home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Xref: sparky sci.materials:587 sci.electronics:13696
- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!hal.com!decwrl!deccrl!news.crl.dec.com!pa.dec.com!nntpd2.cxo.dec.com!nntpd.lkg.dec.com!e2big.mko.dec.com!cimill.enet.dec.com!pierson
- From: pierson@cimill.enet.dec.com (Dave Pierson)
- Newsgroups: sci.materials,sci.electronics
- Subject: Re: Negative resistance
- Message-ID: <1992Jul31.130353.8521@e2big.mko.dec.com>
- Date: 31 Jul 92 15:58:11 GMT
- Sender: guest@e2big.mko.dec.com (Guest (DECnet))
- Organization: Digital Equipment Corporation
- Lines: 28
-
- In article <13404@creare.COM>, kwg@creare.COM (Kent Goeking) writes...
-
- > I would like to know if there are any materials that demonstrate negative
- > resistance on the macroscopic scale. I am aware of this behavior in tunnel
- > diodes but I wonder if it might not occur in other structures.
-
- Many (most? All?) plasmas display negative resistance. Thats what the
- ballast in a fluorescent lamp does, provide a postive
- reactance/impedance to "null" the negative resistance of the arc column.
- (You can use resistor, but its wasteful.)
-
- With care, one can design an "arc amplifier". In fact the arc
- transmitters (distinct from spark gap transmitters) of early wireless
- used the arc gain to function as oscillators.
-
- Roughly speaking, the "hotter" the plasma, the lower the resistance.
- The lower the resistance, the higher the current,
- the higher the current, the hotter the plasma... (repeat until
- fuse blows). By paralleling the arc with resonant circuit, the current
- change can be coupled to the resonant frequency.
-
- thanks
- dave pierson |the facts, as accurately as i can manage,
- Digital Equipment Corporation |the opinions, my own.
- 146 Main Street
- Maynard, Mass
- 01754 pierson@cimnet.enet.dec.com
- "He has read everything, and, to his credit, written nothing." A J Raffles
-