Television
Cathode Ray Tubes
Small Monochrome CRTs
The largest CRT show here is from a small computer. The other
two tubes are from video camcorder viewfinders. The pencil gives a reference to
the actual size of the tubes. The smallest tube was phased out quickly by the
use of liquid crystal displays (LCD). All tubes shown here employ
electro-magnetic deflection. The coils have been removed for the image.
A very early 1950s electron gun from a black and white
television tube is shown below. These early tubes used permanent magnets for
focusing and bending the electron beam to avoid burning of the fluorescent
coating on the tube face. Today burning is prevented by an aluminium coating
behind the phosphor which conducts heat away. Most of the burning on early
tubes was due to heavy ions hitting the screen. These would not deflect as much
as the electrons and would impact the centre of the screen damaging the
fluorescent coating. A bend was introduced to the electron gun and a small
magnet was placed on the neck of the tube so that the electrons would be
deflected down the final electron gun anode. The heavier ions would not deflect
as much and would harmlessly hit the anode wall.

In the 1960s electrostatic focusing was introduced. This removed
the need for bulky ceramic magnets and reduced the length of the tube
neck. The focusing anode can be seen in the centre of the electron gun
below.

The metal fingers at the right of the gun connect the final
accelerating anode to the conductive coating inside the tube (aquadag). The
final anode voltage on a typical monochrome CRT is 15kV. At this voltage a
separate connector is required to avoid insulation break down. The ring in front
of the anode is a geta. This contains reactive elements which help to maintain a
good vacuum during the life of the CRT.
Early colour CRTs were introduced at the end of the 1960s. These
were much more complex than the monochrome tubes. Three electron guns were now in
the neck of the tube and a shadow mask was required to ensure beam alignment
with the correct colour phosphor (red, green, blue). Early assemblies are known as delta electron
guns due to the triangular arrangement of the three guns. Complex static
electro-magnetics were set-up around the gun so that the beams converged properly
onto the screen.
A close-up of the shadow mask is shown on the right. This was
used for the delta gun and later in some high resolution monitors with in-line
guns. Note the holes on the back of the mask are smaller in diameter than on the
front. The mask is shown as it would be viewed through the screen.
 
Arranging the electron guns in a line, in the 1970s, simplified
the external electro-magnetic assemblies and reduced the power consumption of
the television. It complicated the deflection coil assembly which had now to be
set-up and glued to each CRT. The shadow mask appeared with small vertical slots
where it had previously been round holes with the delta gun arrangement.
A close up of the in-line shadow mask is shown on the right. The
shadow mask sits right behind the face-plate or screen on which the phosphors
are painted. The mask is held by a frame which is attached at four points on the
side walls of the face-plate. A complete shadow mask can be seen in the
items page.

Simplifying the electrostatic optics resulted in one gun
assemblies with three electron beams. This is how the CRT has evolved to date.
With the popularity of LCD televisions the CRT market is now shrinking.

Parts of a modern colour CRT electron gun.

Sony brought out their own system, the Trinitron. This is
a variant of the 'in-line' gun but used single electrostatic-optics in order to
achieve good focus. The gun assembly incorporates a potential divider connected
to the final anodes and a more complex electrostatic focusing arrangement. The tube face
plate was cylindrical and not spherical as in normal television CRTs.
The Trinitron did not use the conventional 'shadow mask' but a vertical
'aperture-grille'. This improved picture brightness as more electrons pass
through and hit phosphor. The 'aperture-grille' is delicate and has to be held in tension by a strong and heavy
internal frame. In large high resolution monitors, two additional fine support wires
are just visible running across the screen holding the grille wires steady.

Non-television CRT electron
guns
The gun below is from a vector scanned display used in a Marconi radar system. This was a monochrome display with green
phosphor. Similar to televisions, this CRT employed electromagnetic
deflection coils on the neck of the tube.

This electron gun is from a monochrome tube manufactured by
Brimar (Type: 22B/08L3M) It
had a long neck for external focusing and deflection coils.

Electrostatic deflection is rare in most CRTs other than tube
used in Oscilloscopes. The electron gun below is from a HP Oscilloscope (tube#
5083-0652). The X and Y plate assembly can be seen. The end anode has a fine
gauze which was used to intensify the image on the screen.

The gun below is from a Tektronix analogue storage
oscilloscope. The tube contains a secondary set of guns known as flood
guns which are used to preserve the image written by the main gun on the
screen.


The flood guns are shown on the right. There are two heater, cathode,
and anode gun assemblies mounted onto metal support which was fitted to the tube
cone just in front of the main gun assembly.
The picture below is of a gun from a digital storage oscilloscope.
This CRT had a problem of leakage between the deflection plates and the final
anode. It appears that a getter was over- fired during manufacture. Part of the
metal ring has evaporated, coating the glass supports with metal. A leakage path
between one of the x-deflection plates and the anode has been created. The metal
shading on the supports behind the getter ring is visible in the image.

The electron gun below is from an electron diffraction CRT. This
is a tube used to demonstrate physics principles in schools and
universities. This is one of my favourite experiments as it shows an
electron beam behaving as a wave, thus demonstrating wave particle duality.
- information on this tube
The anode in this tube is the electrode furthest right. There is a centre aperture
which electrons pass through on the way to the fluorescent screen. However, a fine
mesh of carbon atoms covers the aperture. The spacing of the carbon atoms leads
to an interference pattern being displayed on the screen. This can not be
explained in terms of particles and only be described using a wave analogy.
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Things to
note about Cathode Ray Tubes.

They can remain charged at high potentials
for long periods of time. Always discharge CRT anodes to outer
coatings before handling.
Beware of charge recovery. CRTs can redevelop
enough charge to provide a nasty jolt when touched. The shock
is not the main problem. It is likely you will drop the tube if you
receive a shock in this manner.
As CRTs are evacuated they are under large
pressure from the atmosphere. A crack is liable to cause sudden
failure of the glass envelope. Early CRTs are particularly
dangerous as the glass tends to fly out over a large distance.
Modern CRTs employ implosion protection bands. This
may not be obvious as it is the band which supports the front of the
tube and mounts the screen in position. These are tensioned by
heating before being placed onto the tube and must never be removed. As the
tensioning removes some of the stresses on the glass
manufacturers have been able to reduce the thickness of glass. As a
result any attempt to remove the band can result in instant tube
failure.
As CRTs operate at very high voltages
manufacturers specify the maximum voltages to avoid the production
of X-rays. If these limits are exceeded internal shielding may
become inadequate.
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