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Homepage>IEEE 54-1955 - IEEE Standard, Test Code, and Recommended Practice for Induction and Dielectric Heating Equipment
Released: 30.11.1954

IEEE 54-1955

IEEE Standard, Test Code, and Recommended Practice for Induction and Dielectric Heating Equipment

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Standard number:IEEE 54-1955
Released:30.11.1954
ISBN:978-1-5044-0389-4
Pages:24
Status:Active
Language:English
DESCRIPTION

IEEE 54-1955





New IEEE Standard - Inactive-Withdrawn. High-frequency heating equipments divide into two main types: (1) those used for dielectric heating, and (2) those used for induction heating. The induction heating equipments again divide into seven types: (1) commercial power line; (2) rotary generator; (3) mercuryarc converter; (4) gaseous-tube converter; (5) mercuryhydrogen spark-gap converter; (6) quenched spark-gap converter; (7) vacuum-tube generator. Dielectric heating equipments in general use a vacuum tube oscillator as a source of radio-frequency power ranging in frequency from 2 megacycles to hundreds of megacycles. At frequencies above about 200 megacycles, the power is generated by devices other than a conventional vacuum tube, such as a magnetron, Klystron or other microwave device. A dielectric heating generator is normally a high-voltage generator, and application requires high-voltage radio-frequency matching techniques. An induction heating generator is essentially a high-current device operating into very low impedance circuits and sometimes requires transformation in the load circuit to provide the desired heating effect.