Ken
Teo and his team here in the Department of Engineering
have come up with a much more efficient and compact
way to send signals from satellites. They have managed
to use an array of carbon nanotubes to create a device
that replaces conventional heavy, bulky, high temprature,
microwave amplifiers. The new electron source promises
to revolutionise telecommunications and satellite
communications in space.
Long range communications are a vital part of our
lives for business, entertainment or just keeping
in contact with friends and family. Much of this,
especially to remote areas, is made possible through
communications using satellite-based transmitters.
There are typically 50 microwave amplifiers on board
a satellite, each weighing about 1kg and measuring
about 30cm in length.
Currently it costs about 10,000 pounds sterling
to send a single kilogram of payload (data) into
space. There is an advantage, both in terms of cost
savings and extra payload which can be carried, if
the weight and size of the microwave devices are
reduced.
The microwave amplification devices used in space
today are based on what's known as hot cathode technology.
Ken and his team have demonstrated that a cold cathode
source, based on carbon nanotube technology, can
deliver electrons directly at microwave, that is
gigahertz, frequencies and hence can be utilized
in these microwave devices without delay, with potential
weight and size savings of up to 50%. This will not
only reduce the cost and increase the capability
of conventional satellite systems, but will also
enable the drive towards very low cost micro-satellites
which weigh about 10kg.
Carbon nanotubes are graphite sheets of carbon which
are rolled up to form tubes. These tubes have diameters
which are in the nanometer range and lengths from
the micron to millimeter range. Carbon nanotubes
are extremely conductive and have great mechanical
strength. Ken and his team use carbon nanotubes as
very sharp, highly conductive needles. The nanotubes
are laid out into an array, with every nanotube having
roughly the same height and diameter. They look like
a bed of needles, but at the nanoscale. When these
carbon nanotube needles are subjected to an electric
field, such as that from an electromagnetic wave,
they release electrons from their tips. By injecting
radio frequency waves at the nanotubes, they are
able to cycle them on and off at the frequency of
the injected wave and thus create an electron beam
at high frequency. They have done this at 1.5GHz
and recently at 32GHz as well. Frequencies of 30Ghz
and above, where there are plentiful channels, are
where the communication links of the future will
reside.
The new cold cathode source is very different from
conventional hot cathode amplifiers. These have 4
parts: the direct current hot cathode electron source
at 1000 degrees centigrade which generates a constant
stream of electrons; an input stage to impose the
signal onto the electrons; an output stage to retrieve
the amplified signal from the electrons; and finally
a collector stage to catch any wasted electrons.
They are bulky, heavy, inefficient and slow to heat
up.
In summary the advantages of this new carbon nanotube
source are as follows. No heating is required and
the source can be turned on and off instantaneously.
The source and input stages of the microwave amplifier
are also combined, producing a size and weight reduction.
Finally, the whole concept of operation is different.
With the conventional hot cathode source, we have
a stream of electrons in which the electrons are
modulated by speed to create bunches, and it is these
bunches which are extracted as useful output. With
the new cold cathode carbon nanotube source, the
electrons bunches are instantaneously created at
the source.
For more information please go to http://www-g.eng.cam.ac.uk/cnt
To read an article in the journal Nature on this
work visit http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v437/n7061/full/437968a.html
A podcast of an interview by Ken for the journal
Nature can be found at this link: http://www.nature.com/nature/podcast/index.html Click
12 October 2005 and fast forward 12 minutes 15 seconds.
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