GB1570417A

GB1570417A – Electronic oscillator slot mode absorber
– Google Patents

GB1570417A – Electronic oscillator slot mode absorber
– Google Patents
Electronic oscillator slot mode absorber

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Publication number
GB1570417A

GB1570417A
GB39531/77A
GB3953177A
GB1570417A
GB 1570417 A
GB1570417 A
GB 1570417A
GB 39531/77 A
GB39531/77 A
GB 39531/77A
GB 3953177 A
GB3953177 A
GB 3953177A
GB 1570417 A
GB1570417 A
GB 1570417A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
cavity
wall
slot
oscillator
magnetron
Prior art date
1976-09-23
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)

Expired

Application number
GB39531/77A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Varian Medical Systems Inc

Original Assignee
Varian Associates Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1976-09-23
Filing date
1977-09-22
Publication date
1980-07-02

1977-09-22
Application filed by Varian Associates Inc
filed
Critical
Varian Associates Inc

1980-07-02
Publication of GB1570417A
publication
Critical
patent/GB1570417A/en

Status
Expired
legal-status
Critical
Current

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Classifications

H—ELECTRICITY

H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS

H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS

H01J23/00—Details of transit-time tubes of the types covered by group H01J25/00

H01J23/16—Circuit elements, having distributed capacitance and inductance, structurally associated with the tube and interacting with the discharge

H01J23/18—Resonators

H01J23/20—Cavity resonators; Adjustment or tuning thereof

Description

PATENT SPECIFICATION
( 11) 1 ( 21) Application No 39531/77 ( 22) Filed 22 Sept 1977 ace ( 31) Convention Application No.
726 088 ( 32) Filed 23 Sept 1976 in > ( 33) United States of America (US) tn ( 44) Complete Specification published 2 July 1980 -1 ( 51) INT CL 3 HO 1 J 23/1623/3025/587 ( 52) Index at acceptance Hi D 16 C 1 B 1 16 C 1 BY 16 C 1 Y 16 CY 16 M 1 1657 1658 16 T 4 C 2 16 T 4 CY 16 T 4 Y 18 A 1 A 2 18 A 1 Y 18 A 2 D 18 A 2 F 18 A 2 Y 18 AY 46 C 46 Y ( 54) ELECTRONIC OSCILLATOR SLOT MODE ABSORBER ( 71) We, VARIAN ASSOCIATES, INC, of 611 Hansen Way, Palo Alto, California 94303, United States of America, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, United States of America, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement:-
The invention pertains to oscillators wherein a resonant circuit interacting with a negative-resistance element such as a stream of electrons is coupled -to a high-Q stabilizing resonator by slots in the intervening wall The coaxial magnetron with a circular electric field mode (CRM) cavity is a common example.
U.S Patent 2,854,603 describes a coaxial magnetron in which lossy material is positioned at the end of the coupling slots to selectively damp unwanted modes of oscillation which are accompanied by energy storage in the slots Such modes have since become known as “slot modes” The lossy material was placed at the ends of the slots to be removed from the pi-mode fields of the anode vane structure It was also placed on the inside of the wall separating the inner interaction structure from the surrounding stabilizing cavity resonator This inside placement has the advantage of removing the lossy material from much of the field of the circular-electric mode of the stabilizing cavity although the patent does not describe this result.
U.S Patents 3,169,211 and 3,471,744 teach improvements in the slot-made absorber described by Collier, particularly in cooling the lossy material.
U.S Patents 3,231,781; 3,412,284 and 3,479,556 disclose inverted coaxial magnetrons with the CEM cavity surrounded by the cathode-anode structure In each of -these the slot-mode absorber was positioned outside the separating wall in the chamber occupied by the anode vane structure Thus the structure of Collier had simply been turned inside-out with no change in the relative positions of the elements 50 In all these prior art tubes the slot-mode absorber was inside the vacuum envelope.
This required that the absorber be of material compatible with high vacuum and hightemperature bakeout It could be a metal 55 such as iron, which provided insufficient loss, or a lossy ceramic which introduced problems in extracting the heat generated in it Also, some lossy ceramics such as porous alumina impregnated with carbon are very 60 difficult to outgas A final disadvantage is that it is hard to make a heat conducting contact to lossy ceramics in a vacuum.
These prior-art slot-mode absorbers succeeded in preferentially loading the slot 65 modes because these modes have a great deal of their energy stored in or very near the slots themselves However, the cavity mode was also loaded somewhat because some cavity field penetrated to the lossy 70 material.
According to the invention there is provided in an electronic oscillator: circuit means ada pted to interact with electrons at a selected frequency to generate elec 75 tromagnetic energy; cavity means adapted to resonate at said frequency; a conductive wall forming a common part of the electrical boundaries of said circuit means and said cavity means; at least one slot in said wall 80 for coupling electromagnetic fields of said circuit means and said cavity means; lossy material near said slot; a conductive shield between said lossy material and the interior of said cavity means for shielding said lossy 85 material from fields of said cavity means; the portion of said shield near said slot being spaced from said wall by a distance larger than the width of said slot.
Examples of the invention will now be 90 1 570 417 1 570 417 described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
FIG 1 is a section through the axis of a magnetron embodying the invention.
FIG 2 is a partial section perpendicular to the axis of the magnetron of FIG 1.
FIG 3 is an enlarged portion of FIG 2 showing rf electric field of a slot mode.
FIG 4 is a partial section through the axis of an alternative embodiment of the invention.
The invention will first be described as embodied in a so-called “sleeve magnetron” in which the coaxial stabilizing cavity is outside the vacuum envelope The utility of the invention is by no means limited to such a tube, since it could be used in any device wherein a low-Q generating circuit is coupled by an iris to a high-Q stabilizing cavity.
FIG 1 shows a sleeve magnetron The electron-interaction elements are contained in a vacuum envelope subassembly 6 which is interchangeably mounted in a stabilizing cavity subassembly 8 With this configuration the large cavity subassembly 8 need not be evacuated Its materials and construction are not limited by high-vacuum considerations, so it can be made of lightweight material such as aluminum Also, motion of the cavity tuner 9 does not require flexible metal bellows as vacuum seals.
The magnetron of FIG 1 and FIG 2 has a cylindrical cathode emitter 10 as of tungsten impregnated with barium aluminate At each end of emitter 10 is a projecting cathode end-hat 1 l-of non-emitting material such as molybdenum The cathode is supported at one end on a cathode stem structure 12 which is mounted on the body 13 of the magnetron via an insulating seal 14 as of alumina ceramic, sealed at each end, as by brazing, to thin metallic lips 15, 16 as of iron nickel cobalt alloy At the other end cathode 10 is supported by an extended support stem 17 slidably contained against motion transverse to its axis in a ceramic sleeve 18 which is in turn contained within tube body structure 13.
Cathode emitter 10 is heated by a radiant heater 19, as of cermet, mounted on current-carrying leads 20, 21 Lead 20 is joined, as by spotwelding, to cathode stem 17 Lead 21 is centered in cathode stem 12 by a disc-shaped ceramic insulator 22 and extends through the vacuum envelope via a coaxial ceramic seal 23 which insulates lead 21 from cathode stem 12.
Surrounding emitter 10 is a coaxial circular array of anode vanes 24 as of copper, extending inward from a cylindrical anode wall 25, also of copper The inner ends 26 of vanes 24 lie on a cylinder defining the outer wall of a toroidal interaction space 27.
Vanes 24 are regularly spaced circumferentially to define, between adjacent vanes, cavities resonant at approximately the desired frequency of oscillation.
On the outside wall of alternate cavities, axial slots 28 are cut through anode cylinder 25, to couple to the coaxial toroidal stabiliz 70 ing cavity 29.
Axially displaced on opposite sides of emitter 10 and vanes 24 are coaxial ferromagnetic polepieces 40, as of mild steel, sealed at their outside radii, as by brazing, to 75 tubular extensions 41 of non-magnetic tube body 13 Polepieces 40 are sealed at their insides to coaxial thin-walled non-magnetic tubes 42, which in turn are sealed to end rings 43, as of austenitic steel, which com 80 plete the vacuum envelope and support the cathode structure.
Hollow cylindrical permanent magnets 44 are positioned in the annular spaces between tubes 41 and 42, preferably after the 85 tube has been evacuated and baked Magnets 44 are held in place by cover plates 45 and screws 46 Magnets 44 are magnetized axially before positioning in the tube and are oriented so that opposite poles are pre 90 sented to the opposite ends of interaction space 27 and a generally uniform, generally axial magnetic field is produced in interaction space 27 Magnets 44 and polepieces 40 constitute the entire magnetic circuit All 95 other large parts are of non-magnetic material.
In operating the magnetron, alternating heater current is passed between heater lead 21 and cathode lead 15 Voltage is applied 100 to cathode lead 15, pulsed negative with respect to the grounded tube body and anode vanes 24 Electrons are drawn from cathode emitter 10 toward vanes 24 and are directed by the crossed magnetic field into 105 paths circulating around the toroidal interaction path 27 ? where they interact with fringing microwave electric fields of the inter-vane cavities and generate microwave energy 110 The vacuum envelope is completed by thin metal flanges 48, as of iron nickel cobalt alloy, brazed to tube body 13 and to the ends of a dielectric cylindrical window closely surrounding anode cylinder 25 so 115 that the coupling slots 28 in cylinder 25 provide electromagnetic coupling, through window 50, between anode vanes 24 and the external stabilizing cavity 29 The outer surface of envelope 13 has mounting flanges 120 51, 52 which fit slidably in lips 53, 54 of the wall 60 of cavity subassembly 8.
Cavity subassembly 8 is not part of the vacuum envelope, so its construction is not limited to the materials and processes suit 125 able for evacuated devices For example cavity walls 60 may be made of aluminum, thereby saving weight The resonant cavity 29 is tuned by axial motion of tuner 9 comprising an annular metallic disc 62 mounted 130 1 570 417 on a plurality of rods 64, moved axially by a drive mechanism 66, shown schematically.
Stabilizing cavity 29 is coupled by an iris 66 to an output waveguide 68 which may be coupled to the useful load.
Slots 28 serve as coupling between the anode circuit (vanes 24 and wall 25) and stabilizing cavity 29 The electromagnetic fields associated with this coupling are described in aforementioned U S patent 2.854,603 The coupling is sufficiently strong that the resonant frequency of high-Q cavity 29 controls the frequency of oscillation, and tuning cavity 29 by tuner 9 changes the frequency accordingly.
Slots 28 are depicted as of uniform width, rectangular cross-section They may, however, be of other shapes, such as a slit of non-uniform width or a pair of holes connected by a short slot Whatever their shape, slots 28 have their own set of resonant modes, in which a large part of the energy is stored in the slots themselves The fields of these slot modes are only weakly coupled to cavity 29, so the slot modes are not damped by the output loading of cavity 29 The slot modes are however coupled to vanes 24 and thus can present a high impedance to the electrons, producing spurious oscillations.
As one example of the invention, a ring of material having high rf loss is positioned near an end of slots 28 A ring at each end as in FIG 1 may be even better.
Ring 70 is placed quite close to the ends of slots 28 so that the fringing fields of the slot modes penetrate the lossy material, reducing the resonant impedance of the modes to damp out oscillations In the tube shown in FIG 1 the lossy material is outside the vacuum envelope, so it may be a porous ceramic impregnated with carbon, epoxy resin loaded with iron particles, or any other known high-loss material The lossy material may alternatively be inside the vacuum, and there is some advantage in having it inside wall 25 where it is Less coupled to cavity fields When inside the vacuum envelope, the material must be compatible with a sealed-off tube vacuum Materials such as silicon carbide or a boron ceramic loaded with silicon carbide particles are suitable, although the aforementioned porous ceramic impregnated with carbon has been widely used in spite of its large evolution of gas.
Rings 70 are mounted as by cement on the wall 60 of cavity subassembly 8 Rings overlap the ends of slots 28 and extend beyond the ends for a short distance to interact with the fringing end fields of slots
28.
FIG 3 shows the general shape of the electric field of a slot resonance The field strength falls off rapidly (approximately inversely) with distance from the slot The distance at which it has fallen to a given fraction of its value within the slot is proportional to the slot width w For maximum loading of the slot modes, lossy ring 70 thus should be within a few slot-widths of anode 70 cylinder 25.
Rings 70 are within the walls of cavity 29.
By themselves, they would couple to the cavity fields and load the resonance To prevent harmful loading, cylindrical conductive 75 shields 72 are positioned between rings 70 and the interior of the cavity Shields 72 overlap the axial extent of rings 70 They are close enough to rings 70 to reduce any fringing fields from the circular electric 80 field cavity mode which penetrate to lossy rings 70, to a tolerable value However, all cavity modes other than CEM modes have radial and/or axial components of electric field and wall currents, which will couple to 85 the shielded lossy rings 70 The slot-mode absorber of FIG 1 thus has the added advantage of damping unwanted cavity modes.
Shields 72 must not be so close to anode 90 cylinder 25 that they short-circuit the slotmode fields They should thus be preferably a few slot-widths away, and certainly no closer than the slot width w In an early abandoned experiment a shield somewhat 95 like 72 was placed directly on a thin lossy member somewhat like 70, but no appreciable loading of slot modes was observed.
However, lossy ring 70 could no doubt be made thicker to extend outward to contact 100 shield 72 as long as the inside of ring 70 is close enough to anode cylinder 25 and shield 72 is far enough away.
Shield rings 72 are conductively joined to the walls 60 of cavity 29 for mechanical 105 support and thermal conduction The points of joining 74 are preferably beyond the ends of slots 28 so as not to shield the fields fringing from the slot ends Again, the distance from the slots should be greater than the slot 110 width.
FIG 4 illustrates an embodiment of the invention in a more conventional coaxial magnetron Here the walls 60 ‘ of the stabilizing cavity 8 ‘ are part of the vacuum 115 envelope The output waveguide 68 ‘ contains a vacuum window 80 as of alumina ceramic Tuner push-rods 64 ‘ transmit motion thru the envelope via flexible metallic bellows 82 120 In the tube of FIG 4 mode absorber 70 ‘ is within the vacuum In this example it is placed on the inner, vane structure side of the common wall 25 ‘, to provide further shielding from cavity fields Only one 125 absorber 70 ‘ is shown, although a second absorber at the other end of slots 28 ‘ may be used Shields 72 ‘ and 72 ” are supported on the cavity walls, spaced from slots 28 ‘ and overlapping the slot ends Applicants 130 1 570 417 have found that a second shield 72 ” at the end of slots 28 ‘ which are not coupled to a slot-mode absorber further increases the Q of the cavity We believe this benefit is due to making the CEM fields more symmetric about their central plane and coupling cavity currents to the vanes 24 ‘ rather than the ends of slots 28 ‘.

Claims (1)

WHAT WE CLAIM IS:-
1 In an electronic oscillator:
circuit means adapted to interact with electrons at a selected frequency to generate electromagnetic energy, cavity means adapted to resonate at said frequency, a conductive wall forming a common part of the electrical boundaries of said circuit means and said cavity means, at least one slot in said wall for coupling electromagnetic fields of said circuit means and said cavity means, lossy material near said slot, a conductive shield between said lossy material and the interior of said cavity means for shielding said lossy material from fields of said cavity means, the portion of said shield near said slot being spaced from said wall by a distance larger than the width of said slot.
2 The oscillator of claim 1 wherein said slot is in a cylindrical portion of said wall.
3 The oscillator of claim 2 wherein said slot extends parallel to the axis of said cylindrical portion.
4 The oscillator of claim 3 wherein said cavity means includes a totoidal cavity and said cylindrical portion forms at least a part of the inner wall of said cavity.
The oscillator of claim 3 wherein said cavity means includes a cylindrical cavity and said cylindrical portion forms at least a part of the cylindrical wall of said cavity.
6 The oscillator of any one of claims 1 to 5 wherein said shield is conductively joined to a wall of said cavity at a distance 45 from said slot larger than the width of said slot.
7 The oscillator of any one of claims 1 to 3 including a plurality of slots in said wall.
8 The oscillator of claim 4 including a 50 plurality of slots in said cylindrical portion parallel to said axis.
9 The oscillator of any one of claims 1 to 8 wherein said oscillator is a coaxial magnetron comprising a vacuum envelope 55 The magnetron of claim 9 wherein said circuit means and said wall are within or part of the vacuum envelope and wherein substantially the remainder of said cavity means except said wall is outside the vac 60 uum envelope.
11 The magnetron of claim 10 wherein said lossy material is outside said vacuum envelope.
12 The magnetron of claim 10 wherein 65 said vacuum envelope is removable from said remainder of said cavity means.
13 The magnetron of claim 10 wherein said lossy material is inside said vacuum envelope 70 14 The magnetron of claim 13 wherein said lossy material is inside said wall.
An electronic oscillator substantially as herein disclosed with reference to and as illustrated in Figures 1 to 3 or Figure 4 of 75 the accompanying drawings.
For the Applicant(s):A POOLE & CO, Chartered Patent Agents, 54 New Cavendish Street, London, W 1 M 8 HP.
Printed for Her Majesty’s Stationery Office by The Tweeddale Press Ltd, Berwick-upon-Tweed 1980 Published at the Patent Office, 25 Southampton Buildings, London, WC 2 A l AY, from which copies may be obtained.

GB39531/77A
1976-09-23
1977-09-22
Electronic oscillator slot mode absorber

Expired

GB1570417A
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

US05/726,088

US4053850A
(en)

1976-09-23
1976-09-23
Magnetron slot mode absorber

Publications (1)

Publication Number
Publication Date

GB1570417A
true

GB1570417A
(en)

1980-07-02

Family
ID=24917180
Family Applications (1)

Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

GB39531/77A
Expired

GB1570417A
(en)

1976-09-23
1977-09-22
Electronic oscillator slot mode absorber

Country Status (6)

Country
Link

US
(1)

US4053850A
(en)

CA
(1)

CA1078962A
(en)

FR
(1)

FR2365876A1
(en)

GB
(1)

GB1570417A
(en)

IL
(1)

IL52796A
(en)

IT
(1)

IT1087382B
(en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB2218258A
(en)

*

1988-04-19
1989-11-08
Thorn Microwave Devices Limite
Coaxial magnetrons

GB2386749A
(en)

*

2002-03-16
2003-09-24
Marconi Applied Techn Ltd
A magnetron with a dielectric resonator comprising a lossy portion

US7199525B2
(en)

2001-02-13
2007-04-03
E2V Technologies (Uk) Limited
Strapped magnetron with a dielectric resonator for absorbing radiation

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

US2684343A
(en)

*

1950-11-17
1954-07-20
American Cyanamid Co
Treatment of cellulosic material with alkylated polyalkylol melamine resins

GB1587973A
(en)

*

1978-04-25
1981-04-15
English Electric Valve Co Ltd
Co-axial multi cavity anode magnetrons

US4194142A
(en)

*

1978-07-10
1980-03-18
The United States Of America As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy
Mode control apparatus for a separable-insert coaxial magnetron

FR2454175A1
(en)

*

1979-04-13
1980-11-07
Thomson Csf

CROSS-FIELD AMPLIFIER WITH RE-ENTERING BEAM

US4480235A
(en)

*

1983-01-18
1984-10-30
Varian Associates, Inc.
Coaxial magnetron with improved starting

US4588965A
(en)

*

1984-06-25
1986-05-13
Varian Associates, Inc.
Coaxial magnetron using the TE111 mode

US5159241A
(en)

*

1990-10-25
1992-10-27
General Dynamics Corporation Air Defense Systems Division
Single body relativistic magnetron

US5162698A
(en)

*

1990-12-21
1992-11-10
General Dynamics Corporation Air Defense Systems Div.
Cascaded relativistic magnetron

US8378212B2
(en)

*

2009-06-04
2013-02-19
Raytheon Company
Sealed electrical feed-through assembly and methods of making same

GB2478990A
(en)

*

2010-03-26
2011-09-28
E2V Tech
Magnetron with high gfrequency cathode heater power supply

JP6118112B2
(en)

2013-01-07
2017-04-19
新日本無線株式会社

Coaxial magnetron and its assembly method

CN110021510A
(en)

*

2019-03-15
2019-07-16
安徽华东光电技术研究所有限公司
Coaxial manetron cavity resonator structure and preparation method thereof

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Assignee
Title

GB751741A
(en)

*

1953-10-07
1956-07-04
Emi Ltd
Improvements in or relating to cavity resonators

US2854603A
(en)

*

1955-05-23
1958-09-30
Bell Telephone Labor Inc
Magnetrons

FR1173546A
(en)

*

1957-04-09
1959-02-26
Thomson Houston Comp Francaise

Improvement of the multicavity magnetron with oscillating stabilization circuit in a circular electric field mode

NL277268A
(en)

*

1961-04-26

FR1372678A
(en)

*

1962-08-10
1964-09-18
S F D Lab

Inverted type magnetron

US3231781A
(en)

*

1962-08-10
1966-01-25
Sfd Lab Inc
Reverse magnetron with slot mode absorber

US3395314A
(en)

*

1964-11-24
1968-07-30
Westinghouse Electric Corp
Coaxial magnetron having attenuator means for suppressing undesired modes

US3412284A
(en)

*

1965-10-19
1968-11-19
Sfd Lab Inc
Microwave tube apparatus having an improved slot mode absorber

DE1541040B1
(en)

*

1966-05-16
1971-08-26
Siemens Ag

WALKING FIELD TUBE WITH TWO HIGH FREQUENCY INPUT AND OUTSIDE WAVE GUIDES FORMING THE TUBE

US3471744A
(en)

*

1967-09-01
1969-10-07
Varian Associates
Coaxial magnetron having a segmented ring slot mode absorber

US3479556A
(en)

*

1967-09-27
1969-11-18
Sfd Lab Inc
Reverse magnetron having an output circuit employing mode absorbers in the internal cavity

US3706910A
(en)

*

1971-05-28
1972-12-19
Raytheon Co
Coaxial magnetron slot mode suppressor

US3728650A
(en)

*

1971-07-23
1973-04-17
Raytheon Co
Ghost-mode shifted dielectric window

1976

1976-09-23
US
US05/726,088
patent/US4053850A/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

1977

1977-08-22
IL
IL52796A
patent/IL52796A/en
unknown

1977-09-19
CA
CA287,021A
patent/CA1078962A/en
not_active
Expired

1977-09-22
GB
GB39531/77A
patent/GB1570417A/en
not_active
Expired

1977-09-22
IT
IT27833/77A
patent/IT1087382B/en
active

1977-09-23
FR
FR7728757A
patent/FR2365876A1/en
active
Granted

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party

Publication number
Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB2218258A
(en)

*

1988-04-19
1989-11-08
Thorn Microwave Devices Limite
Coaxial magnetrons

GB2218258B
(en)

*

1988-04-19
1992-12-23
Thorn Microwave Devices Limite
Coaxial magnetrons

US7199525B2
(en)

2001-02-13
2007-04-03
E2V Technologies (Uk) Limited
Strapped magnetron with a dielectric resonator for absorbing radiation

GB2386749A
(en)

*

2002-03-16
2003-09-24
Marconi Applied Techn Ltd
A magnetron with a dielectric resonator comprising a lossy portion

GB2386749B
(en)

*

2002-03-16
2005-11-23
Marconi Applied Techn Ltd
Magnetron

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

FR2365876B1
(en)

1983-04-29

IT1087382B
(en)

1985-06-04

FR2365876A1
(en)

1978-04-21

IL52796A
(en)

1980-11-30

CA1078962A
(en)

1980-06-03

US4053850A
(en)

1977-10-11

IL52796A0
(en)

1977-10-31

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Legal Events

Date
Code
Title
Description

1980-09-17
PS
Patent sealed [section 19, patents act 1949]

1991-05-22
PCNP
Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

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