. If, as in this case, the two input components are of the same frequency the output will be direct current of a magnitude and direction dependent upon the phase and magnitude of the input components, and is zero when the phase is quadrature.
  • the phase sensitive bridge delivers a direct output current that is zero when Li, Cl is in exact resonance, of one polarity when detuned capacitively and of opposite polarity when detuned inductively.
  • the characteristic bridge output in response to detuning is affected by the various magnitude changes accompanying detuning as well as phase, but the resonant point is unaffected by magnitude and this efl'ect is unimportant.
  • the curve of Fig. 2 illustrates a typical overall bridge output in response to heating head circuit detuning.
  • the windings of the tuning motor M are so connected to the contacts of the relay R that the motor is energized to adjust the inductance Ll or the condenser Ci, or both, in the proper sense to return the heating circuit to resonance with the driving circuit.
  • any influence, such as the temperature-variant dielectric constant or the thermo-sensitive plastic material, that changes the capacity of the condenser Cl initiates a corrective action to restore optimum operating conditions.
  • Various types of reversible motors may be employed in place of the rotary type that is shown schematically in Fig. 1, for example motors of the heated bimetallic strip or the solenoid-operated plunger types, and various types of phase sensitive bridges may be employed.
  • phase sensitive bridges that may be employed in the heating system are illustrated in Figs. 3 to 5.
  • a simple ring modulator bridge of rectifier elements, specifically diodes D is shown in Fig. 3.
  • the resonant input circuits L3, C3 and L4, C4 form the conjugate arms of the bridge, and the relay R is connected to the midpoints of the inductances L3, L4.
  • Other forms of non-linear elements suitable for operation at high frequency may be-substituted for the diodes.
  • the phase sensitive bridge network may employ heater-thermocouple elements which, having square law input-output characteristic, function as non-linear elements.
  • the heaters H are arranged in a closed circuit across which the input circuits L3, C8 and L4, C4 are connected, and the thermocouples T are connected in a series circuit including the relay R.
  • a preferred type of bridge circuit eliminates cross coupling of the resonant input circuits and thereby avoids loss of sensi tivity and affords greater stability of operation.
  • the ends of the inductance L3 are connected to the anodes of a pair of triodc vacuum tubes V. and the center tap of L3 is connected through a radio frequency choke r! to the function of the independently adjustable condensers C8, C8 and to the cathodes of the tubes through resistors r.
  • the resonant circuit 14, C4 is connected between the cathodes and grids of the tubes V, and the relay R. is connected across the cathodes of the tubes.
  • the circuits L3, C3 and L4, Cl are substantially isolated from each other as the only cross coupling through the phase sensitive bridge network is that caused by interelectrode mutual capacitance which can be made negligible.
  • the condensers C3 may be adjusted individually so that plate circuit excitation may be balanced for operational symmetry, and phase unbalance due to unequal mismatching of the transmission lines Ti, T2 may be compensated by a slight detuning of either or both of the bridge input circuits.
  • the circuit of Figure 1 shows the high frequency driver remotely coupled to the other circuit components because in practice this is desirable.
  • the transmission lines basically contribute nothing to circuit function, and the tank circuits shown so coupled may be directly coupled provided they are suitably disposed to minimize cross coupling, for example from the driver circuit L2, C2 directly to L3, C3.
  • the heating head tank circuit Ll, Cl may. be tuned by motor control of an adjustable inductance Ll instead of Cl.
  • a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus comprising a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, the reactive elements of said heating circuit being an inductance and a condenser having plates between which the material to be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates, thereby to tune said heating circuit, and means for automatically controlling said motor to maintain said heating circuit in resonance with said tank circuit; said means including a phase sensitive bridge network having resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and said heating circuit.
  • a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein one of the resonant input circuits of the bridge network is coupled to its associated circuit through an aperiodic transmission line.
  • a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said resonant input circuits are coupled to their associated circuits by aperiodic transmission lines.
  • a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the tank circuit is coupled to said heating circuit and to its associated bridge input circuit by approximately equal coupling factors.
  • a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus comprising a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, the reactive elements of said heating circuit being an inductance and a condenser having plates between which the material to be heated will be placed.
  • one of said reacasoaooc tive elements being continuously variable for tuning the heating circuit, a reversible motor for adjusting said continuously variable reactive element to tune the heating circuit, and means for automatically controlling said motor to maintain said heating circuit in resonance with said tank circuit;
  • said means including a phase sensitive bridge network having resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and said heating circuit, a direct current output circuit for said bridge network, and a relay in said output circuit, said relay having contacts in the reversing control circuits of said motor.
  • a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, said heating circuit comprising an inductance connected across condenser plates between which dielectric material to be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates, thereby to tune the heating circuit, a polarized relay for controlling the energization of said motor, and means responsive to the sense and the magnitude of the detuning of the heating circuit from resonance with the tank circuit for supplying'a current to said relay; said means comprising a modulator bridge with nonlinear side arms connected between conjugate input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circult and said heating circuit, and a direct current output circuit connected to said polarized relay.
  • non-linear elements are rectifiers.
  • a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, said heating circuit comprising an inductance connected across condenser plates between which dielectric material to' be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates to tune said heating circult, a polarized relay for controlling the energization of said motor, and means responsive to the sense and the magnitude' of the detuning of the heating circuit from resonance with the tank circuit for supplying a current to said relay; said means comprising a phase sensitive network comprising a pair of tubes each having a grid and plate cooperating with a cathode, a pair of resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and to said heating circuit, one input circuit being connected across the plates of said tubes, a connection from the mid-point of that input circuit to the cathodes of said tubes through resistors individual to the tubes, the second input circuit being connected between the grids of the tubes and the ca

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Control Of High-Frequency Heating Circuits (AREA)
  • Constitution Of High-Frequency Heating (AREA)
  • General Induction Heating (AREA)

Description

March 5, 1946. R. w GILBERT 7 HIGH FREQUENCY DIELECTRIC HEATING APPARATUS Filed Nov. 24, 1943 Driver I i i P Freiugzcy 7 L3, 63.
Refinance 201711 Patented Mar. 5, 1946 2,396,004 HIGH-FREQUENCY DIELECTRIC HEATING APPARATU Roswell w. Gilbert, Montclair, N. 1., assilnor in Weston Electrical Instrument Corporation, Newark, N. 1., a corporation of New Jersey Application November 24, 1943, Serial No. 511,627
This invention, relates to high frequency di-.
electric heating apparatus, and particularly to heating apparatus of the type including a radio frequency driving unit or oscillator and one or more heating heads having resonant tank circuits coupled to the driving unit.
The size of the radio frequency driving equipment used in dielectric heating for plastic molding makes it impractical of location on the molders bench and a remote connection to a relatively small heating head unit is desirable. Whether or not dimensional considerations impose this design requirement, it is not advisable to include the material to be heated directly in the main tank circuit of the driving equipmentln view of the rather large temperature coeiilcient of dielectric constant of all thermo-setting molding materials. Government regulations require that high frequency heating equipment be maintained within allocated frequency channels because of possible stray radiations, but the oscillator frequency, particularly in the case of selfexcited oscillators, drifts prohibitively when the molding material is located directly in the main oscillator circuit. Separate heating heads have been employed to avoid this frequency drift of the oscillator and to facilitate use at the molders bench. The same detuning action takes place during heating of molding material located in the tank circuit of a heating head, and the detuning may be as much as fifteen percent in fre .quency. This detuning of the heater head circuit may not cause a prohibitive drift of the oscillator frequency but it does reduce the transfer of energy to the heating circuit.
An object of this invention is to provide a dielectric heating system including a high frequency oscillator, a heating circuit coupled to the oscillator, and electrical circuits forautomatically maintaining the heating circuit in resonance with the oscillator during the heating of the thermosetting. or thermo-plastic material. An object is to provide a heating system of the type stated in which a phase sensitive bridge circuit develops a current for controlling a reversible tuning motor to maintain resonance of the heating circuit. Another object to to provide a high frequency di electric heating system in which the heating circuit of a heating head is automatically tuned to resonance with the main tank circuit of a driving oscillator by a phase sensitive bridge, the bridge being coupled to the heating circuit and the tank circuit but aifording substantially no cross-coupling between the same.
These and other objects and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following specification when taken with the accompanying drawing in which:
Fig. 1 is a schematic diagram of an embodiment of the invention;
Fig. 2 is a curve showing the relation between the current output of the phase sensitive bridge and the tuning of the heating circuit; and
Figs. 3, 4 and 5 are circuit diagrams of different types of phase sensitive bridge networks that may be employed in the Fig. l circuit.
In Fig. 1 of the drawing, the resonant circuit Ll, Cl contains the plastic material P to be heated as the dielectric-of the condenser Cl. This circuit is coupled to the high frequency output tank circuit L2, C2 of the driver oscillator O through an aperiodic transmission line TI, and
the circuit Ll, Cl must be kept in resonance with the driving frequency during the heating cycle for efficient energy transfer. The resonant frequency of the heating circuit is controlled by a reversible motor M having an appropriate mechanical coupling to an adjustable element of one of the circuit reactances, for example to a plate of the condenser Cl.
In accordance with this invention, the motor M is controlled automatically to maintain the heating circuit Li, CI in resonance with the driver output tank circuit L2, C2. A resonant circuit L3, C3 is adjustably and loosely coupled to the heating circuit, as indicated by the arrow a, and another resonant circuit L4, C4 is coupled to the driver output circuit L2, C2 by an aperiodic transmission line T2 that is similar to the transmission line Tl but more loosely coupled to equal, approximately, the coupling factor of the LI, Cl and L3, C3 circuits. A phase sensitive bridge network, indicated by the block B, is connected between the circuits L3, C3 and L4, C4 to develop a direct current that varies in direction and magnitude with the sense (capacitive or inductive) and the extent of the detuning of the heating circuit, and the direct current output of the bridge energizes a polarized relay R to control the reversible motor M to correct the tuning of the heating circuit by a progressive adjustment of a continuously variable reactance.
When all circuits are in resonance, the L4, Cl circuit will be in phase with the heating circuit Ll, Cl because both are coupled to the driving circuit L2, C2 in similar manner. The circuit L3, C3 is loosely coupled to circuit LI, Cl however. and will be in the quadrature phase that is characteristic of loosely coupled circuits. Thus, when circuit Ll, Cl is in exact resonance with the driver frequency, the two inputs to the phase sensitive bridge will be in quadrature. If circuit Li, CI detunes from the driver frequency during a heating operation, it will shift in phase relative to the driver frequency and, in turn, will shift the circuit L3, C3 from its quadrature phase relationship with the circuit L4, C4, the direction of the shift being dependent upon whether the detuning of circuit Ll, Cl is capacitive or inductive in direction.
The phase sensitive bridge can be of any of the so-called modulator bridges or ring modulators containing non-linear elements in a balanced circuit arrangement. characteristically these devices deliver a modulation product output that is a function of the magnitude of the two input components times the cosine of their relative phase angles. If, as in this case, the two input components are of the same frequency the output will be direct current of a magnitude and direction dependent upon the phase and magnitude of the input components, and is zero when the phase is quadrature. Thus in the circuit of Figure 1 the phase sensitive bridge delivers a direct output current that is zero when Li, Cl is in exact resonance, of one polarity when detuned capacitively and of opposite polarity when detuned inductively. The characteristic bridge output in response to detuning is affected by the various magnitude changes accompanying detuning as well as phase, but the resonant point is unaffected by magnitude and this efl'ect is unimportant. The curve of Fig. 2 illustrates a typical overall bridge output in response to heating head circuit detuning. The windings of the tuning motor M are so connected to the contacts of the relay R that the motor is energized to adjust the inductance Ll or the condenser Ci, or both, in the proper sense to return the heating circuit to resonance with the driving circuit.
Any influence, such as the temperature-variant dielectric constant or the thermo-sensitive plastic material, that changes the capacity of the condenser Cl initiates a corrective action to restore optimum operating conditions. Various types of reversible motors may be employed in place of the rotary type that is shown schematically in Fig. 1, for example motors of the heated bimetallic strip or the solenoid-operated plunger types, and various types of phase sensitive bridges may be employed.
Different types of phase sensitive bridges that may be employed in the heating system are illustrated in Figs. 3 to 5. A simple ring modulator bridge of rectifier elements, specifically diodes D, is shown in Fig. 3. The resonant input circuits L3, C3 and L4, C4 form the conjugate arms of the bridge, and the relay R is connected to the midpoints of the inductances L3, L4. Other forms of non-linear elements suitable for operation at high frequency may be-substituted for the diodes. As shown in Fig. 4, the phase sensitive bridge network may employ heater-thermocouple elements which, having square law input-output characteristic, function as non-linear elements. The heaters H are arranged in a closed circuit across which the input circuits L3, C8 and L4, C4 are connected, and the thermocouples T are connected in a series circuit including the relay R.
A preferred type of bridge circuit, as shown in Fig. 5, eliminates cross coupling of the resonant input circuits and thereby avoids loss of sensi tivity and affords greater stability of operation. The ends of the inductance L3 are connected to the anodes of a pair of triodc vacuum tubes V. and the center tap of L3 is connected through a radio frequency choke r! to the function of the independently adjustable condensers C8, C8 and to the cathodes of the tubes through resistors r. The resonant circuit 14, C4 is connected between the cathodes and grids of the tubes V, and the relay R. is connected across the cathodes of the tubes. The circuits L3, C3 and L4, Cl are substantially isolated from each other as the only cross coupling through the phase sensitive bridge network is that caused by interelectrode mutual capacitance which can be made negligible. The condensers C3 may be adjusted individually so that plate circuit excitation may be balanced for operational symmetry, and phase unbalance due to unequal mismatching of the transmission lines Ti, T2 may be compensated by a slight detuning of either or both of the bridge input circuits.
The circuit of Figure 1 shows the high frequency driver remotely coupled to the other circuit components because in practice this is desirable. However, the transmission lines basically contribute nothing to circuit function, and the tank circuits shown so coupled may be directly coupled provided they are suitably disposed to minimize cross coupling, for example from the driver circuit L2, C2 directly to L3, C3. Other variations are also obvious. For example the heating head tank circuit Ll, Cl may. be tuned by motor control of an adjustable inductance Ll instead of Cl.
It is to be understood that other variations that may occur to those familiar with the design and operation of high frequency circuits fall within the spirit of my invention as set forth in the following claims.
I claim:
1. A high frequency dielectric heating apparatus comprising a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, the reactive elements of said heating circuit being an inductance and a condenser having plates between which the material to be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates, thereby to tune said heating circuit, and means for automatically controlling said motor to maintain said heating circuit in resonance with said tank circuit; said means including a phase sensitive bridge network having resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and said heating circuit.
2. A high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein one of the resonant input circuits of the bridge network is coupled to its associated circuit through an aperiodic transmission line.
3. A high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said resonant input circuits are coupled to their associated circuits by aperiodic transmission lines.
4. A high frequency dielectric heating apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein the tank circuit is coupled to said heating circuit and to its associated bridge input circuit by approximately equal coupling factors.
5. A high frequency dielectric heating apparatus comprising a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, the reactive elements of said heating circuit being an inductance and a condenser having plates between which the material to be heated will be placed. one of said reacasoaooc tive elements being continuously variable for tuning the heating circuit, a reversible motor for adjusting said continuously variable reactive element to tune the heating circuit, and means for automatically controlling said motor to maintain said heating circuit in resonance with said tank circuit; said means including a phase sensitive bridge network having resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and said heating circuit, a direct current output circuit for said bridge network, and a relay in said output circuit, said relay having contacts in the reversing control circuits of said motor.
8. In a high frequencydielectric heating apparatus, a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, said heating circuit comprising an inductance connected across condenser plates between which dielectric material to be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates, thereby to tune the heating circuit, a polarized relay for controlling the energization of said motor, and means responsive to the sense and the magnitude of the detuning of the heating circuit from resonance with the tank circuit for supplying'a current to said relay; said means comprising a modulator bridge with nonlinear side arms connected between conjugate input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circult and said heating circuit, and a direct current output circuit connected to said polarized relay.
7. In a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus, the invention as recited in claim 6,
wherein said non-linear elements are rectifiers.
8. In a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus, the invention as recited in claim 6, wherein said non-linear elements are diode rectiflers.
9. In a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus, the invention as recited in claim 6, wherein said non-linear elements are heaterthermocouple elements.
10. In a high frequency dielectric heating apparatus, a radio frequency power source having a tank circuit, a heating circuit coupled to said tank circuit, said heating circuit comprising an inductance connected across condenser plates between which dielectric material to' be heated will be placed, a reversible motor for adjusting one of said condenser plates to tune said heating circult, a polarized relay for controlling the energization of said motor, and means responsive to the sense and the magnitude' of the detuning of the heating circuit from resonance with the tank circuit for supplying a current to said relay; said means comprising a phase sensitive network comprising a pair of tubes each having a grid and plate cooperating with a cathode, a pair of resonant input circuits coupled respectively to said tank circuit and to said heating circuit, one input circuit being connected across the plates of said tubes, a connection from the mid-point of that input circuit to the cathodes of said tubes through resistors individual to the tubes, the second input circuit being connected between the grids of the tubes and the cathodes through said individual resistors, and means connecting said polarized relay across the tube cathodes.
ROSWELL W. GILBERT.
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Cited By (28)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2453680A (en) * 1944-12-07 1948-11-09 Singer Mfg Co Speed and frequency control apparatus for radio-frequency bonding systems
US2470443A (en) * 1944-07-21 1949-05-17 Mittelmann Eugene Means for and method of continuously matching and controlling power for high-frequency heating of reactive loads
US2472370A (en) * 1945-01-08 1949-06-07 Cutler Hammer Inc Electrode for high-frequency heating of insulation preforms
US2473143A (en) * 1945-02-07 1949-06-14 Singer Mfg Co Electrostatic bonding machine
US2473188A (en) * 1944-06-17 1949-06-14 Rca Corp Radio-frequency dielectric heater with constant heating rate control
US2498760A (en) * 1946-11-30 1950-02-28 Rca Corp Radio-frequency power generator
US2504969A (en) * 1946-07-06 1950-04-25 Girdler Corp High-frequency apparatus having two work-engaging electrodes and one adjustable electrode
US2504955A (en) * 1945-06-01 1950-04-25 Girdler Corp High-frequency treating system for dielectric materials
US2505025A (en) * 1945-06-01 1950-04-25 Girdler Corp High-frequency treating system
US2506814A (en) * 1947-01-17 1950-05-09 Boonton Molding Company Apparatus for the electronic heating of molding material
US2508321A (en) * 1945-09-05 1950-05-16 Raymond M Wilmotte Method and means of controlling electronic heating
US2508752A (en) * 1945-11-10 1950-05-23 Cutler Hammer Inc High-frequency heating of dielectric materials
US2512336A (en) * 1945-10-12 1950-06-20 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tuning control system
US2516324A (en) * 1946-02-15 1950-07-25 Rca Corp Constant potential gradient dielectric heating device
US2522823A (en) * 1946-04-16 1950-09-19 Union Special Machine Co Automatic tuning of high-frequency electrical seaming apparatus
US2528491A (en) * 1947-12-24 1950-11-07 United Shoe Machinery Corp Shoemaking apparatus
US2528492A (en) * 1948-12-11 1950-11-07 United Shoe Machinery Corp Shoemaking apparatus
US2545296A (en) * 1946-02-20 1951-03-13 Mittelmann Eugene Constant frequency control for high-frequency heating apparatus
US2545297A (en) * 1946-03-13 1951-03-13 Mittelmann Eugene Oscillation frequency control
US2551757A (en) * 1945-08-10 1951-05-08 Mittelmann Eugene High-frequency heating
US2583133A (en) * 1947-06-19 1952-01-22 Westinghouse Electric Corp Variable inductance
US2588304A (en) * 1946-05-11 1952-03-04 Sunbeam Corp High-frequency induction heating apparatus
US2595502A (en) * 1946-08-01 1952-05-06 Allis Chalmers Mfg Co Variable capacity circuit for dielectric heating apparatus
US2607880A (en) * 1945-09-21 1952-08-19 Lord Mfg Co Electrostatic heating
US2609510A (en) * 1945-08-06 1952-09-02 Padevco Inc Electronic heating control system
US2612596A (en) * 1947-02-18 1952-09-30 Raytheon Mfg Co Microwave heating
US2624830A (en) * 1948-03-30 1953-01-06 Jr George Muntz High-frequency dielectric heating apparatus
US2698622A (en) * 1951-01-09 1955-01-04 Hartford Nat Bank & Trust Co Phase sensitive control for shortwave therapy devices

Cited By (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2473188A (en) * 1944-06-17 1949-06-14 Rca Corp Radio-frequency dielectric heater with constant heating rate control
US2470443A (en) * 1944-07-21 1949-05-17 Mittelmann Eugene Means for and method of continuously matching and controlling power for high-frequency heating of reactive loads
US2453680A (en) * 1944-12-07 1948-11-09 Singer Mfg Co Speed and frequency control apparatus for radio-frequency bonding systems
US2472370A (en) * 1945-01-08 1949-06-07 Cutler Hammer Inc Electrode for high-frequency heating of insulation preforms
US2473143A (en) * 1945-02-07 1949-06-14 Singer Mfg Co Electrostatic bonding machine
US2505025A (en) * 1945-06-01 1950-04-25 Girdler Corp High-frequency treating system
US2504955A (en) * 1945-06-01 1950-04-25 Girdler Corp High-frequency treating system for dielectric materials
US2609510A (en) * 1945-08-06 1952-09-02 Padevco Inc Electronic heating control system
US2551757A (en) * 1945-08-10 1951-05-08 Mittelmann Eugene High-frequency heating
US2508321A (en) * 1945-09-05 1950-05-16 Raymond M Wilmotte Method and means of controlling electronic heating
US2607880A (en) * 1945-09-21 1952-08-19 Lord Mfg Co Electrostatic heating
US2512336A (en) * 1945-10-12 1950-06-20 Westinghouse Electric Corp Tuning control system
US2508752A (en) * 1945-11-10 1950-05-23 Cutler Hammer Inc High-frequency heating of dielectric materials
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