US3102847A - Storage tube targets - Google Patents
Storage tube targets Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- US3102847A US3102847A US747184A US74718458A US3102847A US 3102847 A US3102847 A US 3102847A US 747184 A US747184 A US 747184A US 74718458 A US74718458 A US 74718458A US 3102847 A US3102847 A US 3102847A
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- US
- United States
- Prior art keywords
- grid
- layer
- target
- metal
- metallic
- Prior art date
- 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 - Lifetime
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Classifications
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J29/00—Details of cathode-ray tubes or of electron-beam tubes of the types covered by group H01J31/00
- H01J29/02—Electrodes; Screens; Mounting, supporting, spacing or insulating thereof
- H01J29/10—Screens on or from which an image or pattern is formed, picked up, converted or stored
- H01J29/36—Photoelectric screens; Charge-storage screens
- H01J29/39—Charge-storage screens
-
- H—ELECTRICITY
- H01—ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
- H01J—ELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
- H01J9/00—Apparatus or processes specially adapted for the manufacture, installation, removal, maintenance of electric discharge tubes, discharge lamps, or parts thereof; Recovery of material from discharge tubes or lamps
- H01J9/02—Manufacture of electrodes or electrode systems
- H01J9/14—Manufacture of electrodes or electrode systems of non-emitting electrodes
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a method of making a target for storage tubes and to the particular storage tube target made in accordance with the present invention.
- targets which include an insulating layer, contiguous on one side thereof to a metallic layer and on the other side thereof to a grid also made of metallic m atrial which is very line, for example, of which the pitch of mesh work is of the order of fifty microns.
- Another object of the present invention is a method of manufacture in which the grid is directly formed on the surface of the insulating layer to improve the manufacturing techniques thereof and reduce the steps and therewith the cost connected therewith.
- the process according to the present invention includes the following steps:
- a matrix-grid is thereupon applied on the oxidized surface of this metallic plate and an insulating material diiferent from that which constitutes the metallic oxide of the plate utilized is thereupon applied by evaporation onto the surface covered by the matrix-grid.
- This insulating material applied onto the surface covered by the matrixgrid must have the following properties:
- a layer of a metal of which the grid is to be constituted is applied by any suitable method, such as, for example, by pulverization in vacuum, onto the insulating surface.
- This layer will cover the isles of the second insulating material as well as the channels or grooves therebetween which were left by removal of the matrix 3,192,847 Patented Sept. 3, 1963 grid and which correspond to the network of the wires of the desired grid.
- the metal under consideration must have the property of good adherence to the metallic oxide forming the insulating layer of the target but of poor adherence to the insulating material of which the isles are formed.
- Another object of the present invention is to provide a target for storage tubes which excels by the great uniformity throughout the target.
- FIGURES 1 through 5 are cross-sectional views through a target of a storage tube in accordance with the present invention and illustrating the successive stages in the manufacture of the target according to the steps *1 to 5 listed hereinabove.
- reference numeral 1 designates the metallic plate, for example, of aluminum which has been oxidized in such a manner that it is covered with a layer 2 of alumina (aluminum oxide A1 0 A matrix-grid 3 is then placed over the surface 2, and a very thin layer of insulating material having the properties (a) and (b) indicated hereinabove is deposited into the holes of the mesh of this grid in any suitable manner, for example, by evaporation under vacuum.
- silicon monoxide (SiO) is suitable for the application under consideration if the insulating layer of the target is constituted by alumina, and if the metal of the grid is copper.
- FIGURE 2 shows the isles 4 of silicon monoxide on the surface 2 which subsist after removal of the matrix-grid 3.
- the channels or grooves 5 form the matrix for the grid to be formed.
- the channels or grooves 5 and the isles 4 are covered by or are submerged in a layer 6 of metal, for example, projected by cathodic pulveriz-ation under vacuum.
- the metal of layer 6 may be, for example, cop per which adheres poorly to silicon monoxide (810) but which adheres well to aluminum oxide (A1 0
- A1 0 aluminum oxide
- FIGURE 4 after rubbing or any other suitable equivalent action only the metallic structure of the grid 7 remains which adheres to the surface 2 whereas the metallic portions facing the isles 4 have been removed or become detached.
- FIGURE 5 shows the grid designated therein by reference numeral 7 which has been caused to :grow as the result of passage of the target assembly through an electrolytic bath, for example, of cooper.
- FIGURE 5 presents the finished product of the target made in conformity with the present invention according to which the structure of the grid is for-med directly on the surface of the insulating layer.
- the present invention is not limited to the plane structure shown in the drawing. Quite to the contnary, the method described hereinabove is equally applicable if the surface of the metallic grid 1 is curved or nonaplanar, and thereby readily enables also the realization of a convex target structure having the same advan tages as mentioned hereinabove. Consequently, we intend to cover all such changes and modifications as are encompassed by the scope of the appended claim.
- a method of manufacturing a metal grid fixed with a surface thereof to a surfiace of a first insulating layer comprising the steps of applying against said insulating surface a matrix grid; projecting onto said matrix grid a second layer of an insulating material different from said insulating material; removing said matrix grid thereby establishing a network of grooves in said second insulating layer; projecting onto said grooved layer a coating of metal having the characteristics of being strongly adherent to said first insulating layer material while being loosely adherent to said second insulating layer material; and removing the particles of said metal coating adherent to said second layer surface While leaving a grid struc ture by the portions thereof filling said grooves and adherenrt to said first layer surface, said first insulating layer being of alumina, said grid being of copper, and said second insulating layer being of silicon monoxide.
Landscapes
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
- Image-Pickup Tubes, Image-Amplification Tubes, And Storage Tubes (AREA)
- Cathode-Ray Tubes And Fluorescent Screens For Display (AREA)
- Particle Accelerators (AREA)
- Electron Sources, Ion Sources (AREA)
- Medicines Containing Antibodies Or Antigens For Use As Internal Diagnostic Agents (AREA)
- Photoreceptors In Electrophotography (AREA)
- Manufacture Or Reproduction Of Printing Formes (AREA)
Description
Sept. 3, 1963 BOULET ETA L STORAGE TUBE TARGETS Filed July 8, 1958 Q \Wr Y 1 1 wwwr 1 j x 1 1 I Fig. 5
Fig.4
Fig. 3
Fig.2
Fig. 1
INVENTOR Francis BOULET United States Patent G to Compagnie Generale dc Telegraphic sans Fil, Paris, France Filed July 8, 1958, Ser. No. 747,184 Claims priority, application France July 23, 1957 1 Claim. c1.204-1s) The present invention relates to a method of making a target for storage tubes and to the particular storage tube target made in accordance with the present invention.
In certain storage tubes, targets are used which include an insulating layer, contiguous on one side thereof to a metallic layer and on the other side thereof to a grid also made of metallic m atrial which is very line, for example, of which the pitch of mesh work is of the order of fifty microns.
In the known prior art :PX'OCESBS and methods for the manufacture of such targets, the grid ordinarily made separately of the assembly consisting of the metallic layer and of the insulating layer, was applied against the surface of the layer and fixed thereto by any suitable means.
However, for proper operation of these storage tubes of the type under consideration, it is essential that the distance between the grid and the metallic layer remains constant along the entire surface of the target, the precision which is required therefor being of the order of one micron.
This precision, however, could not be oibtained with the known methods of the prior art so that the targets obtained thereby exhibited a defect as to unifonmitythereof.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to obviate the inadequacies of the prior art and to provide .a storage-tube target in which the distance between the grid and the metallic layer is constant throughout with a precision corresponding to the very high desirable accuracy indicated hereinabove.
Another object of the present invention is a method of manufacture in which the grid is directly formed on the surface of the insulating layer to improve the manufacturing techniques thereof and reduce the steps and therewith the cost connected therewith.
The process according to the present invention includes the following steps:
1) At first, a metallic plate is taken of which one face is oxidized;
(2) A matrix-grid is thereupon applied on the oxidized surface of this metallic plate and an insulating material diiferent from that which constitutes the metallic oxide of the plate utilized is thereupon applied by evaporation onto the surface covered by the matrix-grid. This insulating material applied onto the surface covered by the matrixgrid must have the following properties:
(a) It must be capable of forming well defined shadows, that is, Well defined outlines or contours at the limits or borders of the surface covered thereby, and
(b) It must have a poor adherence with respect to the metal which will be utilized to constitute the ultimate or final grid.
After removal of the matrix-grid, there remains on the oxidized surface small isles of this second insulating material which correspond to the apertures or holes of the mesh of the grid to be formed;
(3) Thereafter a layer of a metal of which the grid is to be constituted is applied by any suitable method, such as, for example, by pulverization in vacuum, onto the insulating surface. This layer will cover the isles of the second insulating material as well as the channels or grooves therebetween which were left by removal of the matrix 3,192,847 Patented Sept. 3, 1963 grid and which correspond to the network of the wires of the desired grid.
The metal under consideration must have the property of good adherence to the metallic oxide forming the insulating layer of the target but of poor adherence to the insulating material of which the isles are formed.
(4) By subsequently rubbing the layer of the deposited metal or by acting thereon inan analogous, suitable manner, the parts of the metal deposited on the isles of the second insulating material are caused to be loosened or detached therefrom by reason of the poor adherence thereof with the second insulating material whereas the metal filling the channels or grooves between the isles and deposited directly onto the oxide of metal of the base resist to the rubbing action, thanks to the relatively good adherence thereof.
As a result thereof, a structure of metallic grid encrusted or emplaced between the isles of the second insulating material are obtained.
(5) Finally, by submerging the target assembly into an electrolytic bath of a metal which may be that of which the grid is made or of a different metal, a supplementary deposit of the metal is caused on the metallic encrusted structure which thereby causes the grid to grow.
Accordingly, it is a primary object to provide a method for manufacturing, in a simple manner, a target for storage tubes which has the required and desired very high degree of accuracy.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a target for storage tubes which excels by the great uniformity throughout the target.
These and other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more obvious from the following description when taken in connection with the accompanying drawing which shows, for purposes of illustration only, the various steps of one embodiment of the method in accordance with the present invention, and wherein:
FIGURES 1 through 5 are cross-sectional views through a target of a storage tube in accordance with the present invention and illustrating the successive stages in the manufacture of the target according to the steps *1 to 5 listed hereinabove.
Referring now to the drawing, wherein like reference numerals are used throughout the various views to designate like parts, reference numeral 1 designates the metallic plate, for example, of aluminum which has been oxidized in such a manner that it is covered with a layer 2 of alumina (aluminum oxide A1 0 A matrix-grid 3 is then placed over the surface 2, and a very thin layer of insulating material having the properties (a) and (b) indicated hereinabove is deposited into the holes of the mesh of this grid in any suitable manner, for example, by evaporation under vacuum. As an example, silicon monoxide (SiO) is suitable for the application under consideration if the insulating layer of the target is constituted by alumina, and if the metal of the grid is copper.
FIGURE 2 shows the isles 4 of silicon monoxide on the surface 2 which subsist after removal of the matrix-grid 3. The channels or grooves 5 form the matrix for the grid to be formed.
In FIGURE 3, the channels or grooves 5 and the isles 4 are covered by or are submerged in a layer 6 of metal, for example, projected by cathodic pulveriz-ation under vacuum. The metal of layer 6 may be, for example, cop per which adheres poorly to silicon monoxide (810) but which adheres well to aluminum oxide (A1 0 As shown in FIGURE 4, after rubbing or any other suitable equivalent action only the metallic structure of the grid 7 remains which adheres to the surface 2 whereas the metallic portions facing the isles 4 have been removed or become detached.
FIGURE 5 shows the grid designated therein by reference numeral 7 which has been caused to :grow as the result of passage of the target assembly through an electrolytic bath, for example, of cooper.
Thus, FIGURE 5 presents the finished product of the target made in conformity with the present invention according to which the structure of the grid is for-med directly on the surface of the insulating layer.
Laboratory tests and practical experience both have demonstrated that with the thicknesses of the elements 2 and 7 of the order of a few microns to several tens of microns and with a grid having twenty meshes per millimeter, with a transparency of 60% to 70%, a constancy in the distance between the grid 7 and the surface of the plate 1 is realized with a tolerance of about one nncron over the entire surface of the target.
It should be noted that with the possible exception of the formation of the first insulating layer by oxidation of the metal plate and of the subsequent optional electrolytic treatment of the grid structure, all steps used in the manufacture of the stonageatube target in accordance with the present invention are mechanical in nature and do not require chemical treatments, dissolution, or washing out of parts of the assembly thereby facilitating manufacture and quality control thereof.
While we have shown and described one embodiment of the method and finished product obtained in accordance with the present invention, it is understood that the same is not limited thereto but is susceptible of many changes and modifications within the scope 'and spirit of the present invention.
For example, the present invention is not limited to the plane structure shown in the drawing. Quite to the contnary, the method described hereinabove is equally applicable if the surface of the metallic grid 1 is curved or nonaplanar, and thereby readily enables also the realization of a convex target structure having the same advan tages as mentioned hereinabove. Consequently, we intend to cover all such changes and modifications as are encompassed by the scope of the appended claim.
We claim:
A method of manufacturing a metal grid fixed with a surface thereof to a surfiace of a first insulating layer, comprising the steps of applying against said insulating surface a matrix grid; projecting onto said matrix grid a second layer of an insulating material different from said insulating material; removing said matrix grid thereby establishing a network of grooves in said second insulating layer; projecting onto said grooved layer a coating of metal having the characteristics of being strongly adherent to said first insulating layer material while being loosely adherent to said second insulating layer material; and removing the particles of said metal coating adherent to said second layer surface While leaving a grid struc ture by the portions thereof filling said grooves and adherenrt to said first layer surface, said first insulating layer being of alumina, said grid being of copper, and said second insulating layer being of silicon monoxide.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,123,297 Beynen et a1 July 12, 1938 2,262,281 Hagler Nov. 11, 1941 2,403,239 Rose July 2, 1946 2,467,734 Essi-g Apr. 19, 1949 2,495,042 Wilder et a1. Jan. 17, 1950 2,588,019 Law Mar. 4, 1952 2,623,183 Buck Dec. 23, 1952 2 ,702,270 Donahue et al Feb. 15, 1955 2,728,693 Cado Dec. 27, 1955 2,827,390 Garrigns Mar. 18, 1958 2,874,449 De Rooy et -al Feb. 24, 1959
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
FR1087712X | 1957-07-23 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
US3102847A true US3102847A (en) | 1963-09-03 |
Family
ID=9613448
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
US747184A Expired - Lifetime US3102847A (en) | 1957-07-23 | 1958-07-08 | Storage tube targets |
Country Status (5)
Country | Link |
---|---|
US (1) | US3102847A (en) |
DE (1) | DE1087712B (en) |
FR (1) | FR1182378A (en) |
GB (1) | GB830645A (en) |
NL (1) | NL229540A (en) |
Families Citing this family (1)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US3293474A (en) * | 1963-08-01 | 1966-12-20 | Tektronix Inc | Phosphor dielectric storage target for cathode ray tube |
Citations (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2123297A (en) * | 1934-12-12 | 1938-07-12 | Beynen Laurens Rynhart | Process of preparing perforated metal articles |
US2262281A (en) * | 1939-08-23 | 1941-11-11 | Hagler Benjamin | Method of surfacing panels and like articles |
US2403239A (en) * | 1941-08-16 | 1946-07-02 | Rca Corp | Target electrode for electron discharge tubes |
US2467734A (en) * | 1945-04-12 | 1949-04-19 | Farnsworth Res Corp | Shading compensating mosaic screen electrode |
US2495042A (en) * | 1947-11-12 | 1950-01-17 | Remington Rand Inc | Two-sided mosaic and method of manufacturing same |
US2588019A (en) * | 1946-06-05 | 1952-03-04 | Rca Corp | Monoscope target for pickup tubes |
US2623183A (en) * | 1948-09-01 | 1952-12-23 | Willard E Buck | Infrared receiver |
US2702270A (en) * | 1952-06-07 | 1955-02-15 | Rca Corp | Method of making fine mesh metallic screens |
US2728693A (en) * | 1953-08-24 | 1955-12-27 | Motorola Inc | Method of forming electrical conductor upon an insulating base |
US2827390A (en) * | 1955-02-14 | 1958-03-18 | Thomas Electronics Inc | Production of kinescope targets |
US2874449A (en) * | 1954-12-30 | 1959-02-24 | Philips Corp | Method of providing an electrically conductive network on a support of insulating material |
-
0
- NL NL229540D patent/NL229540A/xx unknown
-
1957
- 1957-07-23 FR FR1182378D patent/FR1182378A/en not_active Expired
-
1958
- 1958-07-08 US US747184A patent/US3102847A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
- 1958-07-21 GB GB23325/58A patent/GB830645A/en not_active Expired
- 1958-07-22 DE DEC17228A patent/DE1087712B/en active Pending
Patent Citations (11)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US2123297A (en) * | 1934-12-12 | 1938-07-12 | Beynen Laurens Rynhart | Process of preparing perforated metal articles |
US2262281A (en) * | 1939-08-23 | 1941-11-11 | Hagler Benjamin | Method of surfacing panels and like articles |
US2403239A (en) * | 1941-08-16 | 1946-07-02 | Rca Corp | Target electrode for electron discharge tubes |
US2467734A (en) * | 1945-04-12 | 1949-04-19 | Farnsworth Res Corp | Shading compensating mosaic screen electrode |
US2588019A (en) * | 1946-06-05 | 1952-03-04 | Rca Corp | Monoscope target for pickup tubes |
US2495042A (en) * | 1947-11-12 | 1950-01-17 | Remington Rand Inc | Two-sided mosaic and method of manufacturing same |
US2623183A (en) * | 1948-09-01 | 1952-12-23 | Willard E Buck | Infrared receiver |
US2702270A (en) * | 1952-06-07 | 1955-02-15 | Rca Corp | Method of making fine mesh metallic screens |
US2728693A (en) * | 1953-08-24 | 1955-12-27 | Motorola Inc | Method of forming electrical conductor upon an insulating base |
US2874449A (en) * | 1954-12-30 | 1959-02-24 | Philips Corp | Method of providing an electrically conductive network on a support of insulating material |
US2827390A (en) * | 1955-02-14 | 1958-03-18 | Thomas Electronics Inc | Production of kinescope targets |
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB830645A (en) | 1960-03-16 |
FR1182378A (en) | 1959-06-24 |
DE1087712B (en) | 1960-08-25 |
NL229540A (en) |
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