Tubes versus Semiconductors
Devoting a whole chapter in a modern electronics
text to the design and function of electron tubes may seem a bit strange, seeing
as how semiconductor technology has all but obsoleted tubes in almost every
application. However, there is merit in exploring tubes not just for historical
purposes, but also for those niche applications that necessitate the qualifying
phrase "almost every application" in regard to semiconductor supremacy.
In some applications, electron tubes not only
continue to see practical use, but perform their respective tasks better than
any solid-state device yet invented. In some cases the performance and
reliability of electron tube technology is far superior.
In the fields of high-power, high-speed circuit
switching, specialized tubes such as hydrogen thyratrons and krytrons are able
to switch far larger amounts of current, far faster than any semiconductor
device designed to date. The thermal and temporal limits of semiconductor
physics place limitations on switching ability that tubes -- which do not
operate on the same principles -- are exempt from.
In high-power microwave transmitter applications,
the excellent thermal tolerance of tubes alone secures their dominance over
semiconductors. Electron conduction through semiconducting materials is greatly
impacted by temperature. Electron conduction through a vacuum is not. As a
consequence, the practical thermal limits of semiconductor devices are rather
low compared to that of tubes. Being able to operate tubes at far greater
temperatures than equivalent semiconductor devices allows tubes to dissipate
more thermal energy for a given amount of dissipation area, which makes them
smaller and lighter in continuous high power applications.
Another decided advantage of tubes over
semiconductor components in high-power applications is their rebuildability.
When a large tube fails, it may be disassembled and repaired at far lower cost
than the purchase price of a new tube. When a semiconductor component fails,
large or small, there is generally no means of repair.
The following photograph shows the front panel of a
1960's vintage 5 kW AM radio transmitter. One of two "Eimac" brand power tubes
can be seen in a recessed area, behind the glass door. According to the station
engineer who gave the facility tour, the rebuild cost for such a tube is only
$800: quite inexpensive compared to the cost of a new tube, and still quite
reasonable in contrast to the price of a new, comparable semiconductor
component!
Tubes, being less complex in their manufacture than
semiconductor components, are potentially cheaper to produce as well, although
the huge volume of semiconductor device production in the world greatly offsets
this theoretical advantage. Semiconductor manufacture is quite complex,
involving many dangerous chemical substances and necessitating super-clean
assembly environments. Tubes are essentially nothing more than glass and metal,
with a vacuum seal. Physical tolerances are "loose" enough to permit
hand-assembly of vacuum tubes, and the assembly work need not be done in a
"clean room" environment as is necessary for semiconductor manufacture.
One modern area where electron tubes enjoy supremacy
over semiconductor components is in the professional and high-end audio
amplifier markets, although this is partially due to musical culture. Many
professional guitar players, for example, prefer tube amplifiers over transistor
amplifiers because of the specific distortion produced by tube circuits. An
electric guitar amplifier is designed to produce distortion rather than
avoid distortion as is the case with audio-reproduction amplifiers (this is why
an electric guitar sounds so much different than an acoustical guitar), and the
type of distortion produced by an amplifier is as much a matter of personal
taste as it is technical measurement. Since rock music in particular was born
with guitarists playing tube-amplifier equipment, there is a significant level
of "tube appeal" inherent to the genre itself, and this appeal shows itself in
the continuing demand for "tubed" guitar amplifiers among rock guitarists.
As an illustration of the attitude among some
guitarists, consider the following quote taken from the technical glossary page
of a tube-amplifier website which will remain nameless:
Solid State: A component that has
been specifically designed to make a guitar amplifier sound bad. Compared to
tubes, these devices can have a very long lifespan, which guarantees that your
amplifier will retain its thin, lifeless, and buzzy sound for a long time to
come.
In the area of audio reproduction amplifiers (music
studio amplifiers and home entertainment amplifiers), it is best for an
amplifier to reproduce the musical signal with as little distortion as
possible. Paradoxically, in contrast to the guitar amplifier market where
distortion is a design goal, high-end audio is another area where tube
amplifiers enjoy continuing consumer demand. Though one might suppose the
objective, technical requirement of low distortion would eliminate any
subjective bias on the part of audiophiles, one would be very wrong. The market
for high-end "tubed" amplifier equipment is quite volatile, changing rapidly
with trends and fads, driven by highly subjective claims of "magical" sound from
audio system reviewers and salespeople. As in the electric guitar world, there
is no small measure of cult-like devotion to tube amplifiers among some quarters
of the audiophile world. As an example of this irrationality, consider the
design of many ultra-high-end amplifiers, with chassis built to display the
working tubes openly, even though this physical exposure of the tubes obviously
enhances the undesirable effect of microphonics (changes in tube
performance as a result of sound waves vibrating the tube structure).
Having said this, though, there is a wealth of
technical literature contrasting tubes against semiconductors for audio power
amplifier use, especially in the area of distortion analysis. More than a few
competent electrical engineers prefer tube amplifier designs over transistors,
and are able to produce experimental evidence in support of their choice. The
primary difficulty in quantifying audio system performance is the uncertain
response of human hearing. All amplifiers distort their input signal to
some degree, especially when overloaded, so the question is which type of
amplifier design distorts the least. However, since human hearing is very
nonlinear, people do not interpret all types of acoustic distortion equally, and
so some amplifiers will sound "better" than others even if a quantitative
distortion analysis with electronic instruments indicates similar distortion
levels. To determine what type of audio amplifier will distort a musical signal
"the least," we must regard the human ear and brain as part of the whole
acoustical system. Since no complete model yet exists for human auditory
response, objective assessment is difficult at best. However, some research
indicates that the characteristic distortion of tube amplifier circuits
(especially when overloaded) is less objectionable than distortion produced by
transistors.
Tubes also possess the distinct advantage of low
"drift" over a wide range of operating conditions. Unlike semiconductor
components, whose barrier voltages, β ratios, bulk resistances, and junction
capacitances may change substantially with changes in device temperature and/or
other operating conditions, the fundamental characteristics of a vacuum tube
remain nearly constant over a wide range in operating conditions, because those
characteristics are determined primarily by the physical dimensions of the
tube's structural elements (cathode, grid(s), and plate) rather than the
interactions of subatomic particles in a crystalline lattice.
This is one of the major reasons solid-state
amplifier designers typically engineer their circuits to maximize
power-efficiency even when it compromises distortion performance, because a
power-inefficient amplifier dissipates a lot of energy in the form of waste
heat, and transistor characteristics tend to change substantially with
temperature. Temperature-induced "drift" makes it difficult to stabilize "Q"
points and other important performance-related measures in an amplifier circuit.
Unfortunately, power efficiency and low distortion seem to be mutually exclusive
design goals.
For example, class A audio amplifier circuits
typically exhibit very low distortion levels, but are very wasteful of power,
meaning that it would be difficult to engineer a solid-state class A amplifier
of any substantial power rating due to the consequent drift of transistor
characteristics. Thus, most solid-state audio amplifier designers choose class B
circuit configurations for greater efficiency, even though class B designs are
notorious for producing a type of distortion known as crossover distortion.
However, with tubes it is easy to design a stable class A audio amplifier
circuit because tubes are not as adversely affected by the changes in
temperature experienced in a such a power-inefficient circuit configuration.
Tube performance parameters, though, tend to "drift"
more than semiconductor devices when measured over long periods of time (years).
One major mechanism of tube "aging" appears to be vacuum leaks: when air enters
the inside of a vacuum tube, its electrical characteristics become irreversibly
altered. This same phenomenon is a major cause of tube mortality, or why tubes
typically do not last as long as their respective solid-state counterparts. When
tube vacuum is maintained at a high level, though, excellent performance and
life is possible. An example of this is a klystron tube (used to produce the
high-frequency radio waves used in a radar system) that lasted for 240,000 hours
of operation (cited by Robert S. Symons of Litton Electron Devices Division in
his informative paper, "Tubes: Still vital after all these years," printed in
the April 1998 issue of IEEE Spectrum magazine).
If nothing else, the tension between audiophiles
over tubes versus semiconductors has spurred a remarkable degree of
experimentation and technical innovation, serving as an excellent resource for
those wishing to educate themselves on amplifier theory. Taking a wider view,
the versatility of electron tube technology (different physical configurations,
multiple control grids) hints at the potential for circuit designs of far
greater variety than is possible using semiconductors. For this and other
reasons, electron tubes will never be "obsolete," but will continue to serve in
niche roles, and to foster innovation for those electronics engineers,
inventors, and hobbyists who are unwilling to let their minds by stifled by
convention.
Lessons In Electric Circuits copyright (C) 2000-2002 Tony
R. Kuphaldt, under the terms and conditions of the
Design
Science License
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