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  • How a Microwave Oven Works EngineerGuy Series #4

  • This microwave oven is a truly remarkable feat of engineering.

  • The rapid heating that makes microwaves popular

  • is made possible by power provided from

  • this vacuum tube

  • Now, if you picture a vacuum tube at all it’s likely in

  • a radio like this.

  • Inevitably, tiny transistors and microchips replaced

  • clunky vacuum tubes, but it's too soon to

  • relegate them to the museum.

  • Microchips can’t easily replace tubes for producing power.

  • For example, in heating food.

  • Now, a microwave contains three main components

  • A vacuum tube called a magnetron

  • it generates the energy that heats food.

  • A waveguide hidden in the wall to direct that energy to the food

  • and a chamber to hold the food and safely contain the microwave radiation.

  • In principle, a microwave oven heats no differently

  • than any other type of heat transfer.

  • At a molecular level heat is a transfer of energy

  • that results in increased motion of the molecules in a substance.

  • Since we aren't quantum-sized,

  • we observe this increase in motion

  • as a rise in temperature.

  • In a traditional oven or stove we heat food

  • by placing a pan on a burner

  • or in the oven where the walls radiate heat,

  • which cooks the outside of the food.

  • The insides cook when heat transfers from the surface

  • of the food to its interior.

  • In contrast, energy from the magnetron penetrates

  • into the food, which means the whole mass of the food

  • can be cooked simultaneously.

  • How does it do this?

  • Well, our food is filled with water,

  • which is positively charged at one end,

  • and negative at the other.

  • To give these molecules more energy,

  • we expose it to electromagnetic waves that emanate from the tube.

  • By definition, the waves have electrical and magnetic fields

  • that change direction rapidly.

  • For this oven, the direction of the fields change

  • two point four five billion times per second.

  • Water will try to align with the radiation’s electric field.

  • The changing field rocks the water molecules

  • back and forth rapidly and molecular friction

  • from this creates heat as the motion disrupts

  • the hydrogen bonds between neighboring water molecules.

  • Now, you can get an idea of the wavelength of the energy

  • emitted from the magnetron using cheese.

  • Now, you can see on here sections where the cheese

  • has completely melted, and other sections where it’s completely unheated.

  • The oven’s metal walls only reflect waves of

  • a length that fits inside the oven.

  • This standing wave causes hot and cold spots inside the oven.

  • The three-dimensional pattern of waves is difficult to predict,

  • but the principle can be seen by looking at

  • the waves in a single dimension.

  • The peaks and valleys in the wave represent

  • the greatest energy of the wave,

  • while the nodes here correspond to the "cold" spots inside the chamber.

  • If I measure the distance between melted cheese spots

  • I find about 2 1/2 inches.

  • That would be half the wavelength

  • the distance between nodes

  • and is pretty close to the actual wavelength of microwave radiation used.

  • Using that wavelength I can estimate the microwave radiation's frequency.

  • The frequency is related to the wavelength by the speed of light.

  • I get an answer that only has a 4 or 5 percent error.

  • Not bad for this primitive measurement.

  • Now, the real engineering in the microwave oven

  • lies in creating the magnetron that

  • generates high powered radio waves.

  • It's truly an amazing and revolutionary device.

  • The vacuum tube is inside here.

  • These are cooling fins

  • thin pieces of metal that dissipate the heat as the magnetron operates.

  • The key parts are these two magnets and

  • the vacuum tube.

  • Now I have another one so you can see the inside.

  • You apply a large voltage across both

  • the inner filament and the circular cooper outside.

  • This voltageboilselectrons off the center filament

  • and they fly toward the circular copper section.

  • The filament is made from tungsten and thorium.

  • Tungsten because it can withstand high temperatures

  • and thorium because it’s a good source of electrons.

  • The magnets bend these electrons so they swing

  • back toward the center filament.

  • We adjust the magnetic strength so that the now

  • orbiting electrons just brush past the opening of these cavities.

  • Like blowing over a half filled pop bottle to make it whistle,

  • this creates an oscillating wave - the microwave radiation that heats food.

  • It’s simply astonishing that these cavities can be made

  • with high precision, low cost, and incredibly high reliability.

  • I’m Bill Hammack, the EngineerGuy.

  • This video is based on a chapter in the book

  • Eight Amazing Engineering Stories.

  • The chapter features more information about this subject.

  • Learn more about the book at the address below.

How a Microwave Oven Works EngineerGuy Series #4

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