On the limits of multipactor in rectangular waveguides

Abstract

Multipactor in WR-284-like geometries is measured utilizing local and global detection techniques. To emulate conditions one may find in a waveguide filter structure while maintaining the fundamental microwave mode, a standard rectangular waveguide geometry with the reduced waveguide height set to 2.1 or 5.5 mm was adopted. Two high power RF sources were used to investigate a large range of input power (few kWs to MWs): a solid state source using GaN HEMTs allowing for larger pulse widths than standard magnetrons (100 μs as opposed to ∼4 μs) and a MW level S-band coaxial magnetron for the high power end. Particular interest was taken in capturing the lower and upper limits of multipactor threshold. Lower multipactor thresholds for finite pulse duration are governed by the appearance of one or more electrons in the multipactor gap during the applied pulse as well as a minimum power (electric field) level that affects a secondary electron emission yield above unity. As shown, such initial electrons(s) may easily be seeded via an external UV source illuminating the gap. However, wall collisions of excited metastable molecules may be another source of electrons, an observation based on the experiment and prior research. A multipactor upper threshold was non-existent in the experiment, even at powers over 200 kW within a 2.1 mm test gap, which numerically yielded a gap transit time significantly shorter than one half-period of the GHz wave. This is attributed to the electric field distribution within the waveguide structure, which results in the multipactor's spatial position moving to more favorable locations within the test gap.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Aug 01, 2020
Source ID
10.1063/5.0012833

Entities

People

  • Andreas Neuber
  • Benedikt Esser
  • J. Dickens
  • John Mankowski
  • L. Silvestre
  • Taichi Sugai
  • Z Shaw

Organizations

  • Air Force Office of Scientific Research
  • Nagaoka University of Technology
  • Texas Tech University

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Electronics Engineering
  • Microwave Engineering.
  • Molecular Photonics/Laser Physics

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics