36 research outputs found
Exceptional Point of Degeneracy in Linear-Beam Tubes for High Power Backward-Wave Oscillators
Abstract An exceptional point of degeneracy (EPD) is induced in a system made
of an electron beam interacting with an electromagnetic (EM) guided mode. This
enables a degenerate synchronous regime in backward wave oscillators (BWOs)
where the electron beams provides distributed gain to the EM mode with
distributed power extraction. Current particle-in-cell simulation results
demonstrate that BWOs operating at an EPD have a starting-oscillation current
that scales quadratically to a non-vanishing value for long interaction lengths
and therefore have higher power conversion efficiency at arbitrarily higher
level of power generation compared to standard BWOs
Exceptional Point of Degeneracy in Backward-Wave Oscillator with Distributed Power Extraction
We show how an exceptional point of degeneracy (EPD) is formed in a system
composed of an electron beam interacting with an electromagnetic mode guided in
a slow wave structure (SWS) with distributed power extraction from the
interaction zone. Based on this kind of EPD, a new regime of operation is
devised for backward wave oscillators (BWOs) as a synchronous and degenerate
regime between a backward electromagnetic mode and the charge wave modulating
the electron beam. Degenerate synchronization under this EPD condition means
that two complex modes of the interactive system do not share just the
wavenumber, but they rather coalesce in both their wavenumbers and eigenvectors
(polarization states). In principle this new condition guarantees full
synchronization between the electromagnetic wave and the beam's charge wave for
any amount of output power extracted from the beam, setting the threshold of
this EPD-BWO to any arbitrary, desired, value. Indeed, we show that the
presence of distributed radiation in the SWS results in having high-threshold
electron-beam current to start oscillations which implies higher power
generation. These findings have the potential to lead to highly efficient BWOs
with very high output power and excellent spectral purity
General Conditions to Realize Exceptional Points of Degeneracy in Two Uniform Coupled Transmission Lines
We present the general conditions to realize a fourth order exceptional point
of degeneracy (EPD) in two uniform (i.e., invariant along z) lossless and
gainless coupled transmission lines (CTLs), namely, a degenerate band edge
(DBE). Until now the DBE has been shown only in periodic structures. In
contrast, the CTLs considered here are uniform and subdivided into four cases
where the two TLs support combinations of forward propagation, backward
propagation and evanescent modes (when neglecting the mutual coupling). We
demonstrate for the first time that a DBE is supported in uniform CTLs when
there is proper coupling between: (i) propagating modes and evanescent modes,
(ii) forward and backward propagating modes, or (iii) four evanescent modes
(two in each direction). We also show that the loaded quality factor of uniform
CTLs exhibiting a fourth order EPD at k=0 is robust to series losses due to the
fact that the degenerate modes do not advance in phase. We also provide a
microstrip possible implementation of a uniform CTL exhibiting a DBE using
periodic series capacitors with very sub-wavelength unit-cell length. Finally,
we show an experimental verification of the existence DBE for a microstrip
implementation of a CTL supporting coupled propagating and evanescent modes
Reduced Plasma Frequency Calculation Based on Particle-In-Cell Simulations
We propose a scheme to calculate the reduced plasma frequency of a
cylindrical-shaped electron beam flowing inside of a cylindrical tunnel, based
on results obtained from Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. In PIC
simulations, we modulate the electron beam using two parallel,
non-intercepting, closely-spaced grids which are electrically connected
together by a single-tone sinusoidal voltage source. The electron energy and
the beam current distributions along the length of the tunnel are monitored
after the system is operating at steady-state. We build a system matrix
describing the beam's dynamics, estimated by fitting a 2x2 matrix that best
agrees with the first order differential equations that govern the
physics-based system. Results are compared with the theoretical Branch and
Mihran model, which is typically used to compute the plasma frequency reduction
factor in such systems. Our method shows excellent agreement with the
theoretical model, however, it is also general. Our method can be potentially
utilized to determine the reduced plasma frequencies of electron beams
propagating in differently-shaped beam tunnels, where no theoretical model yet
exists, such as the case of a cylindrical or elliptical electron beam
propagating inside of a metallic beam tunnel of cylindrical, square, or
elliptical cross-section. It can be applied also to electron beams composed of
multiple streams
Analytical Solution for Space-Charge Waves in a Two-Stream Cylindrical Electron Beam
We present an analytical method to compute the wavenumbers and electric
fields of the space-charge-wave eigenmodes supported by a two-stream electron
beam, consisting of a solid inner cylindrical stream and a coaxial outer
annular stream, both contained within a cylindrical metallic tunnel.We extend
the analytical model developed by Ramo to the case of two streams. The method
accounts for the interaction between the two streams with the presence of the
beam-tunnel wall; it can be used to model the complex wavenumbers associated
with the two-stream instability and the plasma frequency reduction effects in
vacuum electronic amplifiers and other vacuum electronic devices.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figure
Parametric Modeling of Serpentine Waveguide Traveling Wave Tubes
A simple and fast model for numerically calculating small-signal gain in
serpentine waveguide traveling-wave tubes (TWTs) is described. In the framework
of the Pierce model, we consider one-dimensional electron flow along a
dispersive single-mode slow-wave structure (SWS), accounting for the
space-charge effect. The analytical model accounts for the frequency-dependent
phase velocity and characteristic impedance obtained using various equivalent
circuit models from the literature, validated by comparison with full-wave
eigenmode simulation. The model includes a relation between the modal
characteristic impedance and the interaction (Pierce) impedance of the SWS,
including also an extra correction factor that accounts for the variation of
the electric field distribution and hence of the interaction impedance over the
beam cross section. By applying boundary conditions to our generalized Pierce
model, we compute both the theoretical gain of a TWT and all the complex-valued
wavenumbers of the hot modes versus frequency and compare our results with
numerically intensive particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations; the good agreement in
the comparison demonstrates the accuracy and simplicity of our generalized
model. For various examples where we vary the average electron beam (e-beam)
phase velocity, average e-beam current, number of unit cells, and input radio
frequency (RF) power, we demonstrate that our model is robust in the
small-signal regime.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure
Third Order Modal Exceptional Degeneracy in Waveguides with Glide-Time Symmetry
The dispersion of a three-way waveguide is engineered to exhibit exceptional
modal characteristics. Two coupled waveguides with Parity-Time (PT) symmetry
have been previously demonstrated to exhibit second order exceptional points of
degeneracy (EPDs). In this work, we introduce and investigate a particular
class of EPDs, applicable from radio frequency to optical wavelengths, whereby
three coupled waveguides satisfy Glide-Time (GT) symmetry to exhibit a third
order modal degeneracy with a real-valued wavenumber. GT symmetry involves
glide symmetry of lossless/gainless components of the waveguide in addition to
changing the sign of passive/active elements while applying a glide symmetry
operation. This GT-symmetry condition allows three Floquet-Bloch eigenmodes of
the structure to coalesce to a real-valued wavenumber at a single frequency, in
addition of having one branch of the dispersion diagram with a purely real
wavenumber. The proposed scheme may have applications including but not limited
to distributed amplifiers, radiating arrays, and sensors, from radio frequency
to optics