ProfDrK
Materials
- Feb 12, 2006
- 25
If you take a short length of coax cable on a waveguide to coax adapter (large size coax, tbd), fed by a 1.2 kW 2.45 GHz magnetron and isolator, and trim the end to expose the correct length of center conductor, and then inserted that end into a volume of dielectric material; would the wave propegate roughly as a spherical front to uniformly heat the block of material?
Example would be killing termites in a tree by drilling to the core and zapping. Actually, I need to deliver microwave heat to the interior of a block of material inside a vacuum chamber. It would be easier for me to use coax than a circular waveguide due to less complex feedthoughs and drilling a smaller hole. Uniformity is not a serious issue either.
Example would be killing termites in a tree by drilling to the core and zapping. Actually, I need to deliver microwave heat to the interior of a block of material inside a vacuum chamber. It would be easier for me to use coax than a circular waveguide due to less complex feedthoughs and drilling a smaller hole. Uniformity is not a serious issue either.