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Oil Cooling of MSDC IOTs
Introduction
The Constant Efficiency Amplifier (CEA) is the most efficient
high-power UHF amplifier available for use in terrestrial
broadcasting. In 1997, when L-3 Communications Electron
Devices first proposed reducing the CEA to practice, it
was assumed that cooling the device would present a formidable
challenge. The CEA is a Multiple Stage Depressed Collector
Inductive Output Tube (MSDC IOT). Incorporating multiple
stages of collector depression can increase the efficiency
of the device by more than 50%.
The IOT consists of three major elements:
the electron gun, the RF circuit, and the collector. Electron
energy from the
gun that is not converted to RF power is dissipated in the
collector as heat. Since the collector of the IOT resides
at ground potential, water can be used for cooling. The CEA’s
increased efficiency is derived from having multiple collector
stages, which operate at voltages that incrementally rise
towards cathode potential. With reduced potentials on collector
stages, electrons emerging from the output cavity gap are
sorted and collected by their respective energy levels. Although
this makes the device more efficient, it presents a cooling
challenge, since one has to choose a cooling medium that
has a dielectric strength high enough to prevent high-voltage
breakdown between the closely spaced collector stages.
The Challenge of Air Cooling
In 1997, the expectation for average RF output power, in
digital operation, from a single tube was approximately
15 kW. At that power level, air cooling was determined
to be suitable for cooling the CEA. However, air cooling
presents unique challenges:
- Air handling systems are noisy.
- The air has to be filtered to avoid contamination of
the collector’s high-voltage standoff ceramics.
- High-voltage breakdown in air between the collector stages
becomes a problem and is even more pronounced at high
altitude.
- Air cooling has practical limitations
related to the principle that as air is compressed (in
developing backpressure
for passage through cooling fins) its temperature rises making
it less useful as a cooling medium.
The Move to Liquid Cooling
In 1999, L-3 engineers became aware that the average power
level expectations derived from a single tube had risen
to 30 kW. Liquid cooling became necessary due to higher
thermal dissipation levels in the collectors. The chosen
cooling medium had to have excellent dielectric properties.
The first choice that came to mind was pure or deionized
(DI) water. However, using DI water creates some challenges:
- The metal surfaces of the cooling
loop must be meticulously scrubbed to keep them free of
ions. Otherwise,
corrosion (electrolysis) will occur.
- Long insulated hoses are needed between collector stages
to prevent high-voltage breakdown.
- It creates a potential freezing and boiling problem.
The Need for Oil Cooling
To solve the problems associated with air- and pure water-cooling
systems, L-3 engineers chose to use commercially available
insulating oil made from 100% synthetic hydrocarbon oils.
The chemical family designation for this type of oil is
Polyalpha Olefin (PAO) Hydrocarbon. This type of oil is
biodegradable and has excellent dielectric properties (23kV/mm)
and heat transfer characteristics. Although the oil’s
ability to transport heat is diminished in comparison to
water, it is not a problem with the CEA thanks to the amplifier’s
decreased collector dissipation and subsequent increase
in efficiency. Alpha-1® oil, manufactured by Dielectric
Systems Inc., is currently used for cooling the CEA. This
oil is used extensively by the transformer industry for
retrofitting transformers filled with mineral-based dielectric
oils. Using a dielectric fluid as the CEA’s cooling
agent presents several advantages:
- The entire collector assembly
can be immersed in the same oil bath, eliminating the
need
for insulating cooling
hoses between collector stages and thereby simplifying the
design of the collector.
- The oil provides long-term corrosion
protection to the collector surfaces.
- The cooling loop can utilize
a standard pump, standard plumbing components, and standard
hydraulic
oil filters.
- The oil is biodegradable and
does not need to be treated as hazardous waste.
- Dielectric oil is expected to
last for the life of the tube, resulting in dramatically
reduced
cost of ownership.
The Truth About Dielectric Oil
Recently, there has been some negative press regarding the
use of dielectric oil to cool MSDC IOTs. Statements were
made containing the words unproven and hazardous. The truth
is that dielectric oils are and have for decades been used
in many applications to cool and insulate high-power equipment.
Listed below are a few of the known applications:
- Shell’s Diala® and Exxon’s
Univolt are electrical insulating oils that are commonly
used in
most of the linear high-voltage power supplies used to power
IOTs and Klystrons used in broadcast service.
- Electrical insulating oils are
used to insulate and cool high-power microwave devices.
Some
examples are
products L-3 Communications currently manufactures, including
the Cross Field Amplifier (CFA) used in many airport surveillance
radars, and a megawatt S-band Klystron used in ground-based
radars.
- In military airborne applications where space is
limited and temperatures can go down as low as -54°C,
insulating oils like Exxon’s Coolanol function as a
coolant, hydraulic fluid, and dielectric fluid. Coolanol
is used on the ALQ-99 radar aboard the EA-6B Prowler and
the APG-65, on the AV-8 radar aboard the F-18 and the AWG-9,
and on the AIM-54 radar aboard the F-14. The transmitters
and radars used on the B-2 bomber also depend on Coolanol
because they require a coolant that has high dielectric properties
and thermal transport characteristics.
What is also interesting is that due to high
cost, maintenance, and performance issues, Polyalpha Olefin
is replacing Coolanol.
Section 5.1.d of the Joint Oil Analysis Program Manual, Version
II, Published in March of 1999 by direction of Commander,
Naval Air Systems Command, states: “Coolant Fluid Contamination.
Silicate ester fluids (i.e., Coolanol 25R) are very effective
in transferring heat and providing high-voltage insulation.
However, they have two undesirable properties: a hygroscopic
nature and poor hydrolytic stability. Coolanol fluid is being
replaced by Polyalpha Olefin (PAO) dielectric coolant fluid,
which does not exhibit these properties.”
The PAO Advantage
L-3 has been processing CEAs with no failures induced by
the PAO coolant (Alpha-1®) since 1999. And Thales Broadcast
and Multimedia has been using Alpha-1® in its Paragon
MSDC IOT transmitter without a problem since February of
2001.
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