DocumentCode
2743193
Title
Experiments in the transportation of energy by microwave beam
Author
Brown, Walter
Author_Institution
Raytheon Company, Burlington, MA, USA
Volume
12
fYear
1966
fDate
21-25 March 1966
Firstpage
8
Lastpage
17
Abstract
The recent development of efficient microwave tubes generating hundreds of kilowatts of continuous power at a wavelength of 10 cm has motivated the first initial experiment in utilizing a microwave beam as a means of transporting energy from one point to another. The experiment made use of a CW magnetron operating at 2450 Mc with several hundred watts of power output for the power source, a 9.5 foot diameter ellipsoidal transmitting antenna, a diagonal-horn receiving antenna separated from the transmitting antenna by 25 feet, and a close-spaced thermionic diode rectifier. The overall efficiency as measured from the output of the microwave generator to the input of an electric motor attached to the output of the microwave rectifier at the receiving point was 26%. Although this experiment handled a modest amount of power over a short distance, sufficient "on-the-shelf" technology now exists in each of the component areas to increase the power-handling capability and the distance over which power can be transferred by at least a thousandfold.
Keywords
Antenna measurements; Diodes; Foot; Magnetic separation; Microwave generation; Power generation; Receiving antennas; Rectifiers; Transmitting antennas; Transportation;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
1958 IRE International Convention Record
Conference_Location
New York, NY, USA
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IRECON.1964.1147324
Filename
1147324
Link To Document