Inventions
Inventions
Inventions
INVENTIONS
RESEARCHES AND
WRITINGS
OF
NIKOLA TESLA
TO HIS COUNTRYMEN
IN EASTERN EUROPE THIS RECORD OF
THE WORK
ALREADY ACCOMPLISHED BY
NIKOLA TESLA
IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED
THE INVENTIONS
RESEARCHES AND WRITINGS
OF
NIKOLA TESLA
WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO HIS WORK IN POLYPHASE
CURRENTS AND HIGH POTENTIAL LIGHTING
HY
THOMAS COMMERFORD MARTIN
Editor THE ELKCTHICAL ENGiNEtR
;
Past-President American Institute Electrical
Engineers
1894
THE ELECTRICAL
ENGINEER
NEW YORK
D. VAN NOSTRAND
COMPANY,
NEW YORK.
Entered
according
to Act of
Congress
in the
year 1893 by
T. C. MARTIN
in the office of the Librarian of
Congress
at
Washington
Press of
Mcllroy
&
Emmet, 36
Cortlandt
St.,
N. Y.
PREFACE.
rpHE
electrical
problems
of the
present day
lie
largely
in the
**
economical transmission of
power
and in the radical im-
provement
of the means and methods of illumination. To
many
workers and thinkers in the domain of electrical
invention,
the
apparatus
and devices that are
familiar,
appear
cumbrous and
wasteful,
and
subject
to severe limitations.
They
believe that
the
principles
of current
generation
must be
changed,
the area
of current
supply
be
enlarged,
and the
appliances
used
by
the
consumer be at once
cheapened
and
simplified.
The brilliant
successes of the
past justify
them in
every expectancy
of still
more
generous
fruition.
The
present
volume is a
simple
record of the
pioneer
work
done in such
departments up
to
date,
by
Mr. Nikola
Tesla,
in
whom the world has
already recognized
one of the foremost of
modern electrical
investigators
and inventors. No
attempt
what-
ever has been made here to
emphasize
the
importance
of his
researches and discoveries. Great ideas and real inventions win
their own
way, determining
their own
place by
intrinsic merit.
But with the conviction that Mr. Tesla is
blazing
a
patli
that
electrical
development
must follow for
many years
to
come,
the
compiler
has endeavored to
bring together
all that bears the im-
press
of Mr. Tesla's
genius,
and is
worthy
of
preservation.
Aside
from its value as
showing
the
scope
of his
inventions,
this
volume
may
be of service as
indicating
the
range
of his
thought.
There is intellectual
profit
in
studying
the
push
and
play
of a
vigorous
and
original
mind.
Althqugh
the
lively
interest of the
public
in Mr. Tesla's work
is
perhaps
of recent
growth,
this volume covers the results of
full ten
years.
It includes his
lectures,
miscellaneous articles
vi
PREFACE.
and
discussions,
and makes note of all his inventions thus far
known, particularly
those
bearing
on
polyphase
motors and the
effects obtained with currents of
high potential
and
high
fre-
quency.
It will be seen that Mr. Tesla has ever
pressed forward,
barely pausing
for an instant to work out in detail the utilizations
that have at once been obvious to him of the new
principles
he
has elucidated. Wherever
possible
his own
language
has been
employed.
It
may
be added that this volume is issued with Mr. Tesla's
sanction and
approval,
and that
permission
has been obtained for
the
re-publication
in it of such
papers
as have been read before
various technical societies of this
country
and
Europe.
Mr.
Tesla has
kindly
favored the author
by looking
over the
proof
sheets of the sections
embodying
his latest researches. The
Work has also
enjoyed
the careful revision of the author's
friend and editorial
associate,
Mr.
Joseph Wetzler, through
whose hands all the
proofs
have
passed.
DECEMBER,
1893.
T. C. M.
CONTENTS.
PART I,
POLYPHASE CUERENTS.
CHAPTEK I.
BIOGRAPHICAL AND INTRODUCTORY..
CHAPTER II.
A NEW SYSTEM OF ALTERNATING CURRENT MOTORS AND
TRANSFORMERS Y
CHAPTER III.
THE TESLA ROTATING MAGNETIC FIELD. MOTORS WITH
CLOSED CONDUCTORS. SYNCHRONIZING MOTORS. ROTA-
TING FIELD TRANSFORMERS 9
CHAPTER IV.
MODIFICATIONS AND EXPANSIONS OF THE TESLA POLYPHASE
SYSTEMS 26
CHAPTER V.
UTILIZING FAMILIAR TYPES OF GENERATORS OF THE CON-
TINUOUS CURRENT TYPE 31
CHAPTER VI.
METHOD OF OBTAINING DESIRED SPEED OF MOTOR OR
GENERATOR 36
viii
CHAPTER
VII.
REGULATOR
FOR ROTARY CURRENT MOTORS 45
CHAPTER VIII.
SINGLE
CIRCUIT,
SELF-STARTING SYNCHRONIZING MOTORS. . . 50
CHAPTER IX.
CHANGE FROM DOUBLE CURRENT TO SINGLE CURRENT
MO.TORS
56
CHAPTER X.
MOTOR WITH
"
CURRENT LAG
"
ARTIFICIALLY SECURED 58
CHAPTER XL
ANOTHER METHOD OF TRANSFORMATION FROM A
TORQUE
TO
A SYNCHRONIZING MOTOR ... 62
CHAPTER XII.
"
MAGNETIC LAG
"
MOTOR
67
CHAPTER XIII.
METHOD OF
OBTAINING DIFFERENCE OF PHASE BY MAG-
NETIC SHIELDING
71
CHAPTER XIV.
TYPE OF TESLA
SINGLE-PHASE MOTOR
76
CHAPTER XV.
MOTORS WITH
CIRCUITS OF
DIFFERENT
RESISTANCE
79
CHAPTER XVI.
MOTOR WITH
EQUAL MAGNETIC
ENERGIES IN FIELD AND
ARMATURE
g^
CHAPTER XVII.
MOTORS WITH
COINCIDING MAXIMA OK
MAGNETIC EFFECT
IN
ARMATURE AND
FIELD
83
CONTENTS. ix
CHAPTER XVIII.
MOTOR BASED ON THE DIFFERENCE OF PHASE IN THE MAG-
NETIZATION OF THE INNER AND OUTER PARTS OF AN
IRON CORE 88
CHAPTER XIX.
ANOTHER TYPE OF TESLA INDUCTION MOTOR 92
CHAPTER XX.
COMBINATIONS OF SYNCHRONIZING MOTOR AND
TORQUE
MOTOR 95
CHAPTER XXI.
MOTOR WITH A CONDENSER IN THE ARMATURE CIRCUIT . . . 101
CHAPTER XXII.
MOTOR WITH CONDENSER IN ONE OF THE FIELD CIRCUITS. 106
CHAPTER XXIII.
TESLA POLYPHASE TRANSFORMER 1 J9
CHAPTER XXIV.
A CONSTANT CURRENT TRANSFORMER WITH MAGNETIC
SHIELD BETWEEN COILS OF PRIMARY AND SECONDARY 113
PART II.
THE TESLA EFFECTS WITH HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND
HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS.
CHAPTER XXV.
INTRODUCTORY. THE SCOPE OF THE TESLA LECTURES 119
CHAPTER XXVI.
THE NEW YORK LECTURE. EXPERIMENTS WITH ALTERNATE
CURRENTS OF VERY HIGH
FREQUENCY,
AND THEIR
APPLICATION TO METHODS OF ARTIFICIAL ILLUMINA-
TION,
MAY
20,
1S91 145
x
CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
XXVII.
THE LONDON LECTURE. EXPERIMENTS WITH ALTERNATE
CURRENTS OF HIGH POTENTIAL AND HIGH
FREQUENCY,
FEBRUARY
3,
1892
198
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE PHILADELPHIA
AND ST. Louis LECTURE. ON LIGHT
AND OTHER HIGH
FREQUENCY
PHENOMENA,
FEBRUARY
AND
MARCH,
1893.
294
CHAPTER XXIX.
TESLA ALTERNATING CURRENT GENERATORS FOR HIGH
FREQUENCY
374
CHAPTER XXX.
ALTERNATE CURRENT ELECTROSTATIC INDUCTION APPARATUS 392
CHAPTER XXXI.
"
MASSAGE
"
WITH CURRENTS OF HIGH
FREQUENCY
394
CHAPTER XXXII.
ELECTRIC DISCHARGE IN VACUUM TUBES 396
PART III.
MISCELLANEOUS INVENTIONS AND WEITINGS.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
METHOD OF OBTAINING DIRECT FROM ALTERNATING CUR-
RENTS
409
CHAPTER XXXIV.
CONDENSERS WITH PLATES IN OIL 418
CHAPTER XXXV.
ELECTROLYTIC REGISTERING ]!UETER . 420
CONTENTS. xi
CHAPTER XXXVI.
THERMO-MAGNETIC MOTORS AND PYRO-MAGNETIC GENE-
RATORS , 424
CHAPTER XXXVII.
ANTI-SPARKING DYNAMO BRUSH AND COMMUTATOR 432
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
AUXILIARY BRUSH REGULATION OF DIRECT CURRENT DY-
NAMOS 438
CHAPTER XXXIX.
IMPROVEMENT IN DYNAMO AND MOTOR CONSTRUCTION 448
CHAPTER XL.
TESLA DIRECT CURRENT ARC LIGHTING SYSTEM 451
CHAPTER XLI.
IMPROVEMENT IN UNIPOLAR GENERATORS . . . 465
PART IV.
APPENDIX : EARLY PHASE MOTORS AND THE TESLA
OSCILLATORS.
CHAPTER XLIL
MR. TESLA'S PERSONAL EXHIBIT AT THE WORLD'S FAIR . . .
4.77
CHAPTER XLIII.
THE TESLA MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS... 486
PART
I.
POLYPHASE
CURRENTS.
CHAPTER I.
BIOGRAPHICAL AND INTRODUCTORY.
As AN introduction to the record contained in this volume
of Mr. Tesla's
investigations
and
discoveries,
a few words of "a
biographical
nature
will,
it is
deemed,
not be out of
place,
nor
other than welcome.
Nikola Tesla was born in 1857 at
Smiljan,
Lika,
a borderland
region
of
Austro-Hungary,
of the Serbian
race,
w
r
hich has main-
tained
against Turkey
and all comers so
unceasing
a
struggle
for
freedom. His
family
is an old and
representative
one
among
these Switzers of Eastern
Europe,
and his father was an
eloquent
clergyman
in the Greek Church. An uncle is
to-day Metropoli-
tan in Bosnia. His mother was a woman of inherited
ingenuity,
and
delighted
not
only
in skilful work of the
ordinary
household
character,
but in the construction of such mechanical
appliances
as looms and churns and other
machinery required
in a rural
community.
Nikola was educated at
Gospich
in the
public
school for four
years,
and then
spent
three
years
in the Real
Scliule. He was then sent to
Carstatt, Croatia,
where he con-
tinued his studies for three
years
in the
Higher
Real Scliule.
There for the first time he saw a steam locomotive. He
gradu-
ated in
1873, and,
surviving
an attack of
cholera,
devoted him-
self to
experimentation, especially
in
electricity
and
magnetism.
His father would have had him maintain the
family
tradition
by
Altering
the
Church,
but native
genius
was too
strong,
and he
was allowed to enter the
Polytechnic
School at
Gratz,
to finish
his
studies,
and with the
object
of
becoming
a
professor
of math-
ematics and
physics.
One of the machines there
experimented
with was a Gramme
dynamo,
used as a motor.
Despite
his in-
structor's
perfect
demonstration of the fact that it \vas
impossible
to
operate
a
dynamo
without commutator or
brushes, Mr. Tesla
could not be convinced that such accessories \\eiv
K-cessary
or
desirable. He had
already
seen with
quick
intuition that a
way
could be found to
dispense
with them
;
and from that time he
may
4
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
be said to have
begun
work on the ideas that fructified
ultimately
in his
rotating
field motors.
In the second
year
of his Gratz
course,
Mr. Tesla
gave up
the
notion of
becoming
a
teacher,
and took
up
the
engineering
cur-
riculum.
His studies
ended,
he returned home in time to see his
father
die,
and then went to
Prague
and Buda-Pesth to
study
languages,
with the
object
of
qualifying
himself
broadly
for the
practice
of the
engineering profession.
For a short time he
served as an assistant
in the Government
Telegraph Engineer-
ing Department,
and then became associated with M.
Puskas,
a
personal
and
family
friend,
and other
exploiters
of the
telephone
in
Hungary.
He made a number of
telephonic inyentions,
but
found his
opportunities
of
benefiting by
them limited in various
ways.
To
gain
a wider field* of
action,
he
pushed
on to Paris
and there secured
employment
as an electrical
engineer
with one
of the
large companies
in the new
industry
of electric
lighting.
It was
during
this
period,
and as
early
as
1882,
that he
began
serious and continued efforts to
embody
the
rotating
field
prin-
ciple'
in
operative apparatus.
He was enthusiastic about it
;
be-
lieved it to mark a new
departure
in the electrical
arts,
and could
think of
nothing
else. In
fact,
but for the solicitations of a few
friends in commercial circles who
urged
him to form a
company
to
exploit
the
invention,
Mr.
Tesla,
then a
youth
of little
worldly
experience,
would have
sought
an immediate
opportunity
to
pub-
lish his
ideas, believing
them to be
worthy
of note as a novel and
radical advance in electrical
theory
as well as destined to have
a
profound
influence on all
dynamo
electric
machinery.
At last he determined that it would be best to
try
his fortunes
in America. In France he had met
many Americans,
and in
contact with them learned the
desirability
of
turning every
new
idea in
electricity
to
practical
use. He learned also of the
ready
encouragement given
in the United States to
any
inventor who
could attain some new and valuable result. The resolution \v. ..,
formed with characteristic
quickness,
and
abandoning
all his
prospects
in
Europe,
he at once set his face westward.
Arrived in the United
States,
Mr. Tesla took off his coat tin-
day
he
arrived,
in the Edison Works. That
place
had been a-
goal
of his
ambition,
and one can
readily imagine
the benefit and
stimulus derived from
association with Mr.
Edison,
for whom
Mr. Tesla 'aas
always
had the
strongest
admiration. It was im-
possible, however, that,
with -his own ideas to
carry out,
and his
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 5
own inventions to
develop,
Mr. Tesla could
long
remain in even
the most
delightful employ
; and,
his work now
attracting
atten-
tion,
he left the Edison ranks to
join
a
company
intended to
make and sell an arc
lighting system
based on some of his inven-
tions in that branch of the art. With
unceasing diligence
he
brought
the
system
to
perfection,
and saw it
placed
on the market.
But the
thing
which most
occupied
his time and
thoughts,
how-
ever,
all
through
this
period,
was his old
discovery
of the
rotating
field
principle
for
alternating
current
work,
and the
application
of it in motors that have now become known the world over.
Strong
as his convictions on the
subject
then
were,
it is a fact ,
that he stood
very
much
alone,
for the
alternating
current had
no well
recognized place.
Few electrical
engineers
had ever
used
it,
and the
majority
were
entirely
unfamiliar with its
value,
or even its essential features. Even Mr. Tesla himself did
not,
until after
protracted
effort and
experimentation,
learn how to
construct
alternating
current
apparatus
of fair
efficiency.
But
that he had
accomplished
his
purpose
was shown
by
the tests of
Prof.
Anthony,
made in the of winter
188T-8,
when Tesla motors
in the hands of that
distinguished expert gave
an
efficiency equal
to that of direct current motors.
Nothing
now stood in the
way
of the commercial
development
and introduction of such
motors,
except
that
they
had to be constructed with a view to
operating
on the circuits then
existing,
which in this
country
were all of
high frequency.
The first full
publication
of his work in this direction outside
his
patents
was a
paper
read before the American Institute of
Electrical
Engineers
in New
York,
in
May,
1888
(read
at the
suggestion
of Prof.
Anthony
and the
present writer),
when he
exhibited motors that had been in
operation long previous,
and
with which his belief that brushes and commutators could be
dispensed with,
was
triumphantly proved
to be correct. The
section of this volume devoted to Mr. Tesla's inventions in the
utilization of
polyphase
currents will show how
thoroughly
from
the outset he had mastered the fundamental idea and
applied
it
in the
greatest variety
of
ways.
Having
noted for
years
the
many advantages
obtainable with
alternating currents,
Mr. Tesla was
naturally
led on to
experi-
ment with them at
higher potentials
and
higher frequencies
than
were common or
approved
of. Ever
pressing
forward to deter-
mine in even the
slightest degree
the outlines of the
unknown,
he
6 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
was rewarded
very quickly
in this field with results of the most-
surprising
nature. A
slight acquaintance
with some of these
experiments
led the
compiler
of this volume to
urge
Mr. Tesla
to
repeat
them before the American Institute of Electrical En-
gineers.
This was done in
May,
1891,
in a lecture that
marked,
beyond question,
a distinct
departure
in electrical
theory
and
practice,
and all the results of which have not
yet
made them-
selves
fully apparent.
The New York
lecture,
and its suc-
cessors,
two in
number,
are also included in this
volume,
with a
few
supplementary
notes.
Mr. Tesla's work
ranges
far
beyond
the vast
departments
of
polyphase
currents and
high potential lighting.
The
"
Miscella-
neous
"
section of this volume includes a
great many
other in-
ventions in arc
lighting, transformers, pyro-magnetic generators,
thermo-magnetic motors,
third-brush
regulation, improvements
in
dynamos,
new forms of incandescent
lamps,
electrical
meters,
condensers, unipolar dynamos,
the conversion of
alternating
into
direct
currents,
etc. It is needless to
say
that at this moment
Mr. Tesla is
engaged
on a number of
interesting
ideas and inven-
tions,
to be made
public
in due course. The
present
volume
deals
simply
with his work
accomplished
to date.
CHAPTER II.
A NEW SYSTEM OF ALTERNATING CURRENT MOTORS AND
TRANSFORMERS.
THE
present
section of this volume deals with
polyphase
cur-
rents,
and the inventions
by
Mr.
Tesla,
made known thus
far,
in
which he has embodied one feature or another of the broad
principle
of
rotating
field
poles
or resultant attraction exerted on
the armature. It is needless to remind electricians of the
great
interest aroused
by
the first enunciation of the
rotating
field
principle,
or to dwell
upon
the
importance
of the advance from
a
single alternating current,
to methods and
apparatus
which deal
with more than one.
Simply prefacing
the consideration here
attempted
of the
subject,
with the remark that in nowise is the
object
of this volume of a
polemic
or controversial
nature,
it
may
be
pointed
out that Mr. Tesla's work has not at all been
fully
understood or realized
up
to date. To
many readers,
it is
believed,
the
analysis
of what he has done in this
department
will be a
revelation,
while it will at the same time illustrate the
beautiful
flexibility
and
range
of the
principles
involved. It
will be seen
that,
as
just suggested,
Mr. Tesla did not
stop
short
at a mere
rotating field,
but dealt
broadly
with the
shifting
of
the resultant attraction of the
magnets.
It will be seen that he
went on to evolve the
"
multiphase
"
system
with
many
ramifica-
tions and
turns;
that he showed the broad idea of motors em-
ploying
currents of
differing phase
in the armature with direct
currents in the field
;
that he first described and worked out the
idea of an armature with a
body
of iron and coils closed
upon
themselves
;
that he worked out both
synchronizing
and
torque
motors;
that he
explained
and illustrated how machines of ordi-
nary
construction
might
be
adapted
to his
system ;
that he em-
ployed
condensers in field and armature
circuits,
and went to the
bottom of the fundamental
principles, testing, approving
or
reject-
ing,
it would
appear, every
detail that inventive
ingenuity
could
hit
upon.
8 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Now that
opinion
is
turning
so
emphatically
in favor of lower
frequencies,
it deserves
special
note that Mr. Tesla
early
re-
cognized
the
importance
of the low
frequency
feature in motor
work. In fact his first motors exhibited
publicly
and
which,
as
Prof.
Anthony
showed in his tests in the winter of
1887-8,
were
the
equal
of direct current motors in
efficiency, output
and start-
ing torque
were of the low
frequency type.
The
necessity
arising,
however,
to utilize these motors in connection with the
existing high frequency circuits,
our
survey
reveals in an inter-
esting
manner Mr. Tesla's
fertility
of resource in this direction.
But
that,
after
exhausting
all the
possibilities
of this
field,
Mr.
Tesla returns to low
frequencies,
and insists on the
superiority
of
his
polyphase system
in
alternating
current
distribution,
need not
at all
surprise us,
in view of the
strength
of his
convictions,
so
often
expressed,
on this
subject.
This
is, indeed, significant,
and
may
be
regarded
as indicative of the
probable development
next
to be witnessed.
Incidental reference has been made to the
efficiency
of
rotating
field
motors,
a matter of much
importance, though
it is not the
intention to dwell
upon
it here. Prof.
Anthony
in his remarks
before the American Institute of Electrical
Engineers,
in
May,
1888,
on the two small Tesla motors then
shown,
which he had
tested,
stated that one
gave
an
efficiency
of about 50
per
cent,
and the other a little over
sixty per
cent. In
1889,
some tests
were
reported
from
Pittsburgh,
made
by
Mr. Tesla and Mr.
Albert
Schmid,
on motors
up
to 10 H. p. and
weighing
about
850
pounds.
These machines showed an
efficiency
of
nearly
90
per
cent. With some
larger
motors it was then found
practic-
able to obtain an
efficiency,
with the three wire
system, up
to as
high
as 94 and 95
per
cent. These
interesting figures, which,
of
course,
might
be
supplemented by
others more elaborate and of
later
date,
are cited to show that the
efficiency
of the
system
has
not had to wait until the
present
late
day
for
any
demonstration
of its
commercial
usefulness. An invention is none the less beauti-
ful because it
may
lack
utility,
but it must be a
pleasure
to
any
inventor to know that the ideas he is
advancing
are
fraught
with
substantial
benefits to the
public.
CHAPTEE III.
THE TESLA KOTATING MAGNETIC FIELD. MOTORS WITH CLOSED
CONDUCTORS. SYNCHRONIZING MOTORS. KOTATING FIELD
TRANSFORMERS.
THE best
description
that can be
given
of what he
attempted,
and succeeded in
doing,
with the
rotating magnetic field,
is to be
found in Mr. Tesla's brief
paper explanatory
of his
rotary
cur-
rent, polyphase system,
read before the American Institute of
Electrical
Engineers,
in New
York,
in
May, 1888,
under the
title
"
A New
System
of Alternate Current Motors and Trans-
formers." As a matter of
fact,
which a
perusal
of the
paper
will
establish,
Mr. Tesla made no
attempt
in that
paper
to de-
scribe all his work. It dealt in
reality
with the few
topics
enu-
merated in the
caption
of this
chapter.
Mr. Tesla's reticence
was no doubt due
largely
to the fact that his action was
gov-
erned
by
the wishes of others with whom lie was
associated,
but
it
may
be worth mention that the
compiler
of this volume who
had seen the motors
running,
and who was then chairman of the
Institute Committee on
Papers
and
Meetings
had
great
diffi-
culty
in
inducing
Mr. Tesla to
give
the Institute
any paper
at all.
Mr. Tesla was overworked and
ill,
and manifested the
greatest
reluctance to an exhibition of his
motors,
but his
objections
were
at last overcome. The
paper
was written the
night previous
to
the
meeting,
in
pencil, very hastily,
and under the
pressure
just
mentioned.
In this
paper
casual reference was made to two
special
forms
of motors not within the
group
to be considered. These two
forms were : 1. A motor with one of its circuits in series with a
transformer,
and the other in the
secondary
of the transformer.
2. A motor
having
its armature circuit connected to the
gener-
ator,
and the field coils closed
upon
themselves. The
paper
in
its essence is as
follows, dealing
witli a few
leading
features of
the Tesla
system, namely,
the
rotating magnetic field,
motors
10
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
with closed conductors,
synchronizing
motors,
and
rotating
field
transformers
:
The
subject
which I now have the
pleasure
of
bringing
to
your
notice is a novel
system
of electric distribution and trans-
mission of
power by
means of alternate
currents, affording pecu-
liar
advantages, particularly
in the
way
of
motors,
which I am
confident
will at once establish the
superior adaptability
of these
currents to the transmission
of
power
and will show that
many
results heretofore
unattainable can be reached
by
their use
;
re-
sults which are
very
much desired in the
practical operation
of
such
systems,
and which cannot be
accomplished by
means of
continuous currents.
Before
going
into a detailed
description
of this
system,
I think
it
necessary
to make a few remarks with reference to certain con-
ditions
existing
in continuous current
generators
and
motors,
which, although generally
known,
are
frequently disregarded.
In our
dynamo
machines,
it is well
known,
we
generate
alter-
nate currents which we direct
by
means of a
commutator,
a com-
plicated
device
and,
it
may
be
justly said,
the source of most of
the troubles
experienced
in the
operation
of the machines.
Now,
the currents so directed cannot be utilized in the
motor,
but
they
must
again by
means of a similar unreliable device
be reconverted into their
original
state of alternate
currents.^
The function of the commutator is
entirely external,
and in no
way
does it affect the internal
working
of the machines. In
reality, therefore,
all machines are alternate current
machines,
the currents
appearing
as continuous
only
in the external circuit
during
their transit from
generator
to motor. In view
simply
of
this
fact,
alternate currents would commend themselves as a more
direct
application
of electrical
energy,
and the
employment
of
continuous currents would
only
be
justified
if we had
dynamos
which would
primarily generate,
and motors which would be
directly
actuated
by,
such currents.
But the
operation
of the commutator on a motor is twofold
;
first,
it reverses the currents
through
the
motor,
and
secondly,
it effects
automatically,
a
progressive shifting
of the
poles
of one
of its
magnetic
constituents.
Assuming, therefore,
that both of
the useless
operations
in the
systems,
that is to
say,
the
directing
of the alternate currents on the
generator
and
reversing
the direct
currents on the
motor,
be
eliminated,
it would still be
necessary,
in order to cause a rotation of the
motor,
to
produce
a
progressive
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 11
shifting
of the
poles
of one of its
elements,
and the
question
presented
itself How to
perform
this
operation by
the direct
action of alternate currents ? I will now
proceed
to show how
this result was
accomplished.
In the first
experiment
a drum-armature was
provided
with
Fie. l. FIG. la.
two coils at
right angles
to each
other,
and the ends of these coils
were connected to two
pairs
of insulated
contact-rings
as usual.
A
ring
was then made of thin insulated
plates
of sheet-iron and
wound with four
coils,
each two
opposite
coils
being
connected
together
so as to
produce
free
poles
on
diametrically opposite
sides of the
ring.
The
remaining
free ends of the coils were then
connected to the
contact-rings
of the
generator
armature so as
to form two
independent circuits,
as indicated in
Fig.
9.' It
may
now be seen what results were secured in this
combination,
and witli this view I would refer to the
diagrams, Figs.
1 to 8#.
The field of the
generator being independently excited,
the rota-
tion of the armature sets
up
currents in the coils c c
l5 varying
in
FIG FIG. 2a.
strength
and direction in the well-known manner. In the
posi-
tion shown in
Fig. 1,
the current in coil c is
nil,
while coil c
{
is
traversed
by
its maximum
current,
and the connections
may
be
such that the
ring
is
magnetized by
the coils c
t <?j,
as indicated
by
the letters N s in
Fig.
1#,
the
magnetizing
effect of the coils
12 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
c c
being
nil,
since these coils are included in the circuit of
coil c.
In
Fig.
2,
the armature coils are shown in a more advanced
position, one-eighth
of one revolution
being completed. Fig.
la illustrates the
corresponding magnetic
condition of the
ring.
At this moment the coil
c,
generates
a current of the same di-
FIG. 3. FIG. 3a.
rection as
previously,
but
weaker, producing
the
poles
w
t .Vj
upon
the
ring
;
the coil c also
generates
a current of the same direc-
tion,
and the connections
may
be such that the coils c c
produce
the
poles
n
*,
as shown in
Fig.
'la. The
resulting polarity
is
indicated
by
the letters x
s,
and it will be observed that the
poles
of the
ring
have been shifted
one-eighth
of the
periphery
of the same.
In
Fig.
3 the armature has
completed
one
quarter
of one
revolution. In this
phase
the current in coil c is a
maximum,
and
of such direction as to
produce
the
poles
N s in
Fig. 3a,
whereas
the current in coil c
v
is
nil,
this coil
being
at its neutral
position.
FIG. 4.
FIG. 4a.
The
poles
N s in
Fig.
3a are thus shifted one
quarter
of the
circumference of the
ring.
Fig.
4 shows the coils c c in a still more advanced
position,
the armature
having completed
three-eighths
of one revolution.
At that moment the coil c still
generates
a current of the same
direction as
before,
but of less
strength,
producing
the
compar-
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 13
atively
weaker
poles
n .y in
Fig.
4. The current in the coil
Cj
is of the same
strength,
but
opposite
direction. Its effect
is,
therefore,
to
produce upon
the
ring
the
poles
n
-^
as
indicated,
and a
polarity,
N
s, results,
the
poles
now
being
shifted three-
eighths
of the
periphery
of the
ring.
In
Fig.
5 one half of one revolution of the armature is com-
pleted,
and the
resulting magnetic
condition of the
ring
is indi-
cated in
Fig.
5. Now the current in coil c is
nil,
while the coil
c
t
yields
its maximum
current,
which is of the same direction as
previously
;
the
magnetizing
effect
is, therefore,
due to the
coils,
6
(
!
e
n alone, and,
referring
to
Fig.
5,
it will be observed that
the
poles
N s are shifted one half of the circumference of the
ring. During
the next half revolution the
operations
are
repeated,
as
represented
in the
Figs,
f> to 8a.
A reference to the
diagrams
will make it clear that
during
one
FIG. Q. FIG. 6a.
revolution of the armature the
poles
of the
ring
are shifted once
around its
periphery, and,
each revolution
producing
like
effects,
a
rapid whirling
of the
poles
in
harmony
with the rotation of the
armature is the result. If the connections of either one of the
circuits in the
ring
are
reversed,
the
shifting
of the
poles
is made
to
progress
in the
opposite direction,
but the
operation
is identi-
14
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
cally
the same. Instead of
using
four
wires,
with like result)
three wires
may
be
used,
one
forming
a common return for both
circuits.
This rotation or
whirling
of the
poles
manifests itself in a series
of curious
phenomena.
If a
delicately pivoted
disc of steel or
other
magnetic
metal is
approached
to the
ring
it is set in
rapid
rotation,
the direction of rotation
varying
with the
position
of
FIG. 7.
FIG. Ta.
the disc. For
instance, noting
the direction outside of the ring
it will he found that inside the
ring
it turns in an
opposite
direc-
tion,
while it is unaffected if
placed
in a
position symmetrical
to
the
ring.
This is
easily explained.
Each time that a
pole ap-
proaches,
it induces an
opposite pole
in the nearest
point
on the
disc,
and an attraction is
produced upon
that
point; owing
to
this,
as the
pole
is shifted further
away
from the disc a
tangential pull
is exerted
upon
the
same,
and the action
being constantly repeat-
ed,
a more or less
rapid
rotation of the disc is the result. As the
pull
is exerted
mainly upon
that
part
which is nearest to the
ring,
the rotation outside and
inside,
or
right
and
left, respectively,
is in
opposite directions,
Fig.
9. When
placed symmetrically
to the
ring,
the
pull
on the
opposite
sides of the disc
being equal,
no rotation results. The action is based on the
magnetic
inertia
of iron
;
for this reason a disc of hard steel is much more af-
fected than a disc of soft
iron,
the latter
being capable
of
very
rapid
variations of
magnetism.
Such a disc has
proved
to be a
very
useful instrument in all these
investigations,
as it has en-
abled me to detect
any irregularity
in the action. A curious ef-
fect is also
produced upon
iron
tilings. By placing
some
upon
a
paper
and
holding
them
externally quite
close to the
ring, they
are set in a
vibrating motion,
remaining
in the same
place, although
the
paper may
be moved back and forth
;
but in
lifting
the
paper
to a certain
height
which seems to be
dependent
on the
intensity
of the
poles
and the
speed
of
rotation, they
are thrown
away
in
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 15
a direction
always opposite
to the
supposed
movement of the
poles.
If a
paper
with
filings
is
put
flat
upon
the
ring
and the
current turned on
suddenly,
the existence of a
magnetic
whirl
may easily
be observed.
To demonstrate the
complete analogy
between the
ring
and a
revolving magnet,
a
strongly energized electro-magnet
was rota-
ted
by
mechanical
power,
and
phenomena
identical in
every par-
ticular to those mentioned above were observed.
Obviously,
the rotation of the
poles produces corresponding
inductive effects and
may
be utilized to
generate
currents in a
closed conductor
placed
within the influence of the
poles.
For
this
purpose
it is convenient to wind a
ring
with two sets of
superimposed
coils
forming respectively
the
primary
and second-
ary
circuits, as shown in
Fig.
10. In order to secure the most
economical results the
magnetic
circuit should be
completely
closed,
and with this
object
in view the construction
may
be
modified at will.
The inductive effect exerted
upon
the
secondary
coils will be
mainly
due to the
shifting
or movement of the
magnetic
action
;
but there
may
also be currents set
up
in the circuits in conse-
quence
of the variations in the
intensity
of the
poles.
However,
by properly designing
the
generator
and
determining
the
magneti-
zing
effect of the
primary coils,
the latter element
may
be made
to
disappear.
The
intensity
of the
poles being
maintained con-
FIG. FIG. 8a.
stant,
the action of the
apparatus
will be
perfect,
and the same
result will be secured as
though
the
shifting
were effected
by
means of a commutator with an infinite number of bars. In such
case the theoretical relation between the
energizing
effect of each
set of
primary
coils and their resultant
magnetizing
effect
may
be
expressed by
the
equation
of a circle
having
its centre coin-
ciding
with that of an
orthogonal system
of
axes,
and in which
the radius
represents
the resultant and the co-ordinates both
16
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA
TESLA.
of its
components.
These are then
respectively
the sine and
cosine
of the
angle
a between*
the radius and one of the axes
(O X\
Referring
to
Fig.
11,
we have ,*
=
x?
+ f
;
where
./
=
r cos
a,
and
y
=
r sin a.
Assuming
the
magnetizing
effect of each set of coils in the
transformer
to be
proportional
to the current which
may
be
admitted
for weak
degrees
of
magnetization
then x
=
KG and
y
_
KC
^
where ^is a constant
and c and c
1
the current in both
sets of coils
respectively.
Supposing,
further,
the field of the
generator
to be
uniform,
we have for constant
speed
c
1
=
A"
1
sin a
and c
=
K
l
sin
(90
+ a)
=
K
l
cos
a,
where K
l
is a constant.
See
Fig.
12.
Therefore,
a?
=
K c KK^ cos
a;
y
=
Kc
l
=
KK
l
sin
a;
and
FIG. 9.
That
is,
for a uniform field the
disposition
of the two coils at
right angles
will secure the theoretical
result,
and the
intensity
of the
shifting poles
will be constant. But from ^
=
x?
-J- >f
it
follows that for
y
=
0,
r
=
x;
it follows that the
joint magnet-
izing
effect of both sets of coils should be
equal
to the effect of
one set when at its maximum action. In transformers and in a
certain class of motors the fluctuation of the
poles
is not of
great
importance,
but in another class of these motors it is desirable to
obtain the theoretical result.
In
applying
this
principle
to the construction of
motors,
two
typical
forms of motor have been
developed. First,
a form hav-
ing
a
comparatively
small
rotary
effort at the start but
maintaining
a
perfectly
uniform
speed
at all
loads,
which motor has been
termed
synchronous. Second,
a form
possessing
a
great rotary
effort at the
start,
the
speed being dependent
on the load.
I'OL YMIAKK
17
These motors
may
be
operated
in three different
ways
: 1.
By
the alternate currents of the source
only.
2.
By
a combined ac-
tion of these and of induced currents. 3.
By
the
joint
action of
alternate and continuous currents.
The
simplest
form of a
synchronous
motor is obtained
by
wind-
ing
a laminated
ring provided
with
pole projections
with four
coils,
and
connecting
the same in the manner before indicated.
An iron disc
having
a
segment
cut
away
on each side
may
be used
Fit* 10.
as an armature. Such a motor is shown in
Fig.
9. The disc
being arranged
to rotate
freely
within the
ring
in close
proximity
to the
projections,
it is evident that as the
poles
are shifted it
will,
owing
to its
tendency
to
place
itself in such a
position
as to
embrace the
greatest
number of the lines of
force, closely
follow
the movement of the
poles,
and its motion will be
synchronous
with that of the armature of the
generator;
that
is,
in the
peculiar
disposition
shown in
Fig. 9,
in which the armature
produces by
one revolution two current
impulses
in each of the circuits. It
is evident that
if, by
one revolution of the
armature,
a
greater
number of
impulses
is
produced,
the
speed
of the motor will be
correspondingly
increased.
Considering
that the attraction ex-
erted
upon
the disc is
greatest
when the same is in close
proximity
to the
poles,
it follows that such a motor will maintain
exactly
the same
speed
at all loads within the limits of its
capacity.
To facilitate the
starting,
the disc
may
be
provided
with a coil
closed
upon
itself. The
advantage
secured
by
such a coil is evi-
dent. On the start
the
currents set
up
in the coil
strongly
ener-
IS INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TKKLA.
gize
the disc and increase the attraction exerted
upon
the same
by
the
ring,
and currents
being generated
in the coil as
long
as the
speed
of the armature is inferior to that of the
poles,
consider-
able work
may
be
performed by
such a motor even if the
speed
be below normal. The
intensity
of the
poles being constant,
no
currents will be
generated
in the coil when the motor is
turning
at its normal
speed.
Instead of
closing
the coil
upon
itself,
its ends
may
be connected
to two insulated
sliding rings,
and a continuous current
supplied
to these from a suitable
generator.
The
proper way
to start such
a motor is to close the coil
upon
itself until the normal
speed
is
reached,
or
nearly so,
and then turn on the continuous cur-
rent. If the disc be
very strongly energized by
a continuous
current the motor
may
not be able to
start,
but if it be
weakly
energized,
or
generally
so that the
magnetizing
eifect of the
ring
is
preponderating,
it will start and reach the normal
speed.
Such
a motor will maintain
absolutely
the same
speed
at all loads. It
has also been found that if the motive
power
of the
generator
is
not
excessive, by checking
the motor the
speed
of the
generator
is
diminished in
synchronism
with that of the motor. It is charac-
teristic of this form of motor that it cannot be reversed
by
revers-
ing
the continuous current
through
the coil.
The
synchronism
of these motors
may
be demonstrated
experi-
mentally
in a
variety
of
ways.
For this
purpose
it is best to
employ
a motor
consisting
of a
stationary
field
magnet
and an
armature
arranged
to rotate within the
same,
as indicated in
Fig.
13. In this case the
shifting
of the
poles
of the armature
produces
a rotation of the latter in the
opposite
direction. It
results therefrom that when the normal
speed
is
readied,
the
poles
of the armature assume fixed
positions relatively
to the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. lit
field
magnet,
and the same is
magnetized by induction, exhibiting
a distinct
pole
on each of the
pole-pieces.
If a
piece
of soft iron
is
approached
to the field
magnet,
it will at the start be attracted
with a
rapid vibrating
motion
produced by
the reversals of
polar-
ity
of the
magnet,
but as the
speed
of the armature
increases,
the
vibrations become less and less
frequent
and
finally entirely
cease.
Then the iron is
weakly
but
permanently attracted, showing
that
synchronism
is reached and the field
magnet energized by
in-
duction.
The disc
may
also be used for the
experiment.
If held
quite
close to the armature it will turn as
long
as the
speed
of rotation
of the
poles
exceeds that of the armature
;
but when the normal
FIG. 13.
speed
is
reached,
or
very nearly so,
it ceases to rotate and is
per-
manently
attracted.
A crude but illustrative
experiment
is made with an incandes-
cent
lamp. Placing
the
lamp
in circuit with the continuous cur-
rent
generator
and in series with the
magnet coil, rapid
fluctua-
tions are observed in the
light
in
consequence
of the induced cur-
rents set
up
in the coil at the start
;
the
speed increasing,
the
fluctuations occur at
longer intervals,
until
they
entirely
disap-
pear, showing
that the motor has attained its normal
speed.
A
telephone
receiver affords a most sensitive instrument
;
when
connected to
any
circuit in the motor the
synchronism may
be
easily
detected on the
disappearance
of the induced currents.
In motors of the
synchronous type
it is desirable to maintain
20
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA
TKSLA.
the
quantity
of the
shifting magnetism
constant, especially
if the
magnets
are not
properly
subdivided.
To obtain a
rotary
effort
in these motors was the
subject
of
long thought.
In order to secure this result it was
necessary
to
make such a
disposition
that while the
poles
of one element of
the motor are shifted
by
the alternate currents of the
source,
the
poles produced upon
the other elements should
always
be main-
tained in the
proper
relation to the
former, irrespective
of the
speed
of the motor. Such a condition exists in a continuous
current
motor
;
but in a
synchronous
motor,
such as
described,
this condition is fulfilled
only
when the
speed
is normal.
The
object
has been attained
by placing
within the
ring
a
prop-
erly
subdivided
cylindrical
iron core wound with several
indepen-
dent coils closed
upon
themselves. Two coils at
right angles
as
6
FIG. 14.
in
Fig.
14,
are
sufficient,
but a
greater
number
may
be advan-
tageously employed.
It results from this
disposition
that when
the
poles
of the
ring
are
shifted,
currents are
generated
in the
closed armature coils. These currents are the most intense at or
near the
points
of the
greatest density
of the lines of
force,
and
their effect is to
produce poles upon
the armature at
right angles
to those of the
ring,
at least
theoretically
so
;
and since this action
is
entirely independent
of the
speed
that
is,
as far as the location
of the
poles
is concerned a continuous
pull
is exerted
upon
the
periphery
of the armature. In
many respects
these motors are
similar to the continuous current motors. If load is
put on,
the
speed,
and also the resistance of the
motor,
is diminished and
more current is made to
pass through
the
energizing
coils,
thus
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 21
increasing
the effort.
Upon
the load
being
taken
off,
the
counter-electromotive force increases and less current
passes
through
the
primary
or
energizing
coils. Without
any
load the
speed
is
very nearly equal
to that of the
shifting poles
of the
iield
magnet.
It will be found that the
rotary
effort in these motors
fully
FIG. 15. FIG. 16. FIG. 17.
equals
that of the continuous current motors. The effort seems
to be
greatest
when both armature and field
magnet
are without
any projections
;
but as in such
dispositions
the field cannot be
concentrated, probably
the best results will be obtained
by
leav-
ing pole projections
on one of the elements
only. Generally,
it
may
be stated the
projections
diminish the
torque
and
produce
a
tendency
to
synchronism.
A characteristic feature of motors of this kind is their
property
of
being very rapidly
reversed. This follows from the
peculiar
action of the motor.
Suppose
the armature to be
rotating
and
the direction of rotation of the
poles
to be reversed. The
appa-
ratus then
represents
a
dynamo machine,
the
power
to drive this
machine
being
the momentum stored
up
in the armature and its
speed being
the sum of the
speeds
of the armature and the
poles.
If we now consider that the
power
to drive such a
dynamo
'\AAA/
FIG. 18. FIG. 19. FIG. 20. FIG. 21.
would be
very nearly proportional
to the third
power
of the
speed,
for that reason alone the armature should be
quickly
re-
versed. But
simultaneously
with the reversal another element is
brought
into
action, namely,
as the movement of the
poles
with
respect
to the armature is
reversed,
the motor acts like a trans-
former in which the resistance of the
secondarv circuit would be
gg
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
abnormally
diminished
by producing
in this circuit an additional
electromotive
force.
Owing
to these causes the reversal is in-
stantaneous.
If it is desirable
to secure a constant
speed,
and at the same
time a certain effort at the
start,
this result
may
be
easily
attained
in a
variety
of
ways.
For
instance,
two
armatures,
one for
torque
and the other for
synchronism,
may
be fastened on the same shaft
and
any
desired
preponderance
may
be
given
to either
one,
or an
armature
may
be wound for
rotary
effort,
but a more or less
pro-
nounced
tendency
to
synchronism
may
be
given
to it
by properly
constructing
the iron core
;
and in
many
other
ways.
As a means of
obtaining
the
required phase
of the currents in
both the
circuits,
the
disposition
of the two coils at
right angles
is the
simplest, securing
the most uniform action
;
but the
phase
may
be obtained in
many
other
ways, varying
with the machine
employed. Any
of the
dynamos
at
present
in use
may
be
easily
adapted
for this
purpose by making
connections to
proper points
of the
generating
coils. In closed circuit
armatures,
such as used
in the continuous current
systems,
it is best to make four deriva-
tions from
equi-distant points
or bars of the
commutator,
and to
connect the same to four insulated
sliding rings
on the shaft. In
this case each of the motor circuits is connected to two diametri-
cally opposite
bars of the commutator. In such a
disposition
the
motor
may
also be
operated
at half the
potential
and on the three-
wire
plan, by connecting
the motor circuits in the
proper
order to
three of the contact
rings.
In
multipolar dynamo machines,
such as used in the converter
systems,
the
phase
is
conveniently
obtained
by winding upon
the
armature two series of coils in such a manner that while the coils
of one set or series are at their maximum
production
of
current,
the coils of the other will be at their neutral
position,
or
nearly
so, whereby
both sets of coils
may
be
subjected simultaneously
or
successively
to the
inducing
action of the field
magnets.
Generally
the circuits in the motor will be
similarly disposed,
and various
arrangements may
bemade to fulfill the
requirements;
but the
simplest
and most
practicable
is to
arrange primary
cir-
cuits on
stationary parts
of the
motor, thereby obviating,
at least
in certain
forms,
the
employment
of
sliding
contacts. In such a
case the
magnet
coils are connected
alternately
in both the cir-
cuits
;
that
is, 1, 3,
5 in
one,
and
2, 4,
6 in the
other,
and
the coils of each set of series
may
be connected all in the same
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 23
manner,
or
alternately
in
opposition ;
in the latter case a motor
with half the number of
poles
will
result,
and its action will be
correspondingly
modified. The
Figs. 15, 16,
and
17,
show
three different
phases,
the
magnet
coils in each circuit
being
con-
nected
alternately
in
opposition.
In this case there will be
always
four
poles,
as in
Figs.
15 and 17
;
four
pole projections
will be
neutral
;
and in
Fig.
16 two
adjacent pole projections
will have
the same
polarity.
If the coils are connected in the same manner
there will be
eight alternating poles,
as indicated
by
the letters
n' s' in
Fig.
15.
The
employment
of
multipolar
motors secures in this
system
an
advantage
much desired and unattainable in the continuous cur-
rent
system,
and that
is,
that a motor
may
be made to run
exactly
at a
predetermined speed irrespective
of
imperfections
in con-
struction,
of the
load, and,
within certain
limits,
of electromotive
force and current
strength.
In a
general
distribution
system
of this kind the
following plan
should be
adopted.
At the central station of
supply
a
generator
should be
provided having
a considerable number of
poles.
The
motors
operated
from this
generator
should be of the
synchronous
type,
but
possessing
sufficient
rotary
effort to insure their
starting.
With the observance of
proper
rules of construction it
may
be
admitted that the
speed
of each motor will be in some inverse
proportion
to its
size,
and the number of
poles
should be chosen
accordingly. Still, exceptional
demands
may modify
this rule.
In view of
this,
it will be
advantageous
to
provide
each motor
with a
greater
number of
pole projections
or
coils,
the number
being preferably
a
multiple
of two and three.
By
this
means, by
simply changing
the connections of the
coils,
the motor
may
be
adapted
to
any probable
demands.
If the number of the
poles
in the motor is
even,
the action will
be harmonious and the
proper
result will be obtained
;
if this
is not the
case,
the best
plan
to be followed is to make a
motor with a double number of
poles
and connect the same in
the manner before
indicated,
so that half the number of
poles
result.
Suppose,
for
instance,
that the
generator
has twelve
poles,
and it would be desired to obtain a
speed equal
to
^
of the
speed
of the
generator.
This would
require
a motor with seven
pole
projections
or
magnets,
and such a motor could not be
properly
connected in the circuits unless fourteen armature coils would be
provided,
which would necessitate the
employment
of
sliding
4
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA
TESLA.
contacts. To avoid
this,
the motor should be
provided
with four-
teen
magnets
and seven connected
in each
circuit,
the
magnets
in each circuit
alternating among
themselves.
The armature
should have fourteen closed coils. The action of the motor will
not be
quite
as
perfect
as in the case of an even number of
poles,
but the drawback will not be of a serious nature.
However,
the
disadvantages
resulting
from this
unsymmetrical
form will be reduced
in the same
proportion
as the number of
the
poles
is
augmented.
If the
generator
has, say,
n,
and the motor
%
poles,
the
speed
of the motor will be
equal
to that of the
generator
multiplied by
The
speed
of the motor will
generally
be
dependent
on the
number of the
poles,
but there
may
be
exceptions
to this rule.
The
speed may
be modified
by
the
phase
of the currents in the
circuit or
by
the character of the current
impulses
or
by
inter-
vals between each or between
groups
of
impulses.
Some of the
possible
cases are indicated in the
diagrams, Figs.
18, 19,
20 and
21,
which are
self-explanatory. Fig.
18
represents
the condi-
tion
generally existing,
and which secures the best result. In
such a
case,
if the
typical
form of motor illustrated in
Fig.
9
is
employed,
one
complete
wave in each circuit will
produce
one
revolution of the motor. In
Fig.
19 the same resiilt will be
effected
by
one wave in each
circuit,
the
impulses being
succes-
sive;
in
Fig.
20
by four,
and in
Fig.
21
by eight
waves.
By
such means
any
desired
speed may
be
attained,
that
is,
at
least within the limits of
practical
demands. This
system pos-
sesses this
advantage,
besides
others, resulting
from
simplicity.
At full loads the motors show an
efficiency fully equal
to that of
the continuous current motors. The transformers
present
an
additional
advantage
in their
capability
of
operating
motors.
They
are
capable
of similar modifications in
construction,
and will
facilitate the introduction of motors and their
adaptation
to
prac-
tical demands. Their
efficiency
should be
higher
than that of
the
present transformers,
and I base
my
assertion on the fol-
lowing
:
In a
transformer,
as constructed at
present,
we
produce
the
currents in the
secondary
circuit
by varying
the
strength
of the
primary
or
exciting
currents. If we admit
proportionality
with
respect
to the iron core the inductive effect exerted
upon
the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 25
secondary
coil will be
proportional
to the numerical sum of the
variations in the
strength
of the
exciting
current
per
unit of
time;
whence it follows that for a
given
variation
any prolongation
of
the
primary
current will result in a
proportional
loss. In order
to obtain
rapid
variations in the
strength
of the
current,
essential
to efficient
induction,
a
great
number of undulations are
employ-
ed
;
from this
practice
various
disadvantages
result. These are :
Increased cost and diminished
efficiency
of the
generator ;
more
waste of
energy
in
heating
the
cores,
and also diminished
output
of the
transformer,
since the core is not
properly utilized,
the
reversals
being
too
rapid.
The inductive effect is also
very
small
in certain
phases,
as will be
apparent
from a
graphic representa-
tion,
and there
may
be
periods
of
inaction,
if there are intervals
between the
succeeding
current
impulses
or waves. In
producing
a
shifting
of the
poles
in a
transformer,
and
thereby inducing
currents,
the induction is of the ideal
character, being always
maintained at its maximum action. It is also reasonable to as-
sume that
by
a
shifting
of the
poles
less
energy
will be wasted
than
by
reversals.
CHAPTER
IV.
MODIFICATIONS AND EXPANSIONS or THE TESLA POLYPHASE
SYSTEMS.
IN his earlier
papers
and
patents
relative to
polyphase
currents,
Mr. Tesla devoted himself
chiefly
to an enunciation of the broad
lines and ideas
lying
at the basis of this new work
;
but he
sup-
plemented
this
immediately by
a series of other
striking
inven-
tions which
may
be
regarded
as modifications and
expansions
of
certain features of the Tesla
systems.
These we shall now
pro-
ceed to deal with.
In the
preceding chapters
we have thus shown and described
the Tesla electrical
systems
for the transmission of
power
and the
conversion and distribution of electrical
energy,
in which the
motors and the transformers contain two or more coils or sets of
coils,
which were connected
up
in
independent
circuits with
corresponding
coils of an
alternating
current
generator,
the
opera-
tion of the
system being brought
about
by
the
co-operation
of
the
alternating
currents in the
independent
circuits in
progres-
sively moving
or
shifting
the
poles
or
points
of maximum
mag-
netic effect of the motors or converters. In these
systems
two
independent
conductors are
employed
for each of the
independ-
ent circuits
connecting
the
generator
with the devices for con-
verting
the transmitted currents into mechanical
energy
or into
electric currents of another character.
This, however,
is not
always necessary.
The two or more circuits
may
have a
single
return
path
or wire in
common,
with a
loss,
if
any,
which is so
extremely slight
that it
may
be
disregarded entirely.
For the
sake of
illustration,
if the
generator
have two
independent
coils
and the motor two coils or two sets of coils in
corresponding
Vela-
tions to its
operative
elements one terminal of each
generator
coil is
connected to the
corresponding
terminals of the motor
coils
through
two
independent conductors,
while the
opposite
terminals of the
respective
coils are both connected to one
return wire. The
following description
deals with the modifica-
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 27
tion.
Fig.
22 is a
diagrammatic
illustration of a
generator
and
single
motor constructed and
electrically
connected in accord-
ance with the invention.
Fig.
23 is a
diagram
of the
system
as it is nsed in
operating
motors or
converters,
or
both,
in
parallel,
while
Fig.
24 illustrates
diagrammatically
the manner of
operat-
ing
two or more motors or
converters,
or
both,
in series. Refer-
ring
to
Fig.
22,
A A
designate
the
poles
of the field
magnets
of
an
alternating-current generator,
the armature of
which, being
in
this case
cylindrical
in form and mounted on a
shaft, c,
is wound
FIG. 24.
longitudinally
with coils B B'. The shaft c carries three insulated
contact-rings,
a b
c,
to two of
which,
as 5
c,
one terminal of each
coil,
as e
d,
is connected. The
remaining
terminals, fg,
are both
connected to the third
ring,
a.
A motor in this case is shown as
composed
of a
ring, H,
wound
with four
coils,
i i j
j, electrically connected,
so as to
co-operate
in
pairs,
with a
tendency
to fix the
poles
of the
ring
at four
points
ninety degrees apart.
Within the
magnetic ring
H is a disc or
cylindrical
core wound with two
coils,
G
a',
which
may
be con-
28 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
nected to form two closed circuits. The terminals
j
k of the two
sets or
pairs
of coils are
connected, respectively,
to the
binding-
posts
E'
F',
and the other
terminals,
h
i,
are connected to a
single
binding-post,
D'. To
operate
the
motor,
three line-wires are used
to connect the terminals of the
generator
with those of the mo-
tor.
So far as the
apparent
action or mode of
operation
of this ar-
rangement
is
concerned,
the
single
wire
D,
which
is,
so to
speak,
FIG. 23.
a common
return-wire for both
circuits,
may
be
regarded
as two
independent
wires. In the
illustration,
with the order of con-
nection
shown,
coil B' of the
generator
is
producing
its maximum
current and coil B its
minimum
;
hence the current which
passes
through
wire
e,
ring 5,
brush b'
',
line-wire
E,
terminal
E',
wire,;',
coils i
i,
wire or
terminal
D',
line-wire
D,
brush
a',
ring a,
and
wire/,
fixes the
polar
line of the motor
midway
between the
POLYPHASE VURRKNT8. 25)
two coils i i
;
but as the coil B' moves from the
position
indicated
it
generates
less
current,
while coil
B, moving
into the
field, gen-
erates more. The current from coil B
passes through
the devices
and wires
designated by
the letters
d, c,
c'
F,
F'
&,
j
j, i, D', D, #',
,
and
g,
and the
position
of the
poles
of the motor will be due
to the resultant effect of the currents in the two sets of coils
that
is,
it will be advanced in
proportion
to the advance or for-
ward movement of the armature coils. The movement of the
generator-armature through one-quarter
of a revolution will ob-
viously bring
coil B' into its neutral
position
and coil B into its
position
of maximum
effect,
and this shifts the
poles ninety
de-
grees,
as
they
are fixed
solely by
coils B. This action is
repeated
for each
quarter
of a
complete
revolution.
When more than one motor or other device is
employed, they
may
be run either in
parallel
or series. In
Fig.
23 the former
arrangement
is shown. The electrical device is shown as a con-
verter, L,
of which the two sets of
primary
coils
p
r are con-
nected,
respectively,
to the mains F
E,
which are
electrically
con-
nected with the two coils of the
generator.
The cross-circuit
wires I
m, making
these
connections,
are then connected to the
common return-wire D. The
secondary
coils
p' p"
are in circuits
n
<>, including,
for
example,
incandescent
lamps. Only
one con-
verter is shown entire in this
figure,
the others
being
illustrated
diagrammatically.
When motors or converters are to be run in
series,
the two
wires E F are led from the
generator
to the coils of the first
motor or
converter,
then continued on to the
next,
and so on
through
the whole
series,
and are then
joined
to the
single
wire
D,
which
completes
both circuits
through
the
generator.
This is
shown in
Fig. 24,
in which j i
represent
the two coils or sets of
coils of the motors.
There
are,
of
course,
other conditions under which the same
idea
may
be carried out. For
example,
in case the motor and
generator
each has three
independent circuits,
one terminal of
each circuit is connected to a
line-wire,
and the other three ter-
minals to a common return-conductor. This
arrangement
will
secure similar results to those attained with a
generator
and motor
having
but two
independent circuits,
as above described.-
When
applied
to such machines and motors as have three or
more induced circuits with a common electrical
joint,
the three
or more terminals of the
generator
would be
simply
connected
30 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
to those of the motor. Mr. Tesla
states, however,
that the re-
sults obtained in this manner show a lower
efficiency
than do the
forms dwelt
upon
more
fully
above.
CHAPTER V.
UTILIZING FAMILIAR TYPES OF GENERATOR OF THE CONTINUOUS
CURRENT TYPE.
THE
preceding descriptions
have assumed the use of
alternating
current
generators
in
which,
in order to
produce
the
progressive
movement of the
magnetic poles,
or of the resultant attraction of
independent
field
magnets,
the current
generating
coils are inde-
pendent
or
separate.
The
ordinary
forms of continuous current
dynamos may, however,
be
employed
for the same
work,
in
accordance with a method of
adaptation
devised
by
Mr. Tesla.
As will be
seen,
the modification involves but
slight changes
in
their
construction,
and
presents
other elements of
economy.
On the shaft of a
given generator,
either in
place
of or in ad-
dition to the
regular commutator,
are secured as
many pairs
of
insulated
collecting-rings
as there are circuits to be
operated.
Now,
it will be understood that in the
operation
of
any dynamo
electric
generator
the currents in the coils in their movement
through
the field of force
undergo
different
phases
that is to
say,
at different
positions
of the coils the currents have certain
directions and certain
strengths
and that in the Tesla motors or
transformers it is
necessary
that the currents in the
energizing
coils should
undergo
a certain order of variations in
strength
and
direction.
Hence,
the further
step viz.,
the connection between
the induced or
generating
coils of the machine and the contact-
rings
from which the currents are to be taken off will be deter-
mined
solely by
what order of variations of
strength
and direction
in the currents is desired for
producing
a
given
result in the
electrical
translating
device. This
may
be
accomplished
in
various
ways ;
but in the
drawings
we
give typical
instances
only
of the best and most
practicable ways
of
applying
the invention
to three of the
leading types
of machines in
widespread use,
in
order to illustrate the
principle.
Fig.
25 is a
diagram
illustrative of the mode of
applying
the
invention to the well-known
type
of
"
closed
"
or continuous cir-
32
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA
TESLA.
cuit machines.
Fig.
26 is a similar
diagram
embodying
an arma-
ture with
separate
coils connected
diametrically,
or what is
gener-
ally
called an
"open-circuit"
machine.
Fig.
27 is a
diagram
showing
the
application
of the invention to a machine the arm-
ature-coils of which have -a common
joint.
Keferring
to
Fig.
25,
let A
represent
a Tesla motor or trans-
former
which,
for
convenience,
we will
designate
as a "con-
verter." It consists of an annular
core, B,
wound with four inde-
pendent
coils,
c and
D,
those
diametrically opposite being
con-
FIG. 25.
nected
together
so as to
co-operate
in
pairs
in
establishing
free
poles
in the
ring,
the
tendency
of each
pair being
to fix the
poles
at
ninety degrees
from the other. There
may
be an
armature,
E,
within the
ring,
which is wound with coils closed
upon
them-
selves. The
object
is to
pass through
coils c D currents of such
relative
strength
and direction as to
produce
a
progressive
shift-
ing
or movement of the
points
of maximum
magnetic
effect
around the
ring,
and to
thereby
maintain a
rotary
movement of
the armature. There are therefore secured to the shaft F of the
generator,
four insulated
contact-rings,
abed, upon
which bear
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 33
the
collecting-brushes
a' b' c'
d',
connected
by
wires G G H
H,
re-
spectively,
with the terminals of coils c and D.
Assume,
for sake of
illustration,
that the coils D D are to re-
ceive the maximum and coils c c at the same instant the mini-
mum
current,
so that the
polar
line
may
be
midway
between the
coils D D. The
rings
a 5 would therefore be connected to the
continuous armature-coil at its neutral
points
with
respect
to the
field,
or the
point corresponding
with that of the
ordinary
com-
mutator
brushes,
and between which exists the
greatest
differ-
ence of
potential ;
while
rings
c d would be connected to two
points
in the
coil,
between which exists no difference of
potential.
The best results will be obtained
by making
these connections at
points equidistant
from one
another,
as shown. These connec-
tions are easiest made
by using
wires L between the
rings
and the
loops
or wires
j, connecting
the coil i to the
segments
of the
commutator K. When the converters are made in this
manner,
it is evident that the
phases
of the currents in the sections of the
generator
coil will be
reproduced
in the converter coils. For
example,
after
turning through
an arc of
ninety degrees
the con-
ductors L
L,
which before
conveyed
the maximum
current,
will
receive the minimum current
by
reason of the
change
in the
position
of their
coils,
and it is evident that for the same reason
the current in these coils lias
gradually
fallen from the maximum
to the minimum in
passing through
the arc of
ninety degrees.
In this
special plan
of
connections,
the rotation of the
magnetic
poles
of the converter will be
synchronous
with that of the
armature coils of the
generator,
and the result will be the
same,
whether the
energizing
circuits are derivations from a continuous
armature coil or from
independent coils,
as in Mr. Tesla's
other devices.
In
Fig.
25,
the brushes M M are shown in dotted lines in their
proper
normal
position.
In
practice
these brushes
may
be re-
moved from the commutator and the field of the
generator
excited
by
an external source of
current;
or the brushes
may
be
allowed to remain on the commutator and to take off a converted
current to excite the
field,
or to be used for other
purposes.
In a certain well-known class of machines known as the
"open
circuit,"
the armature contains a number of coils the terminals of
which connect to commutator
segments,
the coils
being
connected
across the armature in
pairs.
This
type
of machine is
repre-
sented in
Fig.
2fi. In this machine each
pair
of coils
goes
34
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
through
the same
phases
as the coils
in some of the
generators
already
shown,
and it is
obviously only necessary
to utilize them
in
pairs
or sets to
operate
a Tesla converter
by extending
the
segments
of the commutators
belonging
to each
pair
of coils and
causing
a
collecting
brush to bear on the continuous
portion
of
each
segment.
In this
way
two or more circuits
may
be taken
off from the
generator,
each
including
one or more
pairs
or sets
of coils as
may
be desired.
In
Fig.
2H i i
represent
the armature
coils,
T T the
poles
of the
field
magnet,
and F the shaft
carrying
the
commutators,
which
are extended to form continuous
portions
a I c d. The brushes
FIG. 26. FIG. 27.
bearing
on the continuous
portions
for
taking
off the
alternating
currents are
represented by
a' V c' d'. The
collecting
brushes,
or those which
may
be used to take off the direct
current,
are
designated by
M M. Two
pairs
of the armature coils and their
commutators are shown in the
figure
as
being
utilized;
but all
may
be utilized in a similar manner.
There is another well-known
type
of machine in which three
or more
coils,
A'
'
c',
on the armature have a common
joint,
the free ends
being
connected to the
segments
of a commutator.
This form of
generator
is illustrated in
Fig.
27. In this case each
terminal of the
generator
is connected
directly
or in derivation
to a continuous
ring,
a 1)
<?,
and
collecting brushes,
a' V
c', bearing
POLYPHASE CURRENT*. 33
thereon,
take oft' the
alternating
currents that
operate
the
motor.
It is
preferable
in this case to
employ
a motor or transformer
with three
energizing
coils,
A" B"
c", placed symmetrically
with
those of the
generator,
and the circuits from the latter are con-
nected to the terminals of such coils either
directly
as when
they
are
stationary
or
by
means of brushes e' and contact
rings
e. In
this,
as in the other
cases,
the
ordinary
commutator
may
be used on the
generator,
and the current taken from it utilized
for
exciting
the
generator iielcl-magnets
or for other
purposes.
CHAPTER VI.
METHOD OF OBTAINING DESIRED SPEED
OF MOTOR OR
GENERATOR.
WITH the
object
of
obtaining
the desired
speed
in motors
operated by
means of
alternating
currents of
differing phase,
Mr. Tesla has devised various
plans
intended to meet the
prac-
tical
requirements
of the
case,
in
adapting
his
system
to
types
of
multipolar alternating
current machines
yielding
a
large
number
of current reversals for each revolution.
For
example,
Mr. Tesla has
pointed
out that to
adapt
a
given
type
of
alternating
current
generator, you may couple rigidly
two
complete machines, securing
them
together
in such a
way
that the
requisite
difference in
phase
will be
produced ;
or
you
may
fasten two armatures to the same shaft within the influence
of the same field and with the
requisite angular displacement
to
yield
the
proper
difference in
phase
between the two
currents;
or two armatures
may
be attached to the same shaft with their
coils
symmetrically disposed,
but
subject
to the influence of two
sets of field
magnets duly displaced ;
or the two sets of coils
may
be wound on the same armature
alternately
or in such man-
ner that
they
will
develop
currents the
phases
of which differ in
time
sufficiently
to
produce
the rotation of the motor.
Another method included in the
scope
of the same
idea,
where-
by
a
single generator may
run a number of motors either at its
own rate of
speed
or all at different
speeds,
is to construct the
motors with fewer
poles
than the
generator,
in which case their
speed
will be
greater
than that of the
generator,
the rate of
speed
being higher
as the number of their
poles
is
relatively
less. This
may
be understood from an
example, taking
a
generator
that has
two
independent
generating
coils which revolve between two
pole pieces
oppositely magnetized ;
and a motor with
energizing
coils that
produce
at
any given
time two
magnetic poles
in one
element that tend to set
up
a rotation of the motor. A
genera-
tor thus
constructed
yields
four
reversals,
or
impulses,
in each
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 37
revolution,
two in each of its
independent
circuits
;
and the effect
upon
the motor is to shift the
magnetic poles through
three hun-
dred and
sixty degrees.
It is obvious that if the four reversals
in the same order could be
produced by
each half-revolution of
the
generator
the motor would make two revolutions to the
gen-
erator's one. This would be
readily accomplished by adding
two
intermediate
poles
to the
generator
or
altering
it in
any
of the
other
equivalent ways
above indicated. The same rule
applies
to
generators
and motors with
multiple poles.
For
instance,
if a
generator
be constructed with two
circuits,
each of which
pro-
duces twelve reversals of current to a
revolution,
and these cur-
rents be directed
through
the
independent energizing-coils
of a
motor,
the coils of which are so
applied
as to
produce
twelve
FIG.
28,
FIG. 29.
magnetic poles
at all
times,
the rotation of the two will be
syn-
chronous
;
but if the motor-coils
produce
but six
poles,
the movable
element will be rotated twice while the
generator
rotates once
;
or
if the motor have four
poles,
its rotation will be three times as
fast as that of the
generator.
These
features,
so far as
necessary
to an
understanding
of the
principle,
are here illustrated.
Fig.
28 is a
diagrammatic
illus-
tration of a
generator
constructed in accordance with the inven-
tion.
Fig.
29 is a similar view of a
correspondingly
constructed
motor.
Fig.
30 is a
diagram
of a
generator
of modified con-
struction.
Fig.
31 is a
diagram
of a motor of
corresponding
character.
Fig.
32 is a
diagram
of a
system containing
a
gener-
ator and several motors
adapted
to run at various
speeds.
38
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
In
Fig.
28,
let c
represent
a
cylindrical
armature core wound
longitudinally
with insulated coils A
A,
which are connected
up
in
series,
the terminals of the series
being
connected to
collecting-
rings
a a on the shaft G.
By
means of this shaft the armature
is mounted to rotate between
the
poles
of an annular
field-mag-
net
D,
formed with
polar projections
wound with coils
E,
that
magnetize
the said
projections.
The coils E are included in the
circuit of a
generator
F, by
means of which the
field-magnet
is
energized.
If thus
constucted,
the machine is a well-known
form of
alternating-current generator.
To
adapt
it to his
sys-
tem, however,
Mr. Tesla winds on armature c a second set of
coils B B intermediate to the
first, or,
in other
words,
in such
po-
sitions that while the coils of one set are in the relative
positions
to the
poles
of the
field-magnet
to
produce
the maximum
current,
those of the other set will be in the
position
in which
they pro-
duce the minimum current. The coils B are
connected, also,
in
FIG. 30. FIG. 81.
series and to two
connecting-rings,
secured
generally
to the
shaft at the
opposite
end of the armature.
The motor shown in
Fig.
29 has an annular
field-magnet H,
with four
pole-pieces
wound with coils i. The armature is con-
structed
similarly
to the
generator,
but with two sets of two
coils in closed circuits to
correspond
with the reduced number of
magnetic poles
in the field. From the
foregoing
it is evident that
one revolution of the armature of the
generator producing eight
current
impulses
in each circuit will
produce
two revolutions of
the motor-armature.
The
application
of the
principle
of this invention is
not,
how-
ever,
confined to
any particular
form of machine. In
Figs.
30
and 31 a
generator
and motor of another well-known
type
are
shown. In
Fig. 30,
j j are
magnets disposed
in a circle and
wound with coils
K,
which are in circuit with a
generator
which
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 39
supplies
the current that maintains the field of force. In the
usual construction of these machines the armature-conductor L is
carried
by
a suitable
frame,
so as to be rotated in face of the
magnets
j
.1,
or between these
magnets
and another similar set
in front of them. The
magnets
are
energized
so as to be of al-
ternately opposite polarity throughout
the
series,
so that as the
conductor c is rotated the current
impulses
combine or are
added to one
another,
those
produced by
the conductor in
any
given position being
all in the same direction. To
adapt
such
a machine to his
system,
Mr. Tesla adds a second set of induced
conductors
M,
in all
respects
similar to the
first,
but so
placed
in reference to it that the currents
produced
in each will differ
by
a
quarter-phase.
With such relations it is evident that as the
current decreases in conductor L it increases in conductor
M,
and
conversely,
and that
any
of the forms of Tesla motor invented
for use in this
system may
be
operated by
such a
generator.
Fig.
31 is intended to show a motor
corresponding
to the ma-
chine in
Fig.
30. The construction of the motor is identical with
that of the
generator,
and if
coupled
thereto it will run
syn-
chronously
therewith, j' j' are the
field-magnets,
and K' the
coils thereon, i/ is one of the armature-conductors and M' the
other.
Fig.
32 shows in
diagram
other forms of machine. The
gene-
rator N in this case is shown as
consisting
of a
stationary ring
o,
wound with
twenty-four
coils p
p',
alternate coils
being
connected
in series in two circuits. Within this
ring
is a disc or drum
Q,
with
projections
Q'
wound with
energizing-coils
included in cir-
cuit with a
generator
K.
By driving
this disc or
cylinder
alter-
nating
currents are
produced
in the coils p and
p',
which are
carried off to run the several motors.
The motors are
composed
of a
ring
or annular
field-magnet
s,
wound with two sets of
energizing-coils
T
T',
and armatures
u,
having projections
L
T/
wound with coils
v,
all connected in series
in a closed circuit or each closed
independently
on itself.
Suppose
the twelve
generator-coils
p are wound
alternately
in
opposite directions,
so that
any
two
adjacent
coils of the same set
tend to
produce
a free
pole
in the
ring
o between them and the
twelve coils p' to be
similarly
wound. A
single
revolution of
the disc or
cylinder Q,
the twelve
polar projections
of which are
of
opposite polarity,
will therefore
produce
twelve current im-
pulses
in each of the circuits w w'. Hence the motor
x,
which
40
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
has sixteen coils or
eight
free
poles,
will make one and a half turns
to the
generator's
one. The motor
Y,
with twelve coils or six
poles,
will rotate with twice the
speed
of the
generator,
and the
motor
z,
with
eight
coils or four
poles,
will revolve three times
as fast as the
generator.
These
multipolar
motors have a
peculi-
arity
which
may
be often utilized to
great
advantage.
For ex-
FTG. 32.
ample,
in the motor
x, Fig. 32,
the
eight poles may
be either
alternately opposite
or there
may
be at
any given
time
alternately
two like and two
opposite poles.
This is
readily
attained
by
making
the
proper
electrical connections. The effect of such a
change, however,
would be the same as
reducing
the number of
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 41
poles one-half,
and
thereby doubling
the
speed
of
any given
motor.
It is obvious that the Tesla electrical transformers which have
independent primary
currents
may
be used with the
generators
described. It
may
also be stated with
respect
to the devices
we now describe that the most
perfect
and harmonious action
of the
generators
and motors is obtained when the numbers of the
poles
of each are even and not odd. If this is not the
case,
there
will be a certain unevenness of action which is the less
appreci-
able as the number of
poles
is
greater; although
this
may
be in a
measure corrected
by special provisions
which it is not here
necessary
to
explain.
It also
follows,
as a matter of
course,
that
if the number of the
poles
of the motor be
greater
than that of
the
generator
the motor will revolve at a slower
speed
than the
generator.
In this
chapter,
we
may
include a method devised
by
Mr.
Tesla for
avoiding
the
very high speeds
which would be neces-
sary
with
large generators.
In lieu of
revolving
the
generator
armature at a
high
rate of
speed,
he secures the desired result
by
a rotation of the
magnetic poles
of one element of the
generator,
while
driving
the other at a different
speed.
The effect is the
same as that
yielded by
a
very high
rate of rotation.
In this
instance,
the
generator
which
supplies
the current for
operating
the motors or transformers consists of a subdivided
ring
or annular core wound with four
diametrically-opposite
coils,
E
F/,
Fig.
33. Within the
ring
is mounted a
cylindrical
armature-core wound
longitudinally
with two
independent coils,
F
F',
the ends of which
lead, respectively,
to two
pairs
of insu-
lated contact or
collecting rings,
D D' G
G',
on the armature shaft.
Collecting
brushes d d'
g g'
bear
upon
these
rings, respectively,
and
convey
the currents
through
the two
independent
line-cir-
cuits M M'. In the main line there
may
be included one or more
motors or
transformers,
or both. If motors be
used, they
are of
the usual form of Tesla construction with
independent
coils or
sets of coils j
j', included, respectively,
in the circuits M M'.
These
energizing-coils
are wound on a
ring
or annular field or on
pole pieces thereon,
and
produce by
the action of the
alternating
currents
passing through
them a
progressive shifting
of the
mag-
netism from
pole
to
pole.
The
cylindrical
armature H of the
motor is wound with two coils at
right angles,
which form inde-
pendent
closed circuits.
42 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
If transformers be
employed,
one set of the
primary coils,
as
N
N,
wound on a
ring
or annular core is connected to one
circuit,
as
M',
and the other
primary coils,
N
N',
to the circuit M. The
secondary
coils K K'
may
then be utilized for
running groups
of
incandescent
lamps
p p'.
With this
generator
an exciter is
employed.
This consists of
FIG. 33.
two
poles,
A
A,
of steel
permanently magnetized,
or of iron ex-
cited
by
a
battery
or other
generator
of continuous
currents,
and
a
cylindrical
armature core
mounted on a
shaft, B,
and wound
with two
longitudinal coils,
c c'. One end of each of these coils
is connected to the
collecting-rings
I
c,
respectively,
while the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS.
43
other ends are both connected to a
ring,
a.
Collecting-brushes
b' e' bear on the
rings
b
c, respectively,
and conductors L L con-
vey
tlie currents therefrom
through
the coils E and E of the
gen-
erator, i/ is a common return-wire to brush a'. Two
indepen-
dent circuits are thus
formed,
one
including
coils c of the exciter
and E E of the
generator,
the other coils c' of the exciter and E'
E' of the
generator.
It results from this that the
operation
of
the exciter
produces
a
progressive
movement of the
magnetic
poles
of the annular field-core of the
generator,
the
shifting
or
rotary
movement of the
poles being synchronous
with the rota-
tion of the exciter armature.
Considering
the
operative
con-
ditions of a
system
thus
established,
it will be found that when
the exciter is driven so as to
energize
the field of the
generator,
the armature of the
latter,
if left free to
turn,
would rotate at a
speed practically
the same as that of the exciter. If under such
conditions the coils F F' of the
generator
armature be closed
upon
themselves or
short-circuited,
no
currents,
at least theoreti-
cally,
will be
generated
in these armature coils. In
practice
the
presence
of
slight
currents is
observed,
the existence of which
is attributable to more or less
pronounced
fluctuations in the in-
tensity
of the
magnetic poles
of the
generator ring. So,
if the
armature-coils F F' be closed
through
the
motor,
the latter will
not be turned as
long
as the movement of the
generator
armature
is
synchronous
with that of the exciter or of the
magnetic poles
of its lield.
If,
on the
contrary,
the
speed
of the
generator
arm-
ature be in
any way checked,
so that the
shifting
or rotation of
the
poles
of the field becomes
relatively
more
rapid,
currents will
be induced in the armature coils. This
obviously
follows from
the
passing
of the lines of force across the armature conductors.
The
greater
the
speed
of rotation of the
magnetic poles relatively
to that of the armature the more
rapidly
the currents
developed
in the coils of the latter will follow one
another,
and the more
rapidly
the motor will revolve in
response thereto,
and this con-
tinues until the armature
generator
is
stopped entirely,
as
by
a
brake,
when the
motor,
if
properly constructed,
runs at the
speed
with which the
magnetic poles
of the
generator
rotate.
The effective
strength
of the currents
developed
in the arma-
ture coils of the
generator
is
dependent upon
the
strength
of the
currents
energizing
the
generator
and
upon
the number of rota-
tions
per
unit of time of the
magnetic poles
of the
generator;
hence the
speed
of the motor armature will
depend
in all cases
44 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
upon
the relative
speeds
of the armature of the
generator
and of
its
magnetic poles.
For
example,
if the
poles
are turned two
thousand times
per
unit of time and the armature is turned
eight
hundred,
the motor will turn twelve hundred
times,
or
nearly
so.
Very slight
diiferences of
speed may
be indicated
by
a
delicately
balanced motor.
Let it now be assumed that
power
is
applied
to the
generator
armature to turn it in a direction
opposite
to that in which its
magnetic poles
rotate. In such case the result would be similar
to that
produced by
a
generator
the armature and field
magnets
of which are rotated in
opposite directions,
and
by
reason of these
conditions the motor armature will turn at a rate of
speed equal
to the sum of the
speeds
of the armature and
magnetic poles
of
the
generator,
so that a
comparatively
low
speed
of the
generator
armature will
produce
a
high speed
in the motor.
It will be observed in connection with this
system
that on
diminishing
the resistance of the external circuit of the
generator
armature
by checking
the
speed
of the motor or
by adding
translating
devices in
multiple
arc in the
secondary
circuit or cir-
cuits of the transformer the
strength
of the current in the arma-
ture circuit is
greatly
increased. This is due to two causes :
first,
to the
great
differences in the
speeds
of the motor and
generator,
and,
secondly,
to the fact that the
apparatus
follows the
analogy
of a
transformer, for,
in
proportion
as the resistance of the arma-
ture or
secondary
circuits is
reduced,
the
strength
of the currents
in the field or
primary
circuits of the
generator
is increased and
the currents in the armature are
augmented correspondingly.
For similar reasons the currents in the armature-coils of the
generator
increase
very rapidly
when the
speed
of the armature
is reduced when
running
in the same direction as the
magnetic
poles
or
conversely.
It will be understood from the above
description
that the
generator-armature may
be run in the direction of the
shifting
of
the
magnetic poles,
but more
rapidly,
and that in such case the
speed
of the motor will be
equal
to the difference between the
two rates.
CHAPTER VII.
FOR RoTARY CURRENT MoTORS.
AN
interesting
device for
regulating
and
reversing
has been
devised
by
Mr. Tesla for the
purpose
of
varying
the
speed
of
polyphase
motors. It consists of a form of converter or trans-
former with one element
capable
of movement with
respect
to
the
other, whereby
the inductive relations
may
be
altered,
either
manually
or
automatically,
for the
purpose
of
varying
the
strength
of the induced current. Mr. Tesla
prefers
to construct
this device in such manner that the induced or
secondary
ele-
ment
may
be movable with
respect
to the other
;
and the inven-
tion,
so far as relates
merely
to the construction of the device it-
self, consists,
essentially,
in the
combination,
with two
opposite
magnetic poles,
of an armature wound with an insulated coil and
mounted on a
shaft, whereby
it
may
be turned to the desired
extent within the field
produced by
the
poles.
The normal
po-
sition of the core of the
secondary
element is that in which it
most
completely
closes the
magnetic
circuit between the
poles
of the
primary element,
and in this
position
its coil is in its
most effective
position
for the inductive action
upon
it of the
primary
coils
;
but
by turning
the movable core to either
side,
the induced currents delivered
by
its coil become weaker
until,
by
a movement of the said core and coil
through
90,
there will
be no current delivered.
Fig.
34 is a view in side elevation of the
regulator. Fig.
35 is
a broken section on line a
1
a? of
Fig.
34.
Fig.
36 is a
diagram
illustrating
the most convenient manner of
applying
the
regulator
to
ordinary
forms of
motors,
and
Fig.
37 is a similar
diagram
illus-
trating
the
application
of the device to the Tesla
alternating-
current motors. The
regulator may
be constructed in
many
ways
to secure the desired result
;
but that which
is, perhaps,
its
best form is shown in
Figs.
34 and 35.
A
represents
a frame of iron. B B are the cores of the indue-
Iti
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA
TEKLA.
ing
or
primary
coils c c. i> is a shaft mounted on the side
bars,
D',
and on which is secured
a sectional iron
core, E,
wound with
an' induced or
secondary
coil, F,
the convolutions of which are
parallel
with the axis of the shaft. The ends of the core are
rounded
off so as to fit
closely
in the
space
between the two
poles
and
permit
the core E to be turned to and held at
any
desiivd
point.
A
handle, G,
secured to the
projecting
end of the shaft
D,
is
provided
for this
purpose.
In
Fig.
36 let n
represent
an
ordinary alternating
current
gen-
erator,
the
field-magnets
of which are excited
by
a suitable
source of
current,
i. Let j
designate
an
ordinary
form of electro-
magnetic
motor
provided
with an
armature, K,
commutator
L,
and
field-magnets
M. It is well known that such a
motor,
if its
FIG. 34.
field-magnet
cores be divided
up
into insulated
sections, may
be
practically operated by
an
alternating
current
;
but in
using
this
regulator
with such a
motor,
Mr. Tesla includes one element of
the motor
only say
the armature-coils in the main circuit of
the
generator, making
the connections
through
the brushes and
the commutator in the usual
way.
He also includes one of the
elements of the
regulator say
the
stationary
coils in the same
circuit,
and in the circuit with the
secondary
or movable coil of
the
regulator
he connects
up
the field-coils of the motor. He
also
prefers
to use flexible conductors to make the connections
from the
secondary
coil of the
regulator,
as he
thereby
avoids
the use of
sliding
contacts or
rings
without
interfering
with the
requisite
movement of the core E.
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 47
If the
regulator
be in its normal
position,
or that in which its
magnetic
circuit is most
nearly closed,
it delivers its maximum
induced
current,
the
phases
of which so
correspond
with those of
the
primary
current that the motor will run as
though
both lield
and armature were excited
by
the main current.
To
vary
the
speed
of the motor to
any
rate between the mini-
mum and maximum
rates,
the core E and coils F are turned in
either direction to an extent which
produces
the desired
result,
for in its normal
position
the convolutions of coil F embrace the
maximum number of lines of
force,
all of which act with the
same effect
upon
the coil
;
hence it will deliver its maximum
current
;
but
by turning
the coil F out of its
position
of maximum
effect the number of lines of force embraced
by
it is diminished.
The inductive effect is therefore
impaired,
and the current de-
livered
by
coil F will continue to diminish in
proportion
to the
angle
at which the coil F is turned
until,
after
passing through
FIG. 36.
an
angle
of
ninety degrees,
the convolutions of the coil will be
at
right angles
to those of coils c
c,
and the inductive effect re-
duced to a minimum.
Incidentally
to certain
constructions,
other causes
may
influ-
ence the variation in the
strength
of the induced currents. For
example,
in the
present
case it will be observed that
by
the first
movement of coil F a certain
portion
of its convolutions are carried
beyond
the line of the direct influence of the lines of
force,
and
that the
magnetic path
or circuit for the lines is
impaired ;
hence
the inductive effect would be reduced.
Next,
that after
moving
through
a certain
angle,
which is
obviously
determined
by
the
relative dimensions of the bobbin or coil
F, diagonally opposite
portions
of the coil will be
simultaneously
included in the
field,
but in such
positions
that the lines which
produce
a current-
impulse
in one
portion
of the coil in a certain direction will
pro-
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
duce in the
diagonally
opposite portion
a
corresponding impulse
in the
opposite
direction;
hence
portions
of the current will
neutralize one another.
As before
stated,
the mechanical construction of the device
may
be
greatly
varied
;
but the essential conditions of the
princi-
ple
will be fulfilled in
any apparatus
in which the movement of
the elements with
respect
to one another effects the same results
by varying
the inductive relations of the two elements in a man-
ner similar to that described.
It
may
also be stated that the core E is not
indispensable
to the
operation
of the
regulator
;
but its
presence
is
obviously
bene-
ficial. This
regulator,
however,
has another valuable
property
in its
capability
of
reversing
the
motor,
for if the coil F be turned
through
a
half-revolution,
the
position
of its convolutions rela-
tively
to the two coils c c and to the lines of force is
reversed,
and
consequently
the
phases
of the current will be reversed. This
will
produce
a rotation of the motor in an
opposite
direction.
This form of
regulator
is also
applied
with
great advantage
to
Mr. Tesla's
system
of
utilizing alternating currents,
in which the
magnetic poles
of the field of a motor are
progressively
shifted
by
means of the combined effects
upon
the field of
magnetizing
coils included in
independent circuits,
through
which
pass
alter-
nating
currents in
proper
order and relations to each other.
In
Fig.
37,
let P
represent
a Tesla
generator having
two inde-
pendent coils,
P' and
P",
on the
armature,
and T a
diagram
of a
POL7PHAHE CURRENTS. 49
motor
having
two
independent energizing
coils or sets of
coils,
R R'. One of the circuits from the
generator,
as s'
s',
includes
one
set,
R'
R',
of the
energizing
coils of the
motor,
while the
other
circuit,
as s
s,
includes the
primary
coils of the
regulator.
The
secondary
coil of the
regulator
includes the other
coils,
R
R,
of the motor.
While the
secondary
coil of the
regulator
is in its normal
posi-
tion,
it
produces
its maximum
current,
and the maximum
rotary
effect is
imparted
to the
motor;
but this effect will be diminished
in
proportion
to the
angle
at which the coil F of the
regulator
is
turned. The motor will also be reversed
by reversing
the
posi-
tion of the coil with reference to the coils c
c,
and
thereby
re-
versing
the
phases
of the current
produced by
the
generator.
This
changes
the direction of the movement of the
shifting poles
which
the armature follows.
One of the main
advantages
of this
plan
of
regulation
is its
economy
of
power.
When the induced coil is
generating
its
maximum
current,
the maximum amount of
energy
in the
prim-
ary
coils is absorbed
;
but as the induced coil is turned from its
normal
position
the self-induction of the
primary-coils
reduces
the
expenditure
of
energy
and saves
power.
It is obvious that in
practice
either coils c <: or coil v
may
be
used as
primary
or
secondary,
and it is well understood that their
relative
proportions may
be varied to
produce any
desired differ-
ence or similarity in the
inducing
and induced currents.
CHAPTER VIII.
SINGLE
CIRCUIT,
SELF-STARTING SYNCHRONIZING MOTORS.
In the first
chapters
of this section we
have, bearing
in mind
the broad
underlying principle,
considered a distinct class of mo-
tors, namely,
such as
require
for their
operation
a
special genera-
tor
capable
of
yielding
currents of
differing phase.
As a matter
of
course,
Mr. Tesla
recognizing
the
desirability
of
utilizing
his
motors in connection with
ordinary systems
of
distribution,
ad-
dressed himself to the task of
inventing
various methods and
ways
of
achieving
this
object.
In the
succeeding chapters,
therefore,
we witness the evolution of a number of ideas
bearing
upon
this
important
branch of work. It must be obvious to
a careful
reader,
from a number of hints encountered here and
there,
that even the inventions described in these
chapters
to fol-
low do not
represent
the full
scope
of the work done in these
lines.
They might, indeed,
be
regarded
as
exemplifications.
We will
present
these various inventions in the order which
to us
appears
the most
helpful
to an
understanding
of the
subject
by
the
majority
of readers. It will be
naturally perceived
that
in
offering
a series of ideas of this
nature,
wherein some of the
steps
or links are
missing,
the
descriptions
are not
altogether
se-
quential;
but
any
one who follows
carefully
the main drift of
the
thoughts
now
brought together
will find that a
satisfactory
comprehension
of the
principles
can be
gained.
As is well
known,
certain forms of
alternating-current
machines
have the
property,
when connected in circuit with an
alternating
current
generator,
of
running
as a motor in
synchronism
there-
with
; but,
while the
alternating
current will run the motor after
it has attained a rate of
speed synchronous
with that of the
gen-
erator,
it will not start it.
Hence,
in all instances heretofore
where these
"
synchronizing motors,"
as
they
are
termed,
have
been
run,
some means have been
adopted
to
bring
the motors
up
to
synchronism
with the
generator,
or
approximately so,
before
the
alternating
current of the
generator
is
applied
to drive them.
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 51
In some instances mechanical
appliances
have been utilized for
this
purpose.
In others
special
and
complicated
forms of motor
have been constructed. Mr. Tesla has discovered a much more
simple
method or
plan
of
operating synchronizing motors,
which
requires practically
no other
apparatus
than the motor itself. In
other
words, by
a certain
change
in the circuit connections of the
motor he converts it at will from a double circuit
motor,
or such
as have been
already described,
and which will start under the
action of an
alternating current,
into a
synchronizing motor,
or
one which will be run
by
the
generator only
when it has reached
a certain
speed
of rotation
synchronous
with that of the
genera-
tor. In this manner he is enabled to extend
very greatly
the
ap-
plications
of his
system
and to secure all the
advantages
of both
forms of
alternating
current motor.
The
expression
"
synchronous
with that of the
generator,"
is
used here in its
ordinary acceptation
that is to
say,
a motor is
said to
synchronize
with the
generator
when it
preserves
a certain
relative
speed
determined
by
its number of
poles
and the number
of alternations
produced per
revolution of the
generator.
Its
actual
speed, therefore, may
be faster or slower than that of the
generator;
but it is said to be
synchronous
so
long
as it
preserves
the same relative
speed.
In
carrying
out this invention Mr. Tesla constructs a motor
which has a
strong tendency
to
synchronism
with the
generator.
The construction
preferred
is that in which the armature is
pro-
vided with
polar projections.
The
field-magnets
are wound with
two sets of
coils,
the terminals of which are connected to a switch
mechanism, by
means of which the line-current
may
be carried
directly through
these coils or
indirectly through paths by
which its
phases
are modified. To start such a
motor,
the switch
is turned on to a set of contacts which includes in one motor
circuit a dead
resistance,
in the other an inductive
resistance, and,
the two circuits
being
in
derivation,
it is obvious that the differ-
ence in
phase
of the current in such circuits will set
up
a rotation
of the motor. When the
speed
of. the motor has thus been
brought
to the desired rate the switch is shifted to throw the
main current
directly through
the
motor-circuits,
and
although
the currents in both circuits will now be of the same
phase
the
motor will continue to
revolve, becoming
a true
synchronous
motor. To secure
greater efficiency,
the armature or its
polar
projections
are wound with coils closed on themselves.
53
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
In the
accompanying
diagrams, Fig.
38 illustrates
the details
of the
plan
above set
forth,
and
Figs.
39 and 40 modifications
of the same.
Referring
to
Fig.
38,
let A
designate
the
neld-magnets
of a
FK;S.
:
motor,
the
polar projections
of which are wound with coils is c
included in
independent circuits,
and D the armature with
polar
projections
wound with coils E closed
upon
themselves,
the
motor in these
respects being
similar in construction to those
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 53
described
already,
but
having
OH account of the
polar projections
on the armature
core,
or other similar and well-known
features,
the
properties
of a
synch ronizing-motor.
L i/
represents
the
conductors of a line from an
alternating
current
generator
<j.
Near the motor is
placed
a switch the action of which is that
of the one shown in the
diagrams,
which is constructed as fol-
lows : F F' are two
conducting plates
or
arms, pivoted
at their
ends and connected
by
an
insulating
cross-bar, H,
so as to be
shifted in
parallelism.
In the
path
of the bars F F
7
is the contact
2,
which forms one terminal of the circuit
through
coils
c,
and
the contact
4,
which is one terminal of the circuit
through
coils
B. The
opposite
end of the wire of coils c is connected to the
wire L or bar F'
,
and the
corresponding
end of coils B is connected
to wire i/ and bar
F;
hence if the bars be shifted so as to bear on
contacts 2 and 4 both sets of coils B c: will be included in the cir-
cuit L i/ in
multiple
arc or derivation. In the
path
of the levers
F F' are two other contact
terminals,
L and 3. The contact 1 is
connected to contact 2
through
an artificial
resistance, i,
and con-
tact 3 with contact 4
through
a self-induction
coil, j,
so that when
the switch levers are shifted
upon
the
points
] and 3 the circuits
of coils B and c will be connected in
multiple
arc or derivation to
the circuit L
i/,
and will include the resistance and self-induction
coil
respectively.
A third
position
of the switch is that in which
the levers F and F' are shifted out of contact with both sets of
points.
In this case the motor is
entirely
out of circuit.
The
purpose
and manner of
operating
the motor
by
these de-
vices are as follows : The normal
position
of the
switch,
the
motor
being
out of
circuit,
is off the contact
points. Assuming
the
generator
to be
running,
and that it is desired to start the
motor,
the switch is shifted until its levers rest
upon points
1 and
3. The two motor-circuits are thus connected with the
generator
circuit
;
but
by
reason of the
presence
of the resistance i in one
and the self-induction coil j in the other the coincidence of the
phases
of the current is disturbed
sufficiently
to
produce
a
pro-
gression
of the
poles,
which starts the motor in rotation. When
tl.'e
speed
of the motor has run
up
to
synchronism
with the
generator,
or
approximately so,
the switch is shifted over
upon
the
points
2 and
4,
thus
cutting
out the coils i and
j,
so that the
currents in both circuits have the same
phase;
but the motor
now runs as a
synchronous
motor.
It will be understood that when
brought up
to
speed
the mo
r>4
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tor will run with
only
one of the circuits B or c connected
with
the main or
generator
circuit,
or the two circuits
may
be con-
nected
in series.
This latter
plan
is
preferable
when a current
having
a
high
number of alternations
per
unit of time is em-
ployed
to drive the motor.
In such case the
starting
of the
motor is more
difficult,
and the dead and inductive resistances
must take
up
a considerable
proportion
of the electromotive
force of the circuits.
Generally
the conditions are so
adjusted
that the electromotive
force used in each of the motor circuits is
that which is
required
to
operate
the motor when its circuits are
in series. The
plan
followed
in this case is illustrated in
Fig.
39. In this instance the motor has twelve
poles
and the arma-
ture has
polar projections
D wound with closed coils E. The
switch used is of
substantially
the same construction as that
shown in the
previous figure.
There
are, however,
five
contacts,
designated
as
5, 6, 7, 8,
and 9. The motor-circuits B
c,
which in-
clude alternate
field-coils,
are connected to the terminals in the
following
order : One end of circuit c is connected to contact 9
and to contact 5
through
a dead
resistance,
i. One terminal of
circuit B is connected to contact 7 and to contact 6
through
a
self-induction
coil,
J. The
opposite
terminals of both circuits are
connected to contact 8.
One of the
levers,
as
F,
of the switch is made with an exten-
sion, /,
or
otherwise,
so as to cover both contacts 5 and 6 when
shifted into the
position
to start the motor. It will be observed
that when in this
position
and with lever F' on contact 8 the cur-
rent divides between the two circuits B
c,
which from their dif-
ference in electrical character
produce
a
progression
of the
poles
that starts the motor in rotation. When the motor has attained
the
proper speed,
the switch is shifted so that the levers cover
the contacts 7 and
9, thereby connecting
circuits B and c in se-
ries. It is found that
by
this
disposition
the motor is maintained
in rotation in
synchronism
with the
generator.
This
principle
of
operation,
which consists in
converting by
a
change
of con-
nections or otherwise a double-circuit
motor,
or one
operating by
a
progressive shifting
of the
poles,
into an
ordinary synchroniz-
ing
motor
may
be carried out in
many
other
ways.
For
instance,
instead of
using
the switch shown in the
previous figures,
we
may
use a
temporary ground
circuit between the
generator
and
motor,
in order to start the
motor,
in
substantially
the manner
indicated in
Fig.
40. Let G in this
figure represent
an
ordinary
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 55
alternating-current generator with, say,
two
poles,
M
M',
and an
armature wound with two
coils,
N
N',
at
right angles
and con-
nected in series. The motor
has,
for
example,
four
poles
wound
with coils B
c,
which are connected in
series,
and an armature
with
polar projections
D wound with closed coils E E. From the
common
joint
or union between the two circuits of both the
gen-
erator and the motor an earth connection is
established,
while
the terminals or ends of these circuits are connected to the
line.
Assuming
that the motor is a
synchronizing
motor or one
that has the
capability
of
running
in
synchronism
with the
gen-
erator,
but not of
starting,
it
may
be started
by
the above-
described
apparatus by closing
the
ground
connection from both
generator
and motor. The
system
thus becomes one with a two-
circuit
generator
and
motor,
the
ground forming
a common re-
turn for the currents in the two circuits L and i/. When
by
this
arrangement
of circuits the motor is
brought
to
speed,
the
ground
connection is broken between the motor or
generator,
or
both, ground-switches
PP'
being employed
for this
purpose.
The motor then runs as a
synchronizing
motor.
In
describing
the main features which constitute this invention
illustrations have
necessarily
been omitted of the
appliances
used
in
conjunction
with the electrical devices of similar
systems
such,
for
instance,
as
driving-belts,
fixed and loose
pulleys
for the
motor,
and the like
;
but these are matters well understood.
Mr. Tesla believes he is the first to
operate electro-magnetic
motors
by alternating
currents in
any
of the
ways
herein described
that is to
say, by producing
a
progressive
movement or rota-
tion of their
poles
or
points
of
greatest magnetic
attraction
by
the
alternating
currents until
they
have reached a
given speed,
and then
by
the same currents
producing
a
simple
alternation of
their
poles, or,
in other
words, by
a
change
in the order or char-
acter of the circuit connections to convert a motor
operating
on
one
principle
to one
operating
on another.
CHAPTER
IX.
CHANGE FROM DOUBLE CURRENT TO SINGLE CURRENT MOTOR.
A DESCRIPTION is
given
elsewhere of a method of
operating
al-
ternating
current motors
by
first
rotating
their
magnetic poles
until
they
have attained
synchronous speed,
and then
alternating
the
poles.
The motor is thus
transformed, by
a
simple change
of circuit connections from one
operated by
the action of two or
more
independent energizing
currents to one
operated
either
by
a
single
current or
by
several currents
acting
as one. Another
way
of
doing
this will now be described.
At the start the
magnetic poles
of one element or field of the
motor are
progressively
shifted
by alternating
currents
differing
in
phase
and
passed through independent energizing circuits,
and
short circuit the coils of the other element. When the motor
thus started reaches or
passes
the limit of
speed synchronous
with
the
generator,
Mr. Tesla connects
up
the coils
previously
short-cir-
cuited with a source of direct current and
by
a
change
of the cir-
cuit connections
produces
a
simple
alternation of the
poles.
The
motor then continues to run in
synchronism
with the
generator.
The motor here shown in
Fig.
41 is one of the
ordinary forms,
with
field-cores either laminated or solid and with a
cylindrical
lamin-
ated armature
wound,
for
example,
with the coils A B at
right angles.
The shaft of the armature carries three
collecting
or contact
rings
c D E.
(Shown,
for better
illustration,
as of different
diameters.)
One end of coil A connects to one
ring,
as
c,
and one end of
coil B connects with
ring
D. The
remaining
ends are connected
to
ring
E.
Collecting springs
or brushes F G H bear
upon
the
rings
and lead to the contacts of a
switch,
to be
presently
de-
scribed. The field-coils have their terminals in
binding-posts
K
K,
and
may
be either closed
upon
themselves or connected w
r
ith
a source of direct current
L, by
means of a switch M. The main
or
controlling
switch has five contacts a b c d e and two
levers/
g, pivoted
and connected
by
an
insulating
cross-bar
A,
so as to
move in
parallelism.
These levers are connected to the line
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 5?
wires from a source of
alternating
currents N. Contact a is con-
nected to brush o and coil B
through
a dead resistance R and
wire P. Contact b is connected with brush F and coil A
through
a self-induction coil s and wire o. Contacts c and e are connected
to brushes <;
F, respectively, through
the wires P
o,
and contact
<l is
directly
connected with brush H. The lever
/has
a widened
end,
which
may span
the contacts a 1>. When in such
position
and with lever
g
on contact
d,
the
alternating
currents divide be-
tween the two
motor-coils,
and
by
reason of their different self-
induction a difference of
current-phase
is obtained that starts the
motor in rotation. In
starting,
the field-coils are short cir
cuited.
When the motor has attained the desired
speed,
the switch is
shifted to the
position
shown in dotted lines that is to
say,
with
the levers
fg resting
on
points
c e. This connects
up
the two
armature coils in
series,
and the motor will then run as a
syn-
chronous motor. The field-coils are thrown into circuit with the
direct current source when the main switch is shifted.
CHAPTER X.
MOTOR WITH
"
CURRENT LAG" ARTIFICIALLY SECURED.
ONE of the
general
ways
followed
by
Mr. Tesla in
developing
his
rotary phase
motors is to
produce practically independent
currents
differing primarily
in
phase
and to
pass
these
through
the
motor-circuits.
Another
way
is to
produce
a
single alternating
current,
to divide it between the
motor-circuits,
and to effect
artificially
a
lag
in one of these circuits or
branches,
as
by
giving
to the circuits different self-inductive
capacity,
and in
other
ways.
In the former
case,
in which the
necessary
differ-
ence of
phase
is
primarily
effected in the
generation
of
currents,
in some
instances,
the currents are
passed through
the
energizing
coils of both elements of the motor the field and armature
;
but
a further result or modification
may
be obtained
by doing
this
under the conditions hereinafter
specified
in the case of motors
in which the
lag,
as above
stated,
is
artificially
secured.
Figs.
42 to
4T, inclusive,
are
diagrams
of different
ways
in which
the invention is carried out
;
and
Fig.
48,
a side view of a foam
of motor used
by
Mr. Tesla for this
purpose.
A B in
Fig.
42 indicate the two
energizing
circuits of a
motor,
and c D two circuits on the armature. Circuit or coil A is con-
nected in series with circuit or coil
c,
and the two circuits B D are
similarly
connected. Between coils A and c is a
contact-ring
,
forming
one terminal of the
latter,
and a brush
, forming
one
terminal of the former. A
ring
d and brush c
similarly
connect
coils B and D. The
opposite
terminals of the field-coils connect
to one
binding post
h of the
motor,
and those of the armature
coils are
similarly
connected to the
opposite binding post
i
through
a
contact-ringf
and brush
g.
Thus each motor-circuit while in
derivation to the other includes one armature and one field coil.
These circuits are of different
self-induction,
and
may
be made
so in various
ways.
For the sake of
clearness,
an artificial re-
sistance R is shown in one of these
circuits,
and in the other a
self-induction coil s. When an
alternating
current is
passed
POLYPHASE CURRENTS.
through
this motor it divides between its two
energizing-circuits.
The
higher
self-induction of one circuit
produces
a
greater
re-
tardation or
lag
in the current therein than in the other. The
difference of
phase
between the two currents effects the rotation
or
shifting
of the
points
of maximum
magnetic
effect that secures
t www
HM5&RJT *& nffiMT
|
^ l&t-*--*
FIGS.
42,
43 and 44.
the rotation of the armature. In certain
respects
this
plan
of in-
cluding
both armature and field coils in circuit is a marked im-
provement.
Such a motor has a
good torque
at
starting
; yet
it
has also considerable
tendency
to
synchronism, owing
to the fact
60 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
that when
properly
constructed
the maximum
magnetic
effects in
both armature and field coincide a condition which in the usual
construction of these motors with closed armature coils is not
readily
attained. The motor thus constructed
exhibits
too,
a
better
regulation
of current from no load to
load,
and there is
less difference between the
apparent
and real
energy expended
in
running
it. The true
synchronous
speed
of this form of motor
is that of the
generator
when both are alike that is to
say,
if
the number of the coils on the armature and on the field is
a?,
the
motor will run
normally
at the same
speed
as a
generator
driving
Uv^-^Mfa^
Lum'
Fms.
45,
46 and 47.
it if the number of field
magnets
or
poles
of the same be also or.
Fig.
43 shows a somewhat modified
arrangement
of circuits.
There is in this case but one armature coil
E,
the
winding
of
which maintains effects
corresponding
to the resultant
poles pro-
duced
by
the two field-circuits.
Fig.
44
represents
a
disposition
in which both armature and
field are wound with two sets of
coils,
all in
multiple
arc to the
line or main circuit. The armature coils are wound to corre-
spond
with the field-coils with
respect
to their self-induction. A
modification of this
plan
is shown in
Fig.
45 that is to
say,
the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS 61
two field coils and two armature coils are in derivation to them-
selves and in series with one another. The armature coils in
this
case,
as in the
previous figure,
are wound for different self-
induction to
correspond
with the field coils.
Another modification is shown in
Fig.
46. In this case
only
one
armature-coil,
as
D,
is included in the
line-circuit,
while the
other,
as
c,
is short-circuited.
In such a
disposition
as that shown in
Fig. 43,
or where
only
one armature-coil is
employed,
the
torque
on the start is some-
what
reduced,
while the
tendency
to
synchronism
is somewhat
FIG. 48.
increased. In such a
disposition
as shown in
Fig. 4H,
the
oppo-
site conditions would exist. In both
instances, however,
there
is the
advantage
of
dispensing
with one
contact-ring.
In
Fig.
4(5 the two field-coils and the armature-coil D are in
multiple
arc. In
Fig.
47 this
disposition
is
modified,
coil D be-
ing
shown in series with the two field-coils.
Fig.
48 is an outline of the
general
form of motor in which
this invention is embodied. The circuit connections between
the armature and field coils are
made,
as indicated in the
previ-
ous
figures, through
brushes and
rings,
which are not shown.
CHAPTER XI.
ANOTHER METHOD OF TRANSFORMATION FROM A
TORQUE
TO A
SYNCHRONIZING MOTOR.
IN a
preceding chapter
we have described a method
by
which
Mr. Tesla
accomplishes
the
change
in his
type
of
rotating
field
motor from a
torque
to a
synchronizing
motor. As will be ob-
served,
the desired end is there reached
by
a
change
in the cir-
cuit connections at the
proper
moment. We will now
proceed
to describe another
way
of
bringing
about the same result. The
principle
involved in this method is as follows :
If an
alternating
current be
passed through
the field coils
only
of a motor
having
two
energizing
circuits of different self-induc-
tion and the armature coils be
short-circuited,
the motor will have
a
strong torque,
but little or no
tendency
to
synchronism
with
the
generator ;
but if the same current which
energizes
the field
be
passed
also
through
the armature coils the
tendency
to remain
in
synchronism
is
very considerably
increased. This is due to
the fact that the maximum
magnetic
effects
produced
in the field
and armature more
nearly
coincide. On this
principle
Mr.
Tesla constructs a motor
having independent
field circuits of
different
self-induction,
which are
joined
in derivation to a
source of
alternating
currents. The armature is wound with one
or more
coils,
which are connected with the field coils
through
contact
rings
and
brushes,
and around the armature coils a shunt
is
arranged
with means for
opening
or
closing
the same. In start-
ing
this motor the shunt is closed around the armature
coils,
which will therefore be in closed circuit. When the current is
directed
through
the
motor,
it divides between the two
circuits,
(it
is not
necessary
to consider
any
case where there are more
than two circuits
used), which, by
reason of their different self-
induction,
secure a difference of
phase
between the two currents
in the two
branches,
that
produces
a
shifting
or rotation of the
of the
poles. By
the alternations of
current,
other currents are
induced in the closed or
short-circuited armature coils and the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 63
motor has a
strong torque.
When the desired
speed
is
reached,
the shunt around the armature-coils is
opened
and the current
directed
through
both armature and field coils. Under these
conditions the motor has a
strong tendency
to
synchronism.
In
Fig.
49,
A and B
designate
the field coils of the motor. As
the circuits
including
these coils are of different
self-induction,
this is
represented by
a resistance coil R in circuit with
A,
and a
FKJS. 49
(
50 and 51.
self-induction coil s in circuit with B. The same result
may
of
course be secured
by
the
winding
of the coils, c is the armature
circuit,
the terminals of which are
rings
a J. Brushes c d bear
on these
rings
and connect with the line and field circuits. D is
the shunt or short circuit around the armature. E is the switch
in the shunt.
It will be observed that in such a
disposition
as is illustrated in
vi INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Fig. 49,
the field circuits A and B
being
of different
self-induction,
there will
always
be a
greater lag
of the current in one than the
other,
and
that, generally,
the armature
phases
will not corre-
spond
with
either,
but with the resultant of both. It is therefore
important
to observe the
proper
rule in
winding
the armature.
For
instance,
if the motor have
eight poles
four in each circuit
there will be four resultant
poles,
and hence the armature
winding
should be such as to
produce
four
poles,
in order to con-
stitute a true
synchronizing
motor.
The
diagram, Fig.
50,
differs from the
previous
one
only
in
respect
to the order of connections. In the
present
case the arm-
ature-coil,
instead of
being
in series with the
field-coils,
is in mul-
tiple
arc therewith. The armature-
winding may
be similar to
that of the field that is to
say,
the armature
may
have two or
more coils wound or
adapted
for different self-induction and
FIG. 52.
adapted, preferably,
to
produce
the same difference of
phase
as the field-coils. On
starting
the motor the shunt
is closed around both coils. This is shown in
Fig.
51,
in
which the armature coils are K <;. To indicate their different
electrical,
character,
there are shown in circuit with
them, respect-
ively,
the resistance R' and the
self-induction coil s'. The two
armature coils are in series with the field-coils and the same dis-
position
of the shunt or
short-circuit u is used. It is of advan-
tage
in the
operation
of motors of this kind to construct or wind
the armature in such manner that when
short-circuited on the
start it will have a
tendency
to reach a
higher speed
than that
which
synchronizes
with the
generator.
For
example,
a
given
motor
having, say,
eight poles
should
run,
with the armature coil
short-circuited,
at two
thousand
revolutions
per
minute to
bring
it
up
to
synchronism.
It will
generally happen, however,
tha't
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 65
this
speed
is not
reached,
owing
to the fact that the armature
and field currents do not
properly correspond,
so that when the
current is
passed through
the armature
(the
motor not
being
quite up
to
synchronism)
there is a
liability
that it will not "hold
on,"
as it is termed. It is
preferable, therefore,
to so wind or
construct the motor that on the
start,
when the armature coils
are
short-circuited,
the motor will tend to reach a
speed higher
than the
synchronous
as for
instance,
double the latter. In
such case the
difficulty
above alluded to is not
felt,
for the mo-
tor will
always
hold
up
to
synchronism
if the
synchronous speed
in the case
supposed
of two thousand revolutions is reached or
passed.
This
may
be
accomplished
in various
ways ;
but for all
practical purposes
the
following
will suffice : On the armature
are wound two sets of coils. At the start
only
one of these is
Fm. 53.
short-circuited, thereby producing
a number of
poles
on the ar-
mature,
which will tend to run the
speed up
above the
synchron-
ous limit. When such limit is reached or
passed,
the current is
directed
through
the other
coil, which, by increasing
the number
<>f armature
poles,
tends to maintain
synchronism.
In
Fig.
52,
such a
disposition
is shown. The motor
having,
say, eight poles
contains two field-circuits A and
B,
of different
self-induction. The armature has two coils F and G. The former
is closed
upon itself,
the latter connected with the field and line
through contact-rings
a
5,
brushes G
d,
and a switch K. On the
start the coil F alone is active and the motor tends to run at a
speed
above the
synchronous;
but when the coil G is connected
to the circuit the number of armature
poles
is
increased,
while
the motor is made a true
synchronous
motor. This
disposition
66 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
has the
advantage
that the closed armature-circuit
imparts
to the
motor
torque
when the
speed
falls
off,
but at the same time the
conditions are such that the motor comes out of
synchronism
more
readily.
To increase the
tendency
to
synchronism,
two
circuits
may
be used on the
armature,
one of which is short-cir-
cuited on the start and both connected with the external circuit
after the
synchronous speed
is reached or
passed.
This
disposi-
tion is shown in
Fig.
53. There are three
contact-rings
a b e
and three brushes c d
f,
which connect the armature circuits
with the external circuit. ( )n
starting,
the switch H is turned to
complete
the connection between one
binding-post
p and the field-
coils. This short-circuits one of the
armature-coils,
as G. The
other coil F is out of circuit and
open.
When the motor is
up
to
speed,
the switch H is turned
back,
so that the connection
from
binding-post
p to the field coils is
through
the coil
G,
and
switch K is
closed, thereby including
coil F in
multiple
arc with
the field coils. Both armature coils arethus active.
From the above-described instances it is evident that
many
other
dispositions
for
carrying
out the invention are
possible.
CHAPTER XII.
"
MAGNETIC LAG
"
MOTOK.
THE
following description
deals with another form of
motor,
namely, depending
on
"
magnetic lag
"
or
hysteresis,
its
peculiar-
ity being
that in it the attractive effects or
phases
while
lagging
behind the
phases
of current which
produce them,
are mani-
fested
simultaneously
and not
successively.
The
phenomenon
utilized thus at an
early stage by
Mr.
Tesla,
was not
generally
believed in
by
scientific
men,
and Prof.
Ayrton
was
probably
iirst to advocate it or to elucidate the reason of its
supposed
ex-
istence.
Fig.
54- is a side view of the
motor,
in elevation.
Fig.
55 is
a
part-sectional
view at
right angles
to
Fig.
54.
Fig.
56 is an
end view
T
in elevation and
part
section of a
modification,
and
Fig.
57 is a similar view of another modification.
In
Figs.
54 and
55,
A
designates
a base or
stand,
and B B
the
supporting-frame
of the motor. Bolted to the
supporting-
frame are two
magnetic
cores or
pole-pieces
c
c',
of iron or
soft steel. These
may
be subdivided or
laminated,
in which
case hard iron or steel
plates
or bars should be
used,
or
they
should be wound with closed coils. D is a circular disc arma-
ture,
built
up
of sections or
plates
of iron and mounted in the
frame between the
pole-pieces
c
c',
curved to conform to the
circular
shape
thereof. This disc
may
be wound with a number
of closed coils E. v F are the main
energizing coils, supported
by
the
supporting-frame,
so as to include within their
magnet-
izing
influence both the
pole-pieces
c c' and the armature i>.
The
pole-pieces
c c'
project
out
beyond
the coils F F on
op-
posite sides,
as indicated in the
drawings.
If an
alternating
current be
passed through
the coils F
F,
rotation of the arma-
ture will be
produced,
and this rotation is
explained by
the
following apparent action,
or mode of
operation
: An
impulse
of current in the coils F F establishes two
polarities
in the mo-
tor. The
protruding
end of
pole-piece
c,
for
instance,
will be
68
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
of one
sign,
and the
corresponding
end of
pole-piece
c will be
of the
opposite sign.
The armature also exhibits
two
poles.
at
right angles
to the coils r
F,
like
poles
to those in the
pole-
pieces being
011 the same side of the coils. While the current
is
flowing
there is no
appreciable
tendency
to rotation devel-
oped ;
but after each current
impulse
ceases or
begins
to
fall,
the
magnetism
in the armature and in the ends of the
pole-
pieces
c c'
lags
or continues to manifest
itself,
which
produces
a
rotation of the armature
by
the
repellent
force between the
more
closely approximating points
of maximum
magnetic
effect.
This effect is continued
by
the reversal of
current,
the
polari-
ties of field and armature
being simply
reversed.
One or both
of the elements
the armature or field
may
be wound with
FIG. 54
closed induced coils to
intensify
this effect.
Although
in the
illustrations but one of the fields is
shown,
each element of the
motor
really
constitutes a
field,
wound with the closed
coils,
the currents
being
induced
mainly
in those convolutions or coils
which are
parallel
to the coils r F.
A modified form of this motor is shown in
Fig.
5(5. In this
form G is one of two standards that
support
the
bearings
for
the armature-shaft. H H are
uprights
or sides of a
frame,
prefer-
ably magnetic,
the ends c c' of which are bent in the manner
indicated,
to conform to the
shape
of the armature D and form
field-magnet poles.
The construction of the armature
may
be
the same as in the
previous figure,
or it
may
be
simply
a
mag-
netic disc or
cylinder,
as
shown,
and a coil or coils F F are se-
POLYPHASE CURRENT*. 69
cured in
position
to surround both the armature and the
poles
c c'. The armature is detachable from its
shaft,
the latter
being
passed through
the armature after it has been inserted in
posi-
tion. The
operation
of this form of motor is the same in
prin-
ciple
as that
previously
described and needs no further
explana-
tion.
One of the most
important
features in
alternating
current
motors
is, however,
that
they
should be
adapted
to and
capable
of
running efficiently
on the
alternating
circuits in
present use,
in which almost without
exception
the
generators yield
a
very
high
number of alternations. Such a
motor,
of the
type
under
consideration,
Mr. Tesla has
designed by
a
development
of the
principle
of the motor shown in
Fig. 56, making
a
multipolar
motor,
which is illustrated in
Fig.
57. In the construction of
FIG. 56. FIG. 57.
this motor he
employs
an annular
magnetic
frame
j,
with in-
wardly-extending
ribs or
projections K,
the ends of which all
bend or turn in one direction and are
generally shaped
to con-
form to the curved surface of the armature. Coils F F are wound
from one
part
K to the one next
adjacent,
the ends or
loops
of
each coil or
group
of wires
being
carried over toward the
shaft,
so as to form
y-shaped groups
of convolutions at each end of the
armature. The
pole-pieces
C
C', being substantially
concentric
with the
armature,
form
ledges, along
which the coils are laid
and should
project
to some extent
beyond
the the
coils,
as shown.
The
cylindrical
or drum armature D is of the same construction
as in the other motors
described,
and is mounted to rotate within
the annular frame j and 1 Jetween the
U-shaped
ends or bends of
70 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
the coils F. The coils F are connected in
multiple
or in series
with a source of
alternating
currents,
and are so wound that
with a current or current
impulse
of
given
direction
they
will
make the alternate
pole-pieces
c of one
polarity
and the other
pole-pieces
c' of the
opposite polarity.
The
principle
of the
operation
of this motor is the same as the other above de-
scribed, for, considering any
two
pole-pieces
c
c',
a current
impulse passing
in the coil which
bridges
them or is wound
over both tends to establish
polarities
in their ends of
opposite
sign
and to set
up
in the armature core between them a
polarity
of the same
sign
as that of the nearest
pole-piece
c.
Upon
the
fall or cessation of the current
impulse
that established these
polarities
the
magnetism
which
lags
behind the current
phase,
and which continues to manifest itself in the
polar projections
c c' and the
armature, produces by repulsion
a rotation of the
armature. The effect is continued
by
each reversal of the cur-
rent. What occurs in the case of one
pair
of
pole-pieces
occurs
simultaneously
in
all,
so that the
tendency
to rotation of the
armature is measured
by
the sum of all the forces exerted
by
the
pole-pieces,
as above described. In this motor also the
mag-
netic
lag
or effect is intensified
by winding
one or both cores
with closed induced 'coils. The armature core is shown as thus
wound. When closed coils are
used,
the cores should be lamin-
ated.
It is evident that a
pulsatory
as well as an
alternating
current
might
be used to drive or
operate
the motors above described.
It will be understood that the
degree
of
subdivision,
the mass
of the iron in the
cores,
their size and the number of alternations
in the current
employed
to run the
motor,
must be taken into
consideration in order to
properly
construct this motor. In other
words,
in all such motors the
proper
relations between the num-
ber of alternations and the
mass, size,
or
quality
of the iron must
be
preserved
in order to secure the best results.
CHAPTEE XIII.
METHOD OF OBTAINING DIFFERENCE OF PHASE BY MAGNETIC
SHIELDING.
IN that class of motors in which two or more sets of
energizing
magnets
are
employed,
and in which
by
artificial means a certain
interval of time is made to
elapse
between the
respective
max-
imum or minimum
periods
or
phases
of their
magnetic
attraction
or
effect,
the interval or difference in
phase
between the two sets
of
magnets
is limited in extent. It is
desirable, however,
for the
economical
working
of such motors that the
strength
or attraction
of one set of
magnets
should be
maximum,
at the time when that
of the other set is
minimum,
and
conversely ;
but these conditions
have not heretofore been realized
except
in cases where the two
currents have been obtained from
independent
sources in the
same or different machines. Mr. Tesla has therefore devised a
motor
embodying
conditions that
approach
more
nearly
the theo-
retical
requirements
of
perfect working,
or in other
words,
he
produces artificially
a difference of
magnetic phase by
means of
a current from a
single primary
source sufficient in extent to
meet the
requirements
of
practical
and economical
working.
He
employs
a motor with two sets of
energizing
or field
magnets,
each wound with coils connected with a source of
alternating
or
rapidly-varying currents,
but
forming
two
separate paths
or
circuits. The
magnets
of one set are
protected
to a certain ex-
tent from the
energizing
action of the current
by
means of a
magnetic
shield or screen
interposed
between the
magnet
and its
energizing
coil. This shield is
properly adapted
to the conditions
of
particular cases,
so as to shield or
protect
the main core from
magnetization
until it has become itself saturated and no
longer
capable
of
containing
all the lines of force
produced by
the cur-
rent. It will be seen that
by
this means the
energizing
action
begins
in the
protected
set of
magnets
a certain
arbitrarily-
determined
period
of time later than in the
other,
and that
by
this means alone or in
conjunction
with other means or devices
72 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
heretofore
employed
a
practical
difference of
magnetic
phase
may readily
be secured.
Fig.
58 is a view of a
motor, partly
in
section,
with a dia-
gram
illustrating
the invention.
Fig.
59 is a similar view of a
modification of the same.
In
Fig.
58,
which exhibits the
simplest
form of the
invention,
A A is the
field-magnet
of a
motor, having, say, eight poles
or
inwardly-projecting
cores B and c. The cores B form one set of
magnets
and are
energized by
coils D. The cores
c, forming
the other set are
energized by
coils
E,
and the coils are
connected, preferablv,
in series with one
another,
in two de-
rived or branched
circuits,
r
o, respectively,
from a suitable
source of current. Each coil E is surrounded
by
a
magnetic
shield
n,
which is
preferably composed
of an
annealed, insulated,
FIG. 58. FIG. 59.
or oxidized iron wire
wrapped
or wound on the coils in the man-
ner indicated so as to form a closed
magnetic
circuit around the
coils and between the same and the
magnetic
cores c. Be-
tween the
pole pieces
or cores B c is mounted the- armature
K,
which,
as is usual in this
type
of
machines,
is wound with coils
L closed
upon
themselves. The
operation resulting
from this
disposition
is as follows: If a current
impulse
be directed
through
the two circuits of the
motor,
it will
quickly energize
the cores
B,
but not so the cores
c,
for the reason that in
passing through
the coils E there is encountered the influence
of the closed
magnetic
circuits formed
by
the shields H. The
first effect is to retard
effectively
the current
impulse
in circuit
G,
while at the same time the
proportion
of current which does
pass
does not
magnetize
the cores
c,
which are shielded or
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 73
screened
by
the shields H. As the
increasing
electromotive
force then
urges
more current
through
the coils
E,
the iron wire
H becomes
magnetically
saturated and
incapable
of
carrying
all
the lines of
force,
and hence ceases to
protect
the cores
c,
which
becomes
magnetized, developing
their maximum effect after an
interval of time
subsequent
to the similar manifestation of
strength
in the other set of
magnets,
the extent of which is
arbitrarily
determined
by
the thickness of the shield
H,
and other well-un-
derstood conditions.
From the above it will be seen that the
apparatus
or device
acts in two
ways. First, by retarding
the
current, and, second,
by retarding
the
magnetization
of one set of the
cores,
from
which its effectiveness will
readily appear.
Many
modifications of the
principle
of this invention are
pos-
sible. One useful and efficient
application
of the invention is
shown in
Fig.
59. In this
figure
a motor is shown similar in all
respects
to that above
described, except
that the iron wire
H,
which
is
wrapped
around the coils
E,
is in this case connected in series
with the coils D. The iron-wire coils
H,
are connected and
wound,
so as to have little or no
self-induction,
and
being
added to the
resistance of the circuit
F,
the action of the current in that cir-
cuit will be
accelerated,
while in the other circuit G it will be
retarded. The shield H
may
be made in
many forms,
as will be
understood,
and used in different
ways,
as
appears
from the
foregoing description.
As a modification of his
type
of motor with
"
shielded
"
fields^
Mr. Tesla has constructed a motor with a
field-magnet having
two sets of
poles
or
inwardly-projecting
cores and
placed
side
Uy side,
so as
practically
to form two fields of force and alter-
nately disposed
that is to
say,
with the
poles
of one set or field
opposite
the
spaces
between the other. He then connects the free
ends of one set of
poles by
means of laminated iron bands or
bridge-pieces
of
considerably
smaller cross-section than the cores
themselves, whereby
the cores will all form
parts
of
complete
magnetic
circuits. When the coils on each set of
magnets
are
connected in
multiple
circuits or branches from a source of al-
ternating currents,
electromotive forces are set
up
in or im-
pressed upon
each circuit
simultaneously ;
but the coils on the
magnetically bri'dged
or shunted cores will
have, by
reason of
the -closed
magnetic-circuits,
a
high
self-induction,
which retards
the
current, permitting
at the
beginning
of each
impulse
but lit-
7-1 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tie current to
pass.
On the other
hand,
no such
opposition being
encountered
in the other set of
coils,
the current
passes freely
through
them, magnetizing
the
poles
on which
they
are wound.
As
soon, however,
as the laminated
bridges
become saturated
and
incapable
of
carrying
all the lines of force which the
rising
electromotive
force,
and
consequently
increased
current, pro-
duce,
free
poles
are
developed
at the ends of the
cores, which,
acting
in
conjunction
with the
others, produce
rotation of the
armature.
The construction in detail
by
which this invention is illustrated
is shown in the
accompanying drawings.
Fig.
60 is a view in side elevation of a motor
embodying
the
principle. Fig.
61 is a vertical cross-section of the motor. A is
the frame of the
motor,
which should be built
up
of sheets of
iron
punched
out to the desired
shape
and bolted
together
witli
FIG. 60. FIG. 61.
insulation between the sheets. When
complete,
the frame makes
a
field-magnet
with
inwardly projecting pole-pieces
B and c. To
adapt
them to the
requirements
of this
particular
case these
pole-
pieces
are out of line with one
another,
those marked B surround-
ing
one end of the armature and the
others,
as
c,
the
opposite
end,
and
they
are
disposed alternately
that is to
say,
the
pole-
pieces
of one set occur in line with the
spaces
between those of the
other sets.
The armature D is of
cylindrical form,
and is also laminated in
the 'usual
way
and is wound
longitudinally
with coils closed
upon
themselves. The
pole-pieces
c are connected or shunted
by
bridge-pieces
E. These
may
be made
independently
and attached
to the
pole-pieces,
or
they may
be
parts
of the forms or blanks
stamped
or
punched
out of sheet-iron. Their size or mass is de-
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 75
termined
by
various
conditions,
such as the
strength
of the cur-
rent to be
employed,
the mass or size of the cores to which
they
are
applied,
and other familiar conditions.
Coils F surround the
pole-pieces B,
and other coils G are wound
on the
pole-pieces
c. These coils are connected in series in two
circuits,
which are branches of a circuit from a
generator
of alter-
nating currents,
and
they may
be so
wound,
or the
respective
circuits in which
they
are included
may
be so
arranged,
that the
circuit of coils G will
have, independently
of the
particular
con-
struction
described,
a
higher
self-induction than the other circuit
or branch.
The function of the shunts or
bridges
E is that
they
shall form
with the cores c a closed
magnetic
circuit for a current
up
to a
predetermined strength,
so that when saturated
by
such current
and unable to
carry
more lines of force than such a current
pro-
duces
they
will to no further
appreciable
extent interfere with
the
development, by
a
stronger current,
of free
magnetic poles
at
the ends of the cores c.
In such a motor the current is so retarded in the coils
G,
and
the manifestation of the free
magnetism
in the
poles
c is so
delayed
beyond
the
period
of maximum
magnetic
effect in
poles B,
that a
strong torque
is
produced
and the motor
operates
with
approx-
imately
the
power developed
in a motor of this kind
energized
by independently generated
currents
differing by
a full
quarter
phase.
CHAPTEK XIV.
TYPE OF TESLA SINGLE-PHASE MOTOR.
UP TO this
point,
two
principal types
of Tesla motors have
been described :
First,
those
containing
two or more
energizing
circuits
through
which are caused to
pass alternating
currents
differing
from one another in
phase
to an extent sufficient to
produce
a continuous
progression
or
shifting
of the
poles
or
points
of
greatest magnetic eifect,
in obedience to which the
movable element of the motor is maintained in rotation
; second,
those
containing poles,
or
parts
of different
magnetic suscepti-
bility,
which under the
energizing
influence of the same current
or two currents
coinciding
in
phase
will exhibit differences in
their
magnetic periods
or
phases.
In the first class of motors
the
torque
is due to the
magnetism
established in different
por-
tions of the motor
by
currents from the same or from inde-
pendent sources,
and
exhibiting
time differences in
phase.
In
the second class the
torque
results from the
energizing
effects of
a current
upon
different
parts
of the motor which differ in
mag-
netic
susceptibility
in other
words, parts
which
respond
in the
same relative
degree
to the action of a
current,
not
simultaneously,
but after different intervals of time.
In another Tesla
motor, however,
the
torque,
instead of
being
solely
the result of a
tjme difference in the
magnetic periods
or
phases
of the
poles
or attractive
parts
to whatever cause
due,
is
produced by
an
angular displacement
of the
parts which, though
movable with
respect
to one
another,
are
magnetized
simultane-
ously,
or
approximately so, by
the same currents. This
principle
of
operation
has been embodied
practically
in a motor in which
the
necessary angular displacement
between the
points
of
greatest
magnetic
attraction in the two elements of the motor the arma-
ture and field is obtained
by
the direction of the lamination of
the
magnetic
cores of the elements.
Fig.
62 is a side view of such a motor with a
portion
of its
armature core
exposed.
Fig.
63 is an end or
edge
view of the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 77
same.
Fig.
64 is a central cross-section of the
same,
the arma-
ture
being
shown
mainly
in elevation.
Let A A
designate
two
plates
built
up
of thin sections or
laminae of soft iron insulated more or less from one another and
held
together by
bolts a and secured
to a base B. The inner
faces of these
plates
contain recesses or
grooves
in which a coil
or coils D are secured
obliquely
to the direction of the lamina-
tions. Within the coils D is a disc
E, preferably composed
of
a
spirally-
wound iron wire or ribbon or a series of concentric-
rings
and mounted on a shaft
r, having bearings
in the
plates
A A. Such a device when acted
upon by
an
alternating
current
is
capable
of rotation and constitutes a
motor,
the
operation
of
which
may
be
explained
in the
following
manner : A current or
current-impulse traversing
the coils n tends to
magnetize
the
FIG. 62. FIG. 63. FIG. 64.
cores A A and
E,
all of which are within the influence of the
lield of the coils. The
poles
thus established would
naturally
lie in the same line at
right angles
to the coils
D,
but in the
plates
A
they
are deflected
by
reason of the direction of the
laminations,
and
appear
at or near the extremities of these
plates.
In the
disc, however,
where these conditions are not
present,
the
poles
or
points
of
greatest
attraction are on a line at
right
angles
to the
plane
of the
coils;
hence there will be a
torque
es-
tablished
by
this
angular displacement
of the
poles
or
magnetic
lines,
which starts the disc in
rotation,
the
magnetic
lines of the
armature and field
tending
toward a
position
of
parallelism.
This rotation is continued and maintained
by
the reversals of
the current in coils D
D,
which
change alternately
the
polarity
of
the field-cores A A. This
rotary tendency
or effect will be
greatly
78 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
increased
by winding
the disc with conductors
G,
closed
upon
themselves and
having
a radial
direction, whereby
the
magnetic
intensity
of the
poles
of the disc will be
greatly
increased
by
the
energizing
effect of the currents induced in the coils G
by
the
alternating
currents in coils D.
The cores of the disc and field
may
or
may
not be of different
magnetic susceptibility
that is to
say, they may
both be of the
same kind of
iron,
so as to be
magnetized
at
approximately
the
same instant
by
the coils
D;
or one
may
be of soft iron and the
other of
hard,
in order that a certain time
may elapse
between
the
periods
of their
magnetization.
In either case rotation will
be
produced ;
but unless the disc is
provided
with the closed en-
ergizing
coils it is desirable that the above-described difference of
magnetic susceptibility
be utilized to assist in its rotation.
The cores of the field and armature
may
be made in various
ways,
as will be well
understood,
it
being only requisite
that the
laminations in each be in such direction as to secure the neces-
sary angular displacement
of the
points
of
greatest
attraction.
Moreover,
since the disc
may
be considered as made
up
of an
infinite number of radial
arms,
it is obvious that what is true of
a disc holds for
many
other forms of armature.
CHAPTER XV.
MOTORS WITH CIRCUITS OF DIFFERENT RESISTANCE.
As lias been
pointed
out
elsewhere,
the
lag;
or retardation of
the
phases
of an
alternating
current is
directly proportional
to
the self-induction and
inversely proportional
to the resistance of
the circuit
through
which the current flows.
Hence,
in order
to secure the
proper
differences of
phase
between the two motor-
circuits,
it is desirable to make the self-induction in one much
higher
and the resistance much lower than the self-induction and
resistance, respectively,
in the other. At the same time the
magnetic quantities
of the two
poles
or sets of
poles
which the
two circuits
produce
should be
approximately equal.
These
requirements
have led Mr. Tesla to the invention of a motor
having
the
following general
characteristics : The coils which
are included in that
energizing
circuit which is to have the
higher
self-induction are made of coarse
wire,
or a conductor of
relatively
low
resistance,
and with the
greatest possible length
or number of turns. In the other set of coils a
comparatively
few turns of liner wire are
used,
or a wire of
higher
resistance.
Furthermore,
in order to
approximate
the
magnetic quantities
of
the
poles
excited
by
these
coils,
Mr. Tesla
employs
in the self-
induction circuit cores much
longer
than those in the other or
resistance circuit.
Fig.
65 is a
part
sectional view of the motor at
right angles
to
the shaft.
Fig.
66 is a
diagram
of the tield circuits.
In
Fig. 66,
let A
represent
the coils in one motor
circuit,
and H
those in the other. The circuit A is to have the
higher
self-
induction. There
are, therefore,
used a
long length
or a
large
number of turns of coarse wire in
forming
the coils of this cir-
cuit. For the circuit
B,
a smaller conductor is
employed,
or a
conductor of a
higher
resistance than
copper,
such as German
silver or
iron,
and the coils are wound with fewer turns. In
apply-
ing
these coils to a
motor,
Mr. Tesla builds
up
a
field-magnet
of
plates c,
of iron and
steel,
secured
together
in the usual manner
80 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
by
bolts D. Each
plate
is formed with four
(more
or
less)
long
cores
E,
around which is a
space
to receive the coil and an
equal
number of
short
projections
F to receive the coils of the resistance-
circuit. The
plates
are
generally
annular in
shape, having
an
open space
in the centre for
receiving
the armature
G,
which Mr.
Tesla
prefers
to wind with closed coils. An
alternating
current
divided between the two circuits is retarded as to its
phases
in
the circuit A to a mucli
greater
extent than in the circuit B.
By
FIG. 65. FIG.
reason of the relative sizes and
disposition
of the cores and coils
the
magnetic
effect of the
poles
E and F
upon
the armature
closely
approximate.
An
important
result secured
by
the construction shown here
is that these coils which are
designed
to have the
higher
self-
induction are almost
completely
surrounded
by iron,
and that the
retardation is thus
very materially
increased.
CHAPTER XVI.
MOTOR WITH
EQUAL
MAGNETIC ENERGIES IN FIELD AND
ARMATURE.
LET it be assumed that the
energy
as
represented
in the
magnet-
ism in the field of a
given rotating
field motor is
ninety
and
thafe of the armature ten. The sum of these
quantities,
which
represents
the total
energy expended
in
driving
the
motor,
is
one
hundred; but, assuming
that the motor be so constructed
that the
energy
in the field is
represented by fifty,
and that in
the armature
by fifty,
the sum is still one hundred
;
but while in
the first instance the
product
is nine
hundred,
in the second it is
FIG. 67.
two thousand five
hundred,
and as the
energy developed
is in
proportion
to these
products
it is clear that those motors are the
most efficient other
things being equal
in which the
magnetic
energies developed
in the armature and field are
equal.
These
results Mr. Tesla obtains
by using
the same amount of
copper
or
ampere
turns in both elements when the cores of both are
equal,
or
approximately so,
and the same current
energizes
both
;
or in
cases where the currents in one element are induced to those of
the other he uses in the induced coils an excess of
copper
over
that in the
primary
element or conductor.
S3 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
The conventional
figure
of a motor here
introduced, Fig.
H7,
will
give
an idea of the solution furnished
by
Mr. Tesla for the
specific problem. Referring
to the
drawing,
A is the
field-mag-
net,
B the
armature,
c the field
coils,
and D the armature-coils of
the motor.
Generally speaking,
if the mass of the cores of armature and
field be
equal,
the amount of
copper
or
ampere
turns of the
energizing
coils on both should also be
equal ;
but these condi-
tions will be modified in different forms of machine. It will be
understood that these results are most
advantageous
when exist-
ing
under the conditions
presented
where the motor is
running
with its normal
load,
a
point
to be well borne in mind.
CHAPTER XVII.
MOTORS WITH COINCIDING MAXIMA OF MAGNETIC EFFECT IN
ARMATURE AND FIELD.
IN THIS forin of
motor,
Mr. Tesla's
object
is to
design
and
build machines wherein the maxima of the
magnetic
effects of
the armature and field will more
nearly
coincide than in some of
the
types previously
under consideration. These
types
are :
First,
motors
having
two or more
energizing
circuits of the same elec-
trical
character,
and in the
operation
of which the currents used
differ
primarily
in
phase; second,
motors with a
plurality
of
energizing
circuits of different electrical
character,
in or
by
means of which the difference of
phase
is
produced artificially,
and, third,
motors with a
plurality
of
energizing circuits,
the
currents in one
being
induced from currents in another. Con-
sidering
the structural and
operative
conditions of
any
one of
them
as,
for
example,
that first named the armature which is
mounted to rotate in obedience to the
co-operative
influence or
action of the
energizing
circuits has coils wound
upon
it which
are closed
upon
themselves and in which currents are induced
by
the
energizing-currents
with the
object
and result of
energizing
the armature-core
;
but under
any
such conditions as must exist
in these
motors,
it is obvious that a certain time must
elapse
between the manifestations of an
energizing
current
impulse
in
the field
coils,
and the
corresponding magnetic
state or
phase
in
the armature established
by
the current induced
thereby;
conse-
quently
a
given magnetic
influence or effect in the field which is
the direct result of a
primary
current
impulse
will have become
more or less weakened or lost before the
corresponding
effect in
the armature
indirectly produced
has reached its maximum. This
is a condition unfavorable to efficient
working
in certain cases
as,
for
instance,
when the
progress
of the resultant
poles
or
points
of maximum attraction is
verj* great,
or when a
very high
num-
ber of alternations is
employed
for it is
apparent
that a
stronger
84
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tendency
to rotation will be maintained if the maximum
mag-
netic attractions or conditions in both armature and field
coincide,
the
energy developed by
a motor
being
measured
by
the
product
of the
magnetic quantities
of the armature and field.
To secure this coincidence of maximum
magnetic effects,
Mr.
Tesla has devised various
means,
as
explained
below.
Fig.
68 is
a
diagrammatic
illustration of a Tesla motor
system
in which the
alternating
currents
proceed
from
independent
sources and differ
primarily
in
phase.
A
designates
the
field-magnet
or
magnetic
frame of the motor;
FIG. 68. FIG. 69.
B
B,
oppositely
located
pole-pieces adapted
to receive the coils of
one
energizing
circuit
;
and c
c,
similar
pole-pieces
for the coils
of the other
energizing
circuit. These circuits are
designated,
respectively, by
D
E,
the conductor B"
forming
a common return
to the
generator
G. Between these
poles
is mounted an armature
for
example,
a
ring
or annular
armature,
wound with a series
of coils
F,
forming
a closed circuit or circuits. The action or
operation
of a motor thus constructed is now well understood.
It will be
observed,
however,
that the
magnetism
of
poles B,
for
POLYPHASK CURRENTS. 85
example,
established
by
a current
impulse
in the coils
thereon,
precedes
the
magnetic
effect set
up
in the armature
by
the in-
duced current in coils F.
Consequently
the mutual attraction
between the armature and
field-poles
is
considerably
reduced.
The same conditions will be found to exist
if,
instead of
assuming
the
poles
B or c as
acting independently,
we
regard
the ideal re-
sultant of both
acting together,
which is the real condition. To
remedy
this,
the motor field is constructed with
secondary poles
B'
c',
which are situated between the others. These
pole-pieces
are wound with coils D'
E',
the former in derivation to the coils
D,
the latter to coils E. The main or
primary
coils D and E are
wound for a different self-induction from that of the coils*D' and
E',
the relations
being
so fixed that if the currents in D and E
differ,
for
example, by
a
quarter-phase,
the currents in each
secondary coil,
as D'
E',
will differ from those in its
appropriate
primary
D or E
by, say, forty-five degrees,
or
one-eighth
of a
period.
Now, assuming
that an
impulse
or alternation in circuit or
branch E is
just beginning,
while in the branch u it is
just falling
from
maximum,
the conditions are those of a
quarter-phase
difference. The ideal resultant of the attractive forces of the two
sets of
poles
B c therefore
may
be considered as
progressing
from
poles
B to
poles c,
while the
impulse
in E is
rising
to
maximum,
and that in D is
falling
to zero or minimum. The
polarity
set
up
in the
armature, however, lags
behind the manifestations of field
magnetism,
and hence the maximum
points
of attraction in arma-
ture and
field,
instead of
coinciding,
are
angularly displaced.
This effect is counteracted
by
the
supplemental poles
B' c'. The
magnetic phases
of these
poles
succeed those of
poles
B c
by
the
same,
or
nearly
the
same, period
of time as
elapses
between the
effect of the
poles
B c and the
corresponding
induced effect in the
armature
;
hence the
magnetic
conditions of
poles
B' c' and of
the armature more
nearly
coincide and a better result is obtained.
As
poles
B' c' act in
conjunction
with the
poles
in the armature
established
by poles
B
c,
so in turn
poles
c B act
similarly
with
the
poles
set
up by
B'
c', respectively.
Under such conditions
the retardation of the
magnetic
effect of the armature and that
of the
secondary poles
will
bring
the maximum of the two more
nearly
into coincidence and a
correspondingly stronger torque
or
magnetic
attraction secured.
In such a
disposition
as is shown in
Fig.
fiS it will be observed
86 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
that as the
adjacent pole-pieces
of either circuit are of like
polar-
ity they
will have a certain
weakening
effect
upon
one another.
Mr. Tesla therefore
prefers
to remove the
secondary poles
from
the direct influence of the others. This
may
be done
by
con-
structing
a motor with two
independent
sets of
fields,
and with
either one or two armatures
electrically connected,
or
by using
two armatures and one field. These modifications are illustrated
further on.
Fig.
69 is a
diagrammatic
illustration of a motor and
system
in
which the difference of
phase
is
artificially produced.
There are
two coils D i) in one branch and two coils E E in another branch
FIG. 71.
of the main circuit from the
generator
o. These two circuits or
branches are of different
self-induction, one,
as
D,
being higher
than the other. This is
graphically
indicated
by making
coils D
much
larger
than coils E.
By
reason of the difference in the
electrical character of the two
circuits,
the
phases
of current in
one are retarded to a
greater
extent than the other. Let this
difference be
thirty degrees.
A motor thus constructed will
rotate under the action of an
alternating
current
;
but as
happens
in the case
previously
described the
corresponding magnetic
ef-
fects of the
armature and field do not coincide
owing
to the time
that
elapses
between a
given magnetic
effect in the armature and
POLYPHASE CURRENTS 87
the condition of the field that
produces
it. The
secondary
or
supplemental poles
B' c' are therefore availed of. There
being
thirty degrees
difference of
phase
between the currents in coils
D
E,
the
magnetic
effect of
poles
B' c' should
correspond
to that
produced by
a current
differing
from the current in coils D or K
by
fifteen
degrees.
This we can attain
by winding
each
supple-
mental
pole
B' c' with two coils H H'. The coils H are included
in a derived circuit
having
the same self-induction as circuit
D,
and coils H' in a circuit
having
the same self-induction as circuit
E,
so that if these circuits differ
by thirty degrees
the
magnetism
of
poles
B' c' will
correspond
to that
produced by
a current dif-
fering
from that in either D or E
by
fifteen
degrees.
This is true
in all other cases. For
example,
if in
Fig.
68 the coils D' E' be
replaced by
the coils H H' included in the derived
circuits,
the
magnetism
of the
poles
B' c' will
correspond
in effect or
phase,
if it
may
be so
termed,
to that
produced by
a current
differing
from that in either circuit D or E
by forty-five degrees,
or one-
eighth
of a
period.
This invention as
applied
to a derived circuit motor is illustra-
ted in
Figs.
70 and 71. The former is an end view of the motor
with the armature in section and a
diagram
of
connections,
and
Fig.
71 a vertical section
through
the field. These
figures
are
also drawn to show one of the
dispositions
of two fields that
may
be
adopted
in
carrying
out the
principle.
The
poles
B B c c are
in one
field,
the
remaining poles
in the other. The former are
wound with
primary
coils i j and
secondary
coils i'
j',
the latter
with coils K L. The
primary
coils i j are in derived
circuits,
be-
tween
which, by
reason of their different
self-induction,
there is
a difference of
phase, say,
of
thirty degrees.
The coils i' K are
in circuit with one
another,
as also are coils j'
L,
and there should
be a difference of
phase
between the currents in coils K and L and
their
corresponding primaries of, say,
fifteen
degrees.
If the
poles
B c are at
right angles,
the armature-coils should be con-
.nected
directly across,
or a
single
armature core wound from end
to end
may
be used
;
but if the
poles
B c be in line there should
be an
angular displacement
of the armature
coils,
as will be well
understood.
The
operation
will be understood from the
foregoing.
The
maximum
magnetic
condition of a
pair
of
poles,
as B'
B',
coincides
closely
with the maximum effect in the
armature,
which
lags
be-
hind the
corresponding
condition in
poles
H n.
CHAPTER XVIII.
MOTOR BASED ON THE DIFFERENCE OF PHASE IN THE MAGNETIZA-
TION OF THE INNER AND OUTER PARTS OF AN IRON CORE.
IT is well known that if a
magnetic
core,
even if laminated or
subdivided,
be wound with an insulated coil and a current of
electricity
be directed
through
the
coil,
the
magnetization
of the
entire core does not
immediately ensue,
the
magnetizing
effect
not
being
exhibited in all
parts simultaneously.
This
may
be at-
tributed to the fact that the action of the current is to
energize
first those laminae or
parts
of the core nearest the surface and
adjacent
to the
exciting-coil,
and from thence the action
pro-
gresses
toward the interior. A certain interval of time therefore
elapses
between the manifestation of
magnetism
in the external
and the internal sections or
layers
of the core. If the core be
thin or of small
mass,
this effect
may
be
inappreciable
;
but in
the case of a thick
core,
or even of a
comparatively
thin
one,
if
the number of alternations or rate of
change
of the current
strength
be
very great,
the time interval
occurring
between the
manifestations of
magnetism
in the interior of the core and in
those
parts adjacent
to the coil is more marked. In the con-
struction of such
apparatus
as motors which are
designed
to be
run
by alternating
or
equivalent
currents such as
pulsating
or
undulating
currents
generally
Mr. Tesla found it desirable and
even
necessary
to
give
due consideration to this
phenomenon
and
to make
special provisions
in order to obviate its
consequences.
With the
specific object
of
taking advantage
of this action or
effect,
and to render it more
pronounced,
he constructs a field
magnet
in which the
parts
of the core or cores that exhibit at
different intervals of time the
magnetic
effect
imparted
to them
by alternating
or
equivalent
currents in an
energizing
coil or
coils,
are so
placed
with relation to a
rotating
armature as to exert
thereon their attractive effect
successively
in the order of their
magnetization. By
this means he secures a result similar to that
which he had
previously
attained in other forms or
types
of mo-
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 89
tor in which
by
means of one or more
alternating
currents he
lias
produced
the rotation or
progression
of the
magnetic poles.
This new mode of
operation
will now be described.
Fig.
72
is a side elevation of such motor.
Fig.
73 is a side elevation of
a more
practicable
and efficient embodiment of the invention.
Fig.
74 is a central vertical section of the same in the
plane
of
the axis of rotation.
Referring
to
Fig. 72,
let x
represent
a
large
iron
core,
which
may
be
composed
of a number of sheets or laminae of soft iron
or steel.
Surrounding
this core is a coil
Y,
which is connected
with a source E of
rapidly varying
currents. Let us consider now
FIGS. 72 and 73.
the
magnetic
conditions
existing
in this core at
any point,
as
5,
at or near the
centre,
and
any
other
point,
as
#,
nearer the sur-
face. When a current
impulse
is started in the
magnetizing
coil
Y,
the section or
part
at
<z, being
close to the
coil,
is
immediately
energized,
while the section or
part
at
J, which,
to use a conveni-
ent
expression,
is
"
protected
"
by
the
intervening
sections or
layers
between a and
J,
does not at once exhibit its
magnetism.
However,
as the
magnetization
of a
increases,
5 becomes also
affected, reaching finally
its maximum
strength
some time later
than a.
Upon
the
weakening
of the current the
magnetization
of a first
diminishes,
while J still exhibits its maximum
strength ;
90
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
but the continued
weakening
of a is attended
by
a
subsequent
weakening
of b.
Assuming
the current to be an
alternating one,
a will now be
reversed,
while b still continues of the first
imparted
polarity.
This action continues the
magnetic
condition of
&,
fol-
lowing
that of a in the manner above described. If an armature
for
instance,
a
simple
disc
F,
mounted to rotate
freely
on an
axis be
brought
into
proximity
to the
core,
a movement of rota-
tion will be
imparted
to the
disc,
the .direction
depending upon
its
position relatively
to the
core,
the
tendency being
to turn the
portion
of the disc nearest to the core from a to
>,
as indicated
in
Fig.
72.
This action or
principle
of
operation
has been embodied in a
practicable
form of
motor,
which is illustrated in
Fig.
73. Let A
FIG. 74.
in that
figure represent
a circular frame of
iron,
from diametric-
ally opposite points
of the interior of which the cores
project.
Each core is
composed
of three main
parts B,
B and
c,
and
they
are
similarly
formed with a
straight portion
or
body <?,
around
which the
energizing
coil is
wound,
a curved arm or extension
e,
and an
inwardly projecting pole
or end d. Each core is made
up
of two
parts
B
B,
with their
polar
extensions
reaching
in one
direction,
and a
part
c between the other
two,
and with its
polar
extension
reaching
in the
opposite
direction. In order to lessen
in the cores the circulation of currents induced
therein,
the several
sections are insulated from one another in the manner usually
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 91
followed in such cases. These cores are wound with coils
D,
which
are connected in the same
circuit,
either in
parallel
or
series,
arid
supplied
with an
alternating
or a
pulsating current, preferably
the
former, by
a
generator K, represented diagrammatically.
Be-
tween the cores or their
polar
extensions is mounted a
cylindrical
or similar armature
F,
wound with
magnetizing
coils
G,
closed
upon
themselves.
The
operation
of this motor is as follows : When a current
impulse
or alternation is directed
through
the coils
D,
the sections
B B of the
cores,
being
on the surface and in close
proximity
to
the
coils,
are
immediately energized.
The sections
c,
on the other
hand,
are
protected
from the
magnetizing
influence of the coil
by
the
interposed layers
of iron B B. As the
magnetism
of B B
increases,
however,
the sections c are also
energized
;
but
they
do not attain their maximum
strength
until a certain time subse-
quent
to the exhibition
by
the sections B B of their maximum.
Upon
the
weakening
of the current the
magnetic strength
of B B
first
diminishes,
while the sections c have still their maximum
strength ;
but as B B continue to weaken the interior sections are
similarly
weakened. B B
may
then
begin
to exhibit an
opposite
polarity,
which is followed later
by
a similar
change
on
c,
and
this action continues. B B and c
may
therefore be considered as
separate field-magnets, being
extended so as to act on the arma-
ture in the most efficient
positions,
and the effect is similar to
that in the other forms of Tesla motor
viz.,
a rotation or
pro-
gression
of the maximum
points
of the field of force.
Any
armature
such,
for
instance,
as a disc mounted in this field
would rotate from the
pole
first to exhibit its
magnetism
to that
which exhibits it later.
It is evident that the
principle
here described
may
be carried
out in
conjunction
with other means for
securing
a more favor-
able or efficient action of the motor. For
example,
the
polar
extensions of the sections c
may
be wound or surrounded
by
closed coils. The effect of these coils will be to still more
effectively
retard the
magnetization
of the
polar
extensions of c.
CHAPTER XIX.
ANOTHER TYPE OF TESLA INDUCTION MOTOR.
IT WILL have been
gathered by
all who are interested in the
advance of the electrical
arts,
and who follow
carefully, step by
step,
the work of
pioneers,
that Mr. Tesla ha been foremost to
utilize inductive effects in
permanently
closed
circuits,
in the
operation
of
alternating
motors. In this
chapter
one
simple type
of such a motor is described and
illustrated,
which will serve as
an
exemplification
of the
principle.
Let it be assumed that an
ordinary alternating
current
genera-
tor is connected
up
in a circuit of
practically
no
self-induction,
such,
for
example,
as a circuit
containing
incandescent
lamps
only.
On the
operation
of the
machine, alternating
currents will
be
developed
in the
circuit,
and the
phases
of these currents will
theoretically
coincide with the
phases
of the
impressed
electro-
motive force. Such currents
may
be
regarded
and
designated
as
the "unretarded currents."
It will be
understood,
of
course,
that in
practice
there is al-
ways
more or less self-induction in the
circuit,
which modifies to
a
corresponding
extent these conditions
;
but for convenience
this
may
be
disregarded
in the consideration of the
principle
of
operation,
since the same laws
apply.
Assume next that a
path
of currents be formed across
any
two
points
of the above cir-
cuit,
consisting,
for
example,
of the
primary
of an induction de-
vice. The
phases
of the currents
passing through
the
primary,
owing
to the self-induction of the
same,
will not coincide with
the
phases
of the
impressed
electromotive
force,
but will
lag-
behind,
such
lag being directly proportional
to the self-induction
and
inversely proportional
to the resistance of the said coil.
The insertion of this coil will also cause a
lagging
or retardation
of the currents
traversing
and delivered
by
the
generator
behind
the
impressed
electromotive
force,
such
lag being
the mean or
resultant of the
lag
of the current
through
the
primary
alone and
of the
"
unretarded current
"
in the entire
working
circuit. Next
POL YPHAXE CURRENTS. 88
consider the conditions
imposed by
the association in inductive
relation with the
primary coil,
of a
secondary
coil. The current
generated
in the
secondary
coil will react
upon
the
primary
cur-
rent, modifying
the retardation of the
same, according
to the
amount of self-induction and resistance in the
secondary
circuit.
If the
secondary
circuit has but little self-induction
as,
for in-
stance,
when it contains incandescent
lamps only
it will in-
crease the actual difference of
phase
between its own and the
primary current, first, by diminishing
the
lag
between the
pri-
mary
current and the
impressed
electromotive
force, and,
sec-
ond, by
its own
lag
or retardation behind the
impressed
electro-
motive force. On the other
hand,
if the
secondary
circuit have
a
high self-induction,
its
lag
behind the current in the
primary
is
FIG. 7.-).
directly increased,
while it will be still further increased if the
primary
have a
very
low self-induction. The better results are
obtained when the
primary
has a low self-induction.
Fig.
75 is a
diagram
of a Tesla motor
embodying
this
princi-
ple. Fig.
76 is a similar
diagram
of a modification of the same.
In
Fig.
75 let A
designate
the
field-magnet
of a motor
which,
as
in all these
motors,
is built
up
of sections or
plates.
B c are
po-
lar
projections upon
which the coils are wound.
Upon
one
pair
of these
poles,
as
c,
are wound
primary
coils
i>,
which are di-
rectly
connected to the circuit of an
alternating
current
genera-
tor a. On the same
poles
are also wound
secondary
coils
r,
either side
by
side or over or under the
primary coils,
and these
are connected with other coils
E,
which surround the
poles
B B.
94 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
The currents in both
primary
and
secondary
coils in such a mo-
tor will be retarded or will
lag
behind the
impressed
electro-
motive force
;
but to secure a
proper
difference in
phase
between
the
primary
and
secondary
currents
themselves,
Mr. Tesla in-
creases the resistance of the circuit of the
secondary
and reduces
as much as
practicable
its self-induction. This is done
by using
for the
secondary
circuit, particularly
in the coils
E,
wire of com-
paratively
small diameter and
having
but few turns around the
cores;
or
by using
some conductor of
higher specific
resistance,
such as German silver
;
or
by introducing
at some
point
in the
secondary
circuit an artificial resistance K. Thus the self-induc-
tion of the
secondary
is
kept
down and its resistance
increased,
with the result of
decreasing
the
lag
between the
impressed
electro-motive force and the current in the
primary
coils and in-
creasing
the difference of
phase
between the
primary
and secon-
dary
currents.
In the
disposition
shown in
Fig. 76,
the
lag
in the
secondary
is increased
by increasing
the self-induction of that
circuit,
while
the
increasing tendency
of the
primary
to
lag
is counteracted
by
inserting
therein a dead resistance. The
primary
coils D in this
case have a low self-induction and
high
resistance,
while the coils
E
F,
included in the
secondary circuit,
have a
high
self-induction
and low resistance. This
may
be done
by
the
proper winding
of
the coils
;
or in the circuit
including
the
secondary
coils E
F,
we
may
introducb a self-induction coil
s,
while in the
primary
cir-
cuit from the
generator
o and
including
coils
D,
there
may
be in
serted a dead resistance R.
By
this means the difference of
phase
between the
primary
and
secondary
is increased. It is evi-
dent that both means of
increasing
the difference of
phase
namely, by
the
special winding
as well as
by
the
supplemental
or
external inductive and dead resistance
may
be
employed
con-
jointly.
In the
operation
of this motor the current
impulses
in the
pri-
mary
coils induce currents in the
secondary coils,
and
by
the con-
joint
action of the two the
points
of
greatest magnetic
attraction
are shifted or rotated.
In
practice
it is found desirable to wind the armature with
closed coils in which currents are induced
by
the action thereon
of the
primaries.
CHAPTER XX.
COMBINATIONS OF SYNCHRONIZING MOTOR AND
TORQUE
MOTOR.
IN THE
preceding descriptions
relative to
synchronizing
motors
and methods of
operating them,
reference has been made to the
plan adopted by
Mr.
Tesla,
which consists
broadly
in
winding
or
arranging
the motor in such manner that
by
means of suitable
switches it could be started as a
multiple-circuit motor,
or one
operating by
a
progression
of its
magnetic poles,
and
then,
when
up
to
speed,
or
nearly so,
converted into an
ordinary synchroniz-
ing motor,
or one in which the
magnetic poles
were
simply
alter-
nated. In some
cases,
as when a
large
motor is used and when
the number of alternations is
very high,
there is more or less
difficulty
in
bringing
the motor to
speed
as a double or
multiple-
circuit
motor,
for the
plan
of construction which renders the
motor best
adapted
to run as a
synchronizing
motor
impairs
its
efficiency
as a
torque
or double-circuit motor under the assumed
conditions on the start. This will be
readily understood,
for in a
large synchronizing
motor the
length
of the
magnetic
circuit of
the
polar projections,
and their
mass,
are so
great
that
apparently
considerable time is
required
for
magnetization
and
demagnetiza-
tion. Hence with a current of a
very high
number of alternations
the motor
may
not
respond properly.
To avoid this
objection
and to start
up
a
synchronizing
motor in which these conditions
obtain,
Mr. Tesla has combined two
motors,
one a
synchronizing
motor,
the other a
multiple-circuit
or
torque
motor,
and
by
the
latter he
brings
the first-named
up
to
speed,
and then either
throws the whole current into the
synchronizing
motor or
operates
jointly
both of the motors.
This invention involves several novel and useful features. It
will be
observed,
in the first
place,
that both motors are
run,
without commutators of
any kind, and, secondly,
that the
speed
of the
torque
motor
may
be
higher
than that of the
synchroniz-
ing motor,
as will be the case when it contains a fewer number of
poles
or sets of
poles,
so that the motor will be more
readily
and
96
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
easily brought up
to
speed. Thirdly,
the
synchronizing
motor
may
be constructed so as to have a much more
pronounced
ten-
dency
to
synchronism
without
lessening
the
facility
with which
it is started.
Fig.
77 is a
part
sectional view of the two motors
; Fig.
78 an
end view of the
synchronizing
motor
; Fig.
79
an end view and
part
section of the
torque
or double-circuit
motor; Fig.
80 a
diagram
of the circuit connections
employed
;
and
Figs.
81, 82,
83,
84 and 85 are
diagrams
of modified
dispositions
of the two
motors.
Inasmuch as neither motor is
doing any
work while the current
is
acting upon
the
other,
the two armatures are
rigidly
connected,
both
being
mounted
upon
the same shaft
A,
the
field-magnets
B
of the
synchronizing
and c of the
torque
motor
being
secured to
the same base D. The
preferably larger synchronizing
motor has
polar projections
on its
armature,
which rotate in
very
close
prox-
imity
to the
poles
of the
field,
and in other
respects
it conforms
to the conditions that are
necessary
to secure
synchronous
action.
The
pole-pieces
of the armature
are, however,
wound with closed
coils
E,
as this obviates the
employment
of
sliding
contacts. The
smaller or
torque motor,
on the other
hand, has, preferably,
a
cylindrical
armature
F,
without
polar projections
and wound with
closed coils G. The field-coils of the
torque
motor are connected
up
in two series H and
i,
and the
alternating
current from the
generator
is directed
through
or divided between these two cir-
cuits in
any
manner to
produce
a
progression
of the
poles
or
points
of maximum
magnetic
effect. This result is secured
by
connecting
the two motor-circuits in derivation witli the circuit
POLYPHASE CURRENTS.
from the
generator, inserting
in one motor circuit a dead resist-
ance and in the other a self-induction
coil, by
which means a
difference in
phase
between the two divisions of the current is
secured. If both motors have the same number of field
poles,
the
torque
motor for a
given
number of alternations will tend to
run at double the
speed
of the
other, for,
assuming
the connec-
tions to be such as to
give
the best
results,
its
poles
are divided
into two series and the number of
poles
is
virtually
reduced one-
half,
which
being
acted
upon by
the same number of alternations
tend to rotate the armature at twice the
speed. By
this means
the main armature is more
easily brought
to or above the
required
speed.
-When the
speed necessary
for
synchronism
is
imparted
to the main
motor,
the current is shifted from the
torque
motor
into the other.
A convenient
arrangement
for
carrying
out this invention is
FIG. 78. FIG. 79.
shown in
Fig.
80,
in which j .1 are the field coils of the
syn-
chronizing,
and H i the field coils of the
torque
motor. L L' are
the conductors of the main line. One end
of, say,
coils H is con-
nected to wire L
through
a self-induction coil M. One end of the
other set of coils i is connected to the same wire
through
a dead
resistance N. The
opposite
ends of these two circuits are con-
nected to the contact m of a
switch,
the handle or lever of which
is in connection with the line-wire
L',
One end of the field cir-
cuit of the
synchronizing
motor is connected to the wire L. The
other terminates in the switch-contact n. From the
diagram
it
will be
readily
seen that if the lever p be turned
upon
contact
m,
the
torque
motor will start
by
reason of the difference of
phase
between the currents in its two
energizing
circuits. Then when
the desired
speed
is
attained,
if the lever p be shifted
upon
con-
98
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tact ;/ the entire current will
pass through
the field coils of the
synchronizing
motor and the other will be
doing
no work.
The
torque
motor
may
be constructed
and
operated
in various
ways, many
of which have
already
been touched
upon.
It is not
necessary
that one motor be cut out of circuit while the other is
in,
for both
may
be acted
upon by
current at the same
time,
and
Mr. Tesla has devised various
dispositions
or
arrangements
of the
two motors for
accomplishing
this. Some of these
arrangements
are illustrated in
Figs.
81 to 85.
Referring
to
Fig.
81,
let T
designate
the
torque
or
multiple
circuit motor and s the
synchronizing
motor,
L i,'
being
the line-
wires from a source of
alternating
current. The two circuits of
the
torque
motor of different
degrees
of
self-induction,
and de-
signated
by
N
M,
are connected in derivation to the wire L.
They
are then
joined
and connected to the
energizing
circuit of the
FIG.
synchronizing motor,
the
opposite
terminal of which is connected
to wire L'. The two motors are thus in series. To start them
Mr. Tesla short-circuits the
synchronizing
motor
by
a switch
P',
throwing
the whole current
through
the
torque
motor. Then
when the desired
speed
is reached the switch p' is
opened,
so
that the current
passes through
both motors. In such an
arrange-
ment as this it is
obviously
desirable for economical and other
reasons that a
proper
relation between the
speeds
of the two
motors should be observed.
In
Fig.
82 another
disposition
is illustrated, s is the
synchron-
izing
motor and T the
torque motor,
the circuits of both
being
in
parallel,
w is a circuit also in derivation to the motor circuits
and
containing
a switch P". s' is a switch in the
synchronizing
motor circuit. On the start, the switch s' is
opened, cutting
out
the motor s. Then P" is
opened, throwing
the entire current
POLYPHASE CURRENTS.
through
the motor
T,
giving
it a
very strong torque.
When the
desired
speed
is
reached,
switch s' is closed and the current divides
FIGS.
81, 82, 83,
84 and 85.
between both motors.
By
means of switch p" both motors
may
be cut out.
100 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
In
Fig.
83 the
arrangement
is
substantially
the
same, except
that a switch T' is
placed
in the circuit which includes the two cir-
cuits of the
torque
motor.
Fig.
84 shows the two motors in
series,
with a shunt around both
containing
a switch s T. There
is also a shunt around the
synchronizing
motor
s,
with a switch
p'. In
Fig.
85 the same
disposition
is shown
;
but each motor is
provided
witli a
shunt,
in which are switches P' and
T*,
as shown.
CHAPTER XXL
MOTOR WITH A CONDENSER IN THE ARMATURE CIRCUIT.
WE NOW come to a new class of motors in which resort is had
to condensers for the
purpose
of
developing
the
required
differ-
ence of
phase
and
neutralizing
the effects of self-induction. Mr.
Tesla
early began
to
apply
the condenser to
alternating appara-
tus,
in
just
how
r
many ways
can
only
be learned from a
perusal
of other
portions
of this
volume, especially
those
dealing
with
his
high frequency
work.
Certain laws
govern
the action or effects
produced by
a con-
denser when connected to an electric circuit
through
which an
alternating
or in
general
an
undulating
current is made to
pass.
Some of the most
important
of such effects are as follows :
First,
if the terminals or
plates
of a condenser be connected with two
points
of a
circuit,
the
potentials
of which are made to rise and
fall in
rapid succession,
the condenser allows the
passage,
or more
strictly speaking,
the transference of a
current,
although
its
plates
or armatures
may
be so
carefully
insulated as to
prevent
almost
completely
the
passage
of a current of
unvarying strength
or direction and of moderate electromotive force.
Second,
if a
circuit,
the terminals of which are connected with the
plates
of
the
condenser, possess
a certain
self-induction,
the condenser will
overcome or counteract to a
greater
or less
degree, dependent
upon
well-understood
conditions,
the effects of such self-induc-
tion.
Third,
if two
points
of a closed or
complete
circuit
through
w
T
hich a
rapidly rising
and
falling
current flows be
shunted or
bridged
by
a
condenser,
a variation in the
strength
of
the currents in the branches and also a difference of
phase
of the
currents therein is
produced.
These effects Mr. Tesla has utilized
and
applied
in a
variety
of
ways
in the construction and
operation
of his
motors,
such as
by producing
a difference in
phase
in the
two
energizing
circuits of an
alternating
current motor
by
con-
necting
the two circuits in derivation and
connecting up
a con-
denser in series in one of the circuits. A further
development,
102 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
however, possesses
certain novel features of
practical
value and in-
volves a
knowledge
of facts less
generally
understood. It
comprises
the use of a condenser or condensers in connection with the induced
or armature circuit of a motor and certain details of the con-
. 87.
FIG. 90.
struction of such motors. In an
alternating
current motor of the
type particularly
referred to
above,
or in
any
other which has
an armature coil or circuit closed
upon itself,
the latter
repre-
sents not
only
an inductive
resistance,
but one which is
period-
POLYPHASE VUKRENT8. 103
ically varying
in
value,
both of which facts
complicate
and render
difficult the attainment of the conditions best suited to the most
efficient
working
conditions
;
in other
words, they require, first,
that for a
given
inductive effect
upon
the armature there should
be the
greatest possible
current
through
the armature or induced
coils, and, second,
that there should
always
exist between the
currents in the
energizing
and the induced circuits a
given
rela-
tion of
phase.
Hence whatever tends to decrease the self-induc-
tion and increase the current in the induced circuits
will,
other
things being equal,
increase the
output
arid
efficiency
of the mo-
tor,
and the same will be true of causes that
operate
to maintain
the mutual attractive effect between the field
magnets
and arma-
ture at its maximum. Mr. Tesla secures these results
by
con-
necting
with the induced circuit or circuits a
condenser,
in the
manner described
below,
and he
also,
with this
purpose
in
view,
constructs the motor in a
special
manner.
Referring
to the
drawings, Fig.
86,
is a
view, mainly
dia-
grammatic,
of an
alternating
current
motor,
in which the
present
principle
is
applied. Fig.
87 is a central
section,
in line with
the
shaft,
of a
special
form of armature core.
Fig.
88 is a simi-
lar section of a modification of the same.
Fig.
89 is one of the
sections of the core detached.
Fig.
90 is a
diagram showing
a
modified
disposition
of the armature or induced circuits.
The
general plan
of the invention is illustrated
iji
Fig.
86.
A A in this
figure represent
the the frame and field
magnets
of
an
alternating
current
motor,
the
poles
or
projections
of which
are wound with coils B and
c, forming independent energizing
circuits connected either to the same or to
independent
sources
of
alternating currents,
so that the currents
flowing through
the
circuits, respectively,
will have a difference of
phase.
Within
the influence of this field is an armature core
D,
wound with coils
E. In motors of this
description
heretofore these coils have been
closed
upon themselves,
or connected in a closed
series;
but in
the
present
case each coil or the connected series of coils termi-
nates in the
opposite plates
of a condenser F. For this
purpose
the ends of the series of coils are
brought
out
through
the shaft
to
collecting rings
G,
which are connected to the condenser
by
contact brushes H and suitable
conductors,
the condenser
being
independent
of the machine. The armature coils are wound or
connected in such manner that
adjacent
coils
produce opposite
poles.
104 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TK8LA.
The action,
of this motor and the effect of the
plan
followed
in its construction are as follows : The motor
being
started in
operation
and the coils of the field
magnets being
traversed
by
alternating currents,
currents are induced in the armature coils
by
one set of field
coils,
as
B,
and the
poles
thus established are
acted
upon by
the other
set,
as c. The armature
coils, however,
have
necessarily
a
high
self-induction,
which
opposes
the flow of
the currents thus set
up.
The condenser F not
only permits
the
passage
or transference of these
currents,
but also counteracts
the effects of
self-induction,
and
by
a
proper adjustment
of the
capacity
of the
condenser,
the self-induction of the
coils,
and the
periods
of the
currents,
the condenser
may
be made to overcome
entirely
the effect of self-induction.
It is
preferable
on account of the
undesirability
of
using sliding
contacts of
any kind,
to associate the condenser with the armature
directly,
or make it a
part
of the armature. In some cases Mr.
Tesla builds
up
the armature of annular
plates
K
K,
held
by
bolts
L between heads
M,
which are secured to the
driving shaft,
and
in the hollow
space
thus formed he
places
a condenser
F, gener-
ally by winding
the two insulated
plates spirally
around the
shaft. In other cases he utilizes the
plates
of the core itself
as the
plates
of the condenser. For
example,
in
Figs.
88 and
89,
N is the
driving shaft,
M M are the heads of the
armature-core,
and K K' the iron
plates
of which the core is built
up.
These
plates
are insulated from the shaft and from one
another,
and are
held
together by
rods or bolts L. The bolts
pass through
a
large
hole in one
plate
and a small hole in the one next
adjacent,
and
so
on,
connecting electrically
all of
plates K,
as one armature of a
condenser,
and all of
plates
K' as the other.
To either of the condensers above described the armature coils
may
be
connected,
as
explained by
reference to
Fig.
86.
In motors in which the armature coils are closed
upon
them-
selves
as,
for
example,
in
any
form of
alternating
current motor
in which one armature coil or set of coils is in the
position
of
maximum induction with
respect
to the field coils or
poles,
while
the other is in the
position
of minimum induction the coils are
best connected in one
series,
and two
points
of the circuit
thus formed are
bridged by
a condenser. This is illustrated in
Fig. 90,
in which E
represents
one set of armature coils and E'
the other. Their
points
of uniou are
joined through
a con-
denser F. It will be observed that in this
disposition
the self-
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 105
induction of the two branches E and E' varies with their
position
relatively
to the field
magnet,
and that each branch is
alternately
the
predominating
source of the induced current. Hence the
effect of the condenser F is twofold.
First,
it increases the cur-
rent in each of the branches
alternately, and, secondly,
it alters
the
phase
of the currents in the
branches,
this
being
the well-
known effect which results from such a
disposition
of a con-
denser with a
circuit,
as above described. This effect is favorable
to the
proper working
of the
motor,
because it increases the flow
of current in the armature circuits due to a
given
inductive
effect,
and also because it
brings
more
nearly
into coincidence
the maximum
magnetic
effects of the
coacting
field and armature
poles.
It will be
understood,
of
course,
that the causes that contri-
bute to the
efficiency
of condensers when
applied
to such uses as
the above must be
given
due consideration in
determining
the
practicability
and
efficiency
of the motors. Chief
among
these
is,
as is well
known,
the
periodicity
of the
current,
and hence the
improvements
described are
mgre
particularly adapted
to
systems
in which a
very high
rate of alternation or
change
is main-
tained.
Although
this invention has been illustrated in connection
with a
special
form of
motor,
it will be understood that it is
equally applicable
to
any
other
alternating
current motor in
which there is a closed armature coil wherein the currents are
induced
by
the action of the
field,
and the feature of
utilizing
the
plates
or sections of a
magnetic
core for
forming
the con-
denser is
applicable, generally,
to other kinds of
alternating
cur-
rent
apparatus.
CHAPTEK
XXII.
MOTOR WITH CONDENSER
IN ONE OF THE FIELD CIRCUITS.
IF THE field or
energizing
circuits of a
rotary phase
motor be
both derived from the same source of
alternating
currents and a
condenser of
proper capacity
be included in one of the
same, ap-
proximately,
the desired difference of
phase may
be obtained be-
tween the currents
flowing directly
from the source and those
flowing through
the condenser
;
but the
great
size and
expense
of condensers for this
purpose
that would meet the
requirements
of the
ordinary systems
of
comparatively
low
potential
are
par-
ticularly prohibitory
to their
employment.
Another,
now
well-known, method
or
plan
of
securing
a differ-
ence of
phase
between the
energizing
currents of motors of this
kind is to induce
by
the currents in one circuit those in the other
circuit or circuits
;
but as no means had been
proposed
that
would secure in this
way
between the
phases
of the
primary
or
inducing
and the
secondary
or induced currents that difference
theoretically ninety degrees
that is best
adapted
for
practical
and economical
working,
Mr. Tesla devised a means which ren-
ders
practicable
both the above described
plans
or
methods,
and
by
which he is enabled to obtain an economical and efficient al-
ternating
current motor. His invention consists in
placing
a
condenser in the
secondary
or induced circuit of the motor above
described and
raising
the
potential
of the
secondary
currents to
such a
degree
that the
capacity
of the
condenser,
which is in
part dependent
on the
potential,
need be
quite
small. The value
of this condenser is determined in a well-understood manner with
reference to the self-induction and other conditions of the
circuit,
so as to cause the currents which
pass through
it to differ from
the
primary
currents
by
a
quarter phase.
Fig.
91 illustrates the invention as embodied in a motor
in which the inductive relation of the
primary
and
secondary
circuits is secured
by winding
them inside the motor
partly
upon
the same cores
;
but the invention
applies, generally,
to
POL YPHA&K
d
107
other forms of motor in which one of the
energizing
currents is
induced in
any
way
from the other.
Let A B
represent
the
poles
of an
alternating
current
motor,
of
which c is the armature wound with coils
D,
closed
upon
them-
selves,
as is now the
general practice
in motors of this kind. The
poles A,
which alternate with
poles B,
are wound with coils of
ordinary
or coarse wire E in such direction as to make them of
alternate north and south
polarity,
as indicated in the
diagram
by
the characters N s. Over these
coils,
or in other inductive re-
lation to the
same,
are wound
long
fine-wire coils F
F,
and in the
FIG. 91.
same direction
throughout
as the coils E. These coils are secon-
daries,
in which currents of
very high potential
are induced. All
the coils E in one series are
connected,
and all the secondaries F
in another.
On the intermediate
poles
B are wound line-wire
energizing
coils
G,
which are connected in series with one
another,
and also
with the series of
secondary
coils
F,
the direction of
winding
be-
.ing
such that a
current-impulse
induced from the
primary
coils
K
imparts
the same
magnetism
to the
poles
B as that
produced
108 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
in
poles
A
by
the
primary impulse.
Tins condition is indicated
by
the characters N' s'.
In the circuit formed
by
the two sets of coils F and G is intro-
duced a condenser H
;
otherwise this circuit is closed
upon
itself,
while the free ends of the circuit of coils E are connected
to a source of
alternating
currents. As the condenser
capacity
which is needed in
any particular
motor of this kind is
depend-
ent
upon
the rate of alternation or the
potential,
or
both,
its size
or
cost,
as before
explained, may
be
brought
within economical
limits for use with the
ordinary
circuits if the
potential
of the
secondary
circuit in the motor be
sufficiently high. By giving
to the condenser
proper values, any
desired difference of
phase
between the
primary
and
secondary energizing
circuits
may
be
obtained.
CHAPTER XXIII.
TESLA POLYPHASE TRANSFORMER.
APPLYING the
polyphase principle
to the construction of trans-
formers as well to the motors
already noticed,
Mr. Tesla has in-
vented some
very interesting
forms,
which he considers free
from the defects of earlier
and,
at
present,
more familiar forms.
In these transformers he
provides
a series of
inducing
coils and
corresponding
induced
coils,
which are
generally
wound
upon
a
core closed
upon itself, usually
a
ring
of laminated iron.
The two sets of coils are wound side
by
side or
superposed
or
otherwise
placed
in well-known
ways
to
bring
them into the most
effective relations to one another and to the core. The
inducing
or
primary
coils wound on the core are divided into
pairs
or sets
by
the
proper
electrical
connections,
so that while the coils of
one
pair
or set
co-operate
in
fixing
the
magnetic poles
of the
core at two
given diametrically opposite points,
the coils of the
other
pair
or set
assuming,
for sake of
illustration,
that there
are but two tend to fix the
poles ninety degrees
from such
points.
With this induction device is used an
alternating
current
generator
with coils or sets of coils to
correspond
with those of
the
converter,
and the
corresponding
coils of the
generator
and
converter are then connected
up
in
independent
circuits. It re-
sults from this that the different electrical
phases
in the
genera-
tor are attended
by corresponding magnetic changes
in the con-
verter; or,
in other
words,
that as the
generator
coils
revolve,
the
points
of
greatest magnetic intensity
in the converter will be
progressively
shifted or whirled around.
Fig.
92 is a
diagrammatic
illustration of the converter and the
electrical connections of the same.
Fig.
93 is a horizontal cen-
tral cross-section of
Fig.
92.
Fig.
94 is a
diagram
of the circuits
of the entire
system,
the
generator being
shown in section.
Mr. Tesla uses a
core, A,
which is closed
upon
itself that is to
say,
of an annular
cylindrical
or
equivalent
form and as the
efficiency
of the
apparatus
is
largely
increased
by
the subdivision
no INVENTIONS 0V NIKOLA TKKLA.
of tliis
core,
he makes it of thin
strips, plates,
or wires .of soft
iron
electrically
insulated as far as
practicable. Upon
this core
are
wound, say,
four
coils,
BBS'
B',
used as
primary coils,
and 'for
which
long lengths
of
comparatively
fine wire are
employed.
Over these coils are then wound shorter coils of coarser
wire,
c c
c'
c',
to constitute the induced or
secondary
coils. The construc-
tion of this or
any equivalent
form of converter
may
be carried
further,
as above
pointed out, by inclosing
these coils with iron
as,
for
example, by winding
over the coils
layers
of insulated
iron wire.
The device is
provided
with suitable
binding posts,
to which
FIGS. 92 and 93.
the ends of the coils are led. The
diametrically opposite
coils
B R and B' B' are
connected,
respectively,
in
series,
and the four
terminals are connected to the
binding posts.
The induced
coils are connected
together
in
any
desired manner. For ex-
ample,
as shown in
Fig. 94,
c c
may
be connected in
multiple
arc when a
quantity
current is
desired as for
running
a
group
of
incandescent
lamps
while c' c'
may
be
independently
con-
nected in
series in a circuit
including
arc
lamps
or the like. The
generator
in this
system
will be
adapted
to the converter in the
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. Ill
manner illustrated. For
example,
in the
present
case there are
employed
a
pair
of
ordinary permanent
or
electro-magnets,
E
E,
between which is mounted a
cylindrical
armature on a
shaft, F,
and wound with two
coils,
G G'. The terminals of these coils are
connected,
respectively,
to four insulated contact or
collecting
rings,
H H H'
H',
and the four line circuit wires L connect the
brushes
K,
bearing
on these
rings,
to the converter in the order
shown.
Noting
the results of this
combination,
it will be ob-
served that at a
given point
of time the coil G is in its neutral
position
and is
generating
little or no
current,
while the other
coil, G',
is in a
position
where it exerts its maximum effect.
Assuming
coil G to be connected in circuit with coils B B of the
converter,
and coil G' with coils B'
B',
it is evident that the
poles
FIG. 94.
of the
ring
A will be determined
by
coils B' B' alone
;
but as the
armature of the
generator revolves,
coil G
develops
more current
and coil G'
less,
until G reaches its maximum and G' its neutral
position.
The obvious result will be to shift the
poles
of the
ring
A
through one-quarter
of its
periphery.
The movement of
the coils
through
the next
quarter
of a turn
during
which coil
(/ enters a tield of
opposite polarity
and
generates
a current of
opposite
direction and
increasing strength,
while coil
G,
in
passing
from its maximum to its neutral
position generates
a current of
decreasing strength
and same direction as before causes a further
shifting
of the
poles through
the second
quarter
of the
ring.
The second half-revolution will
obviously
be a
repetition
of the
same action.
By
the
shifting
of the
poles
of the
ring A,
a
power-
112 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
ful
dynamic
inductive effect on the coils c c' is
produced.
Be-
sides the currents
generated
in the
secondary
coils
by dynamo-
magnetic induction,
other currents will be set
up
in the same
coils in
consequence
of
many
variations in the
intensity
of the
poles
in the
ring
A. This should be avoided
by maintaining
the
intensity
of the
poles constant,
to
accomplish
which care should
be taken in
designing
and
proportioning
the
generator
and in
distributing
the coils in the
ring
A,
and
balancing
their effect.
When this is
done,
the currents are
produced
by
dynamo-mag-
netic induction
only,
the same result
being
obtained as
though
the
poles
were shifted
by
a commutator with an infinite number
of
segments.
The modifications which are
applicable
to other forms of con-
verter are in
many respects applicable
to
this,
such as those
per-
taining
more
particularly
to the form of the
core,
the relative
lengths
and resistances of the
primary
and
secondary coils,
and
the
arrangements
for
running
or
operating
the same.
CHAPTEK XXIV.
A CONSTANT CURRENT TRANSFORMER WITH MAGNETIC SHIELD
BETWEEN COILS OF PRIMARY AND SECONDARY.
MR. TESLA has
applied
his
principle
of
magnetic shielding
of
parts
to the construction also of
transformers,
the shield
being
interposed
between the
primary
and
secondary
coils. In trans-
formers of the
ordinary type
it will be found that the wave of
electromotive force of the
secondary very nearly
coincides with
that of the
primary, being, however,
in
opposite sign.
At the same
time the
currents,
both
primary
and
secondary, lag
behind their
respective
electromotive forces
;
but as this
lag
is
practically
or
nearly
the same in the case of each it follows that the maximum
and minimum of the
primary
and
secondary
currents will
nearly
coincide,
but differ in
sign
or
direction, provided
the
secondary
be not loaded or if it contain devices
having
the
property
of
self-induction. On the other
hand,
the
lag
of the
primary
behind the
impressed
electromotive force
may
be diminished
by
loading
the
secondary
with a non-inductive or dead resistance
such as incandescent
lamps whereby
the time interval between
the maximum or minimum
periods
of the
primary
and
secondary
currents is increased. This time
interval, however,
is
limited,
and the results obtained
by phase
difference in the
operation
of
such devices as the Tesla
alternating
current motors can
only
be
approximately
realized
by
such means of
producing
or
securing
this
difference,
as above
indicated,
for it is desirable in such cases
that there should exist between the
primary
and
secondary
cur-
rents,
or those
which,
however
produced, pass through
the two
circuits of the
motor,
a difference of
phase
of
ninety degrees;
or,
in other
words,
the current in one circuit should be a maxi-
mum when that in the other circuit is a minimum. To attain
to this condition more
perfectly,
an increased retardation of the
secondary
current is secured in the
following
manner: Instead
of
bringing
the
primary
and
secondary
coils or circuits of a
transformer into the closest
possible relations,
as has hitherto
114 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
been
done,
Mr. Tesla
protects
in a measure the
secondary
from
the inductive action or effect of the
primary by surrounding
either the
primary
or the
secondary
with a
comparatively
thin
magnetic
shield or screen. Under these modified
conditions,
as
long
as the
primary
current has a small
value,
the shield
protects
the
secondary;
but as soon as the
primary
current
has reached a certain
strength,
which is
arbitrarily determined,
the
protecting magnetic
shield becomes saturated and the induc-
tive action
upon
the
secondary begins.
It
results, therefore,
that
the
secondary
current
begins
to How at a certain fraction of a
period
later than it would without the
interposed shield,
and
since this retardation
may
be obtained without
necessarily
retard-
ing
the
primary
current
also,
an additional
lag
is
secured,
and
the time interval between the maximum or minimum
periods
of
the
primary
and
secondary
currents is increased. Such a trans-
FIG. 95.
former
may, by properly proportioning
its several elements and
determining
the
proper
relations between the
primary
and
secondary windings,
the thickness of the
magnetic shield,
and
other
conditions,
be constructed to
yield
a constant current at all
loads.
Fig.
95 is a cross-section of a transformer
embodying
this im-
provement. Fig.
96 is a similar view of a modified form of
transformer,
showing diagrammatically
the manner of
using
the
same.
A A is the main core of the
transformer, composed
of a
ring
of soft annealed and insulated or oxidized iron wire.
Upon
this
core is wound the
secondary
circuit or coil B B. This latter is
then covered with a
layer
or
layers
of annealed and insulated
iron wires c
c,
wound in a direction at
right angles
to the
secondary
POLYPHASE CURRENTS. 115
coil. Over the whole is then wound the
primary
coil or wire D D.
From the nature of this construction it will be obvious that
as
long
as the shield formed
by
the wires c is below
magnetic
saturation the
secondary
coil or circuit is
effectually protected
or
shielded from the inductive influence of the
primary, although
on
open
circuit it
may
exhibit some electromotive force. When
the
strength
of the
primary
reaches a certain
value,
the shield
c,
becoming
saturated,
ceases to
protect
the
secondary
from induc-
tive
action,
and current is in
consequence developed
therein.
For similar
reasons,
when the
primary
current
weakens,
the
weakening
of the
secondary
is retarded to the same or
approxi-
mately
the same extent.
The
specific
construction of the transformer is
largely
imma-
FIG. 90.
terial. In
Fig. 90,
for
example,
the core A is built
up
of thin
insulated iron
plates
or discs. The
primary
circuit D is wound
next the core A. Over this is
applied
the shield
c,
which in this
case is made
up
of thin
strips
or
plates
of iron
properly
insulated
and
surrounding
the
primary, forming
a closed
magnetic
circuit.
The
secondary
B is wound over the shield c. In
Fig.
06, also,
K is a source of
alternating
or
rapidly changing
currents.
The
primary
of the transformer is connected with the circuit of
the
generator.
F is a two-circuit
alternating
current
motor,
one
of the circuits
being
connected with the main circuit from the
source
E,
and the other
being supplied
with currents from the
secondarv of the transformer.
PART II.
THE TESLA EFFECTS WITH HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS.
CHAPTER XXV.
INTRODUCTION. THE SCOPE OF THE TESLA LECTURES.
BEFORE
proceeding
to
study
the three Tesla lectures here
presented,
the reader
may
find it of some assistance to have his
attention directed to the main
points
of interest and
significance
therein. The lirst of these lectures was delivered in New
York,
at Columbia
College,
before the American Institute of Electrical
Engineers, May 20,
1891. The
urgent
desire
expressed
immedi-
ately
from all
parts
of
Europe
for an
opportunity
to witness the
brilliant and unusual
experiments
with which the lecture was
accompanied,
induced Mr. Tesla to
go
to
England early
in
1892,
when he
appeared
before the Institution of Electrical
Engineers,
and a
day later, by special request,
before the
Royal
Institution.
His
reception
was of the most enthusiastic and
flattering
nature on
both occasions. He then
went, by invitation,
to
France,
and re-
peated
his novel demonstrations before the Societe Internationale
des
Electriciens,
and the Societe
Frangaise
de
Physique.
Mr. Tesla
returned to America in the fall of
1892,
and in
February, 1893,
de-
livered his third lecture before the Franklin Institute of Philadel-
phia,
in
fulfilment of a
long standing promise
to Prof. Houston.
The
following
week,
at the
request
of President James I.
Ayer,
of the National Electric
Light Association,
the same lecture was
re-delivered in St. Louis. It had been intended to limit the in-
vitations to
members,
but the
appeals
from residents in the
city
were so numerous and
pressing
that it became
necessary
to secure
a
very large
hall. Hence it came about that the lecture was
listened to
by
an audience of over
5,000 people,
and was in some
parts
of a more
popular
nature than either of its
predecessors.
Despite
this concession to the need of the hour and
occasion,
Mr.
Tesla did not hesitate to show
many
new and brilliant
experi-
ments,
and to advance the frontier of
discovery
far
beyond any
point
he had theretofore marked
publicly.
We
may
now
proceed
to a
running
review of the lectures them-
selves. The
ground
covered
by
them is so vast that
only
the
120 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
leading
ideas and
experiments
can here be touched
upon
; besides,
it is
preferable
that the lectures should be
carefully gone
over for
their own
sake,
it
being
more than likely
that each student will
discover a new
beauty
or stimulus in them.
Taking up
the
course of
reasoning
followed
by
Mr. Tesla in his first
lecture,
it
will be noted that he started out with the
recognition
of the
fact,
which he has now
experimentally
demonstrated,
that for the
pro-
duction of
light
waves, primarily,
electrostatic effects must be
_^Jjrought
into
play,
and
continuedjrtudy
has led him
tpjtheLOpinion
that_all
electrical and
magnetic
effects
may
be referred to ek-c-
trostajtic
_irLolecular _
forces. This
opinion
finds a
singular
con-
firmation in one of the most
striking experiments
which he
describes, namely,
the
production
of a veritable flame
by
the
agitation
of
electrostatically charged
molecules. It is of the
highest
interest to observe that this result
points
out a
way
of
obtaining
a flame which consumes no material and in which no
chemical action whatever takes
place.
It also throws a
light
on
the nature of the
ordinary flame,
which Mr. Tesla believes to be
due to electrostatic molecular
actions, which,
if
true,
would lead
directly
to the idea that even chemical affinities
might
be electro-
static in their nature and
that,
as has
already
been
suggested,
molecular forces in
general may
be referable to one and the same
cause. This
singular phenomenon
accounts in a
plausible
man-
ner for the
unexplained
fact that
buildings
are
frequently
set on
fire
during
thunder storms with'out
having
been at all struck
by
-\v lightning.
It
may
also
explain
the total
disappearance
of
ships
at sea.
One of the
striking proofs
of the correctness of the ideas ad-
vanced
by
Mr. Tesla is the fact
that, notwithstanding
the
employ-
ment of the most
powerful electromagnetic
inductive
effects,
but
.feeble
luminosity
is
obtainable,
and this
only
in close
proximity
to the source of
disturbance; whereas,
when the electrostatic-
effects are
intensified,
the same initial
energy
suffices to excite
luminosity
at considerable distances from the source. That there
are
only
electrostatic effects active seems to be
clearly proved by
Mr. Tesla's
experiments
with an induction coil
operated
with
alternating
currents of
very high frequency.
He shows how
tubes
may
be made to
glow brilliantly
at considerable distances
from
any object
when
placed
in a
powerful, rapidly alternating,
electrostatic
field,
and he describes
many interesting phenomena
observed in such a field. His
experiments open up
the
possibility
man
FHKQUENVY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CVKRKNT*. 121
of
lighting
an
apartment by simply creating
in it sucli an electro-
static
field,
and
this,
in a certain
way,
would
appear
to be the
ideal method of
lighting
a
room,
as it would allow the illuminat-
ing
device to be
freely
moved about. The
power
with which
these exhausted
tubes,
devoid of
any electrodes,
light up
is cer-
tainly
remarkable.
That the
principle propounded by
Mr. Tesla is a broad one is
evident from the
many ways
in which it
may
be
practically ap-
plied.
We need
only
refer to the
variety
of the devices shown
or
described,
all of which are novel in character and
will,
with-
out
doubt,
lead to further
important
results at the hands of Mr.
Tesla and other
investigators.
The
experiment,
for
instance,
of
lighting up
a
single
filament or block of
refractory
material with
a
single wire,
is in itself sufficient to
give
Mr. Tesla's work the
stamp
of
originality,
and the numerous other
experiments
and
effects which
may
be varied at
will,
are
equally
new and interest-
ing. Thus,
the incandescent filament
spinning
in an unex-
hausted
globe,
the well-known Crookes
experiment
on
open
cir-
cuit,
and the
many
others
suggested,
will not fail to interest the
reader. Mr. Tesla has made an exhaustive
study
of the various
forms of the
discharge presented by
an induction coil when
op-
erated with these
rapidly alternating currents, starting
from the
thread-like
discharge
and
passing through
various
stages
to the
true electric flame.
A
point
of
great importance
in the introduction of
high
ten-
sion
alternating
current which Mr. Tesla
brings
out is the neces-
sity
of
carefully avoiding
all
gaseous
matter in the
high
tension
apparatus.
He shows
that,
at least with
very rapidly alternating
currents of
high potential,
the
discharge may
work
through
al-
most
any practicable
thickness of the best
insulators,
if air is
present.
In such cases the air included within the
apparatus
is
violently agitated
and
by
molecular bombardment the
parts may
be so
greatly
heated as to cause a
rupture
of the. insulation.
The
practical
outcome of this
is, that,
whereas with
steady
cur-
rents, any
kind of insulation
may
be
used,
with
rapidly
alternat-
ing
currents oils will
probably
be the best to
employ,
a fact
which has been
observed,
but not until now
satisfactorily
ex-
plained.
The
recognition
of the above fact is of
special impor-
tance in the construction of the
costly
commercial induction coils
which are often rendered useless in an unaccountable manner.
The truth of these views of Mr. Tesla is made evident
by
the in-
122 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
.
teresting experiments
illustrative of the behavior of the air be-
tween
charged
surfaces,
the luminous streams formed
by
the
charged
molecules
appearing
even when
great
thicknesses of tin-
best insulators are
interposed
between the
charged
surfaces.
These luminous streams afford in themselves a
very interesting
study
for the
experimenter.
With these
rapidly alternating
cur-
rents
they
become far more
powerful
and
produce
beautiful
light
effects when
they
issue from a
wire,
pinwheel
or other
object
at-
tached to a terminal of the coil
;
and it is
interesting
to note that
they
issue from a ball almost as
freely
as from a
point,
when the
frequency
is
very high.
From these
experiments
we also obtain a better idea of the
importance
of
taking
into account the
capacity
and self-induction
in the
apparatus employed
and the
possibilities
offered
by
the
use of condensers in
conjunction
with alternate
currents,
the em-
ployment
of currents of
high frequency, among
other
things,
making
it
possible
to reduce the condenser to
practicable
dirnen-
(sions.
Another
point
of interest and
practical bearing
is the
fact, proved by
Mr.
Tesla,
that for alternate
currents, especially
those of
high frequency,
insulators are
required possessing
a
small
specific
inductive
capacity,
which at the same time have a
high insulating power.
Mr. Tesla also makes
interesting
and valuable
suggestion
in re-
gard
to the economical utilization of iron in machines and trans-
formers. He shows
how, by maintaining by
continuous
magnet-
ization a flow of lines
through
the
iron,
the latter
may
be
kept
near its maximum
permeability
and a
higher output
and
economy
may
be secured in such
apparatus.
This
principle may prove
of
considerable commercial
importance
in the
development
of alter-
nating systems.
Mr. Tesla's
suggestion
that the same result can
be secured
by heating
the iron
by hysteresis
and
eddy
currents,
and
increasing
the
permeability
in this
manner,
while it
may ap-
pear
less
practical,
nevertheless
opens
another direction for inves-
tigation
and
improvement.
The demonstration of the fact that with
alternating
currents
of
high frequency,
sufficient
energy may
be transmitted under
practicable
conditions
through
the
glass
of an incandescent
lamp
by
electrostatic or
electromagnetic
induction
may
lead to a de-
^-parture
in the
construction of such devices. Another
important
i I
experimental
result achieved is the
operation
of
lamps,
and even
\ 1
.motors,
with the
discharges
of
condensers,
this method
affording
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 123
a means of
converting
direct or
alternating
currents. In this
connection Mr. Tesla advocates the
perfecting
of
apparatus capa-
ble of
generating electricity
of
high
tension from heat
energy,
believing
this to be a better
way
of
obtaining
electrical
energy
for
practical purposes, particularly
for the
production
of
light.
While
many
were
probably prepared
to encounter curious
phenomena
of
impedance
in the use of a condenser
discharged
disruptively,
the
experiments
shown were
extremely interesting
on account of their
paradoxical
character. The
burning
of an
incandescent
lamp
at
any
candle
power
when connected across a
heavy
metal
bar,
the existence of nodes on the bar and the
possi-
bility
of
exploring
the bar
by
means of an
ordinary
Gardew
voltmeter,
are all
peculiar developments,
but
perhaps
the most
interesting
observation is the
phenomenon
of
impedance
observed
in the
lamp
with a
straight filament,
which remains dark while
the bulb
glows.
Mr. Tesla's manner of
operating
an induction coil
by
means of
the
disruptive discharge,
and thus
obtaining
enormous differences
of
potential
from
comparatively
small and
inexpensive coils,
will
be
appreciated by experimenters
and will find valuable
applica-
tion in laboratories.
Indeed,
his
many suggestions
and hints in
regard
to the construction and use of
apparatus
in these investi-
gations
will be
highly
valued and will aid
materially
in future-
research.
The London lecture was delivered twice. In its first
form,
before the Institution of Electrical
Engineers,
it was in some
respects
an
amplification
of several
j>oints
not
specially enlarged
upon
in the JS
T
ew York
lecture,
but
brought
forward
many
addi-
tional discoveries and new
investigations.
Its
repetition,
in-.""-]
another
form,
at the
Royal Institution,
was due to Prof.
Dewar,
who with Lord
Rayleigh,
manifested a most
lively
interest in Mr.
'j
Tesla's
work,
and whose kindness illustrated once more the
strong
V }
English
love of scientific truth and
appreciation
of its votaries. }
As an
indefatigable experimenter,
Mr. Tesla was
certainly
no-^
where more at home than in the haunts of
Faraday,
and as the /
guest
of
Faraday's
successor. This
Royal
Institution lecture W
summed
up
the
leading points
of Mr. Tesla's
work,
in the
high
/
potential, high frequency field,
and we
may
here avail
ourselves
J
of so valuable a
summarization,
in a
simple form,
of a
subject
by
no means easv of
comprehension
until it has been
thoroughly
studied.
124
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
In these London
lectures, among
the
many
notable
points
made
was
first,
the difficulty
of
constructing
the alternators
to
obtain,
the
very high
frequencies
needed. To obtain the
high
fre-
quencies
it was
necessary
to
provide
several hundred
polar pro-
jections,
which were
necessarily
small and offered
many
draw-
backs,
and this the more as
exceedingly high peripheral speeds
had to be resorted to. In some of the first machines
both arma-
ture and field had
polar projections.
These machines
produced
a curious
noise, especially
when the armature was started from
the state of
rest,
the field
being charged.
The most efficient
machine was found to be one with a drum
armature,
the iron
body
of which consisted of
very
thin wire annealed with
special
care. It
was,
of
course,
desirable to avoid the
employment
of
iron in the
armature,
and several machines of this
kind,
with
moving
or
stationary
conductors were
constructed,
but the re-
sults obtained were not
quite satisfactory,
on account of the
great
mechanical and other difficulties encountered.
The
study
of the
properties
of the
high frequency
currents
obtained from these machines is
very interesting,
as
nearly every
experiment
discloses
something
new. Two coils traversed
by
such a current attract or
repel
each other with a force
which,
owing
to the
imperfection
of our sense of
touch,
seems contin-
uous. An
interesting
observation, already
noted under another
form,
is that a
piece
of
iron,
surrounded
by
a coil
through
which
the current is
passing appears
to be
continuously magnetized.
This
apparent continuity might
be ascribed to the
deficiency
of
the sense of
touch,
but there is evidence that in currents of such
high frequencies
one of the
impulses preponderates
over the
other.
As
might
be
expected,
conductors traversed
by
such currents
are
rapidly heated, owing
to the increase of the
resistance,
and
the
heating
effects are
relatively
much
greater
in the iron.
The
hysteresis
losses in iron are so
great
that an iron
core,
even if
finely subdivided,
is heated in an
incredibly
short time.
To
give
an idea of
this,
an
ordinary
iron wire
-^g-
inch in
diameter inserted within a coil
having
250
turns,
with a current
estimated to be five
amperes passing through
the
coil,
becomes
within two seconds' time so hot as to scorch wood.
Beyond
a
certain
frequency,
an iron
core,
no matter how
finely
subdivided,
exercises a
dampening effect,
and it was
easy
to find a
point
at
HIGH
FRJSQVKNCy
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 125
whicli tlie
impedance
<>f a coil was not affected
by
the
presence
of a core
consisting
of a bundle of
very
thin well annealed and
varnished iron wires.
Experiments
with a
telephone,
a conductor in a
strong mag-
netic
field,
or with a condenser or
arc,
seem to afford certain
proof
that sounds far above the
usually accepted
limit of
hearing
would be
perceived
if
produced
with sufficient
power.
The arc
produced by
these currents
possesses
several
interesting
features.
Usually
it emits a note the
pitch
of which
corresponds
to twice
the
frequency
of the
current,
but if the
frequency
be
sufficiently
high
it becomes
noiseless,
the limit of audition
being
determined
principally by
the linear dimensions of the arc. A curious fea-
ture of the arc is its
persistency,
which is due
partly
to the in-
ability
of the
gaseous
column to cool and increase
considerably
in
resistance,
as is the case with low
frequencies,
and
partly
to
the
tendency
of such a
high frequency
machine to maintain a
constant current.
In connection with these machines the condenser affords a
par-
ticularly interesting study. Striking
effects are
produced by
proper adjustments
of
capacity
and self-induction. It is
easy
to
raise the electromotive force of the machine to
many
times the
original
value
by simply adjusting
the
capacity
of a condenser
connected in the induced circuit. If the condenser be at some
distance from the
machine,
the difference of
potential
on the
terminals of the latter
may
be
only
a small fraction of that on
the condenser.
But the most
interesting experiences
are
gained
when the ten-
sion of the currents from the machine is raised
by
means of an
induction coil. In
consequence
of the enormous rate of
change
obtainable in the
primary
current,
much
higher potential
differ-
ences are obtained than with coils
operated
in the usual
ways,
and, owing
to the
high frequency,
the
secondary discharge pos-
sesses
many striking peculiarities.
Both the electrodes behave
generally alike, though
it
appears
from some observations that
one current
impulse preponderates
over the
other,
as before
mentioned.
The
physiological
effects of the
high
tension
discharge
are
found to be so small that the shock of the coil can be
supported
without
any inconvenience, except perhaps
a small burn
produced
by
the
discharge upon approaching
the hand to one of the ter-
minals. The
decidedly
smaller
physiological
effects of these cur-
126 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
rents are
thought
to be due either to a different distribution
through
the
body
or to the tissues
acting
as condensers. But in
the case of an induction coil with a
great many
turns the harmless-
ness is
principally
due to the fact that but little
energy
is avail-
able in the external circuit when the same is closed
through
the
experimenter's body,
on account of the
great impedance
of the
coil.
In
varying
the
frequency
and strenth of the currents
through
the
primary
of the
coil,
the character of the
secondary discharge
is
greatly
varied,
and no less than five distincts forms are ob-
served : A
weak,
sensitive thread
discharge,
a
powerful naming
discharge,
and three forms of brush or
streaming discharges.
Each of these
possesses
certain
noteworthy
features,
but the most
interesting
to
study
are the latter.
Under certain conditions the
streams,
which are
presumably
due to the violent
agitation
of the air
molecules,
issue
freely
from all
points
of the
coil,
even
through
a thick insulation. If
there is the smallest air
space
between the
primary
and
secondary,
they
will form there and
surely injure
the coil
by slowly
warm-
ing
the insulation. As
they
form even with
ordinary frequencies
when the
potential
is
excessive,
the
air-space
must be most care-
fully
avoided. These
high frequency
streamers differ in
aspect
and
properties
from those
produced by
a static machine. The
wind
produced by
them is small and should
altogether
cease if
still
considerably higher frequencies
could be obtained. A
pe-
culiarity
is that
they
issue as
freely
from surfaces as from
points.
(
hving
to
this,
a metallic
vane,
mounted in one of the terminals of
the coil so as to rotate
freely,
and
having
one of its sides covered
with
insulation,
is
spun rapidly
around. Such a vane would not
rotate with a
steady potential,
but with a
high frequency
coil it
will
spin,
even if it be
entirely
covered with
insulation,
provided
the insulation on one side be either thicker or of a
higher specific
inductive
capacity.
A Crookes electric radiometer is also
spun
around when connected to one of the terminals of the
coil,
but
only
at
very high
exhaustion or at
ordinary pressures.
There is still another and more
striking peculiarity
of such a
high frequency streamer, namely,
it is hot. The heat is
easily
perceptible
with
frequencies
of about
10,000,
even if the
poten-
tial is not
excessively high.
The
heating
effect
is,
of
course,
due
to the molecular
impacts
and collisions. Could the
frequency
and
potential
be
pushed
far
enough,
then a brush could be
pr-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 127
duced
resembling
in
every particular
a flame and
giving light
and
heat, jet
without a chemical
process taking place.
The hot
brush,
when
properly produced,
resembles a
jet
of
burning gas escaping
under
great pressure,
and it emits an extra-
ordinary strong
smell of ozone. The
great ozonizing
action is
ascribed to the fact that the
agitation
of the molecules of the air
is more violent in such a brush than in the
ordinary
streamer of
a static machine. But the most
powerful
brush
discharges
were
produced by employing
currents of much
higher frequencies
than
it was
possible
to obtain
by
means of the alternators. These
currents were obtained
by disruptively
discharging
a condenser
and
setting up
oscillations. In this manner currents of a fre-
quency
of several hundred thousand were obtained.
Currents of this
kind,
Mr. Tesla
pointed out, produce striking
effects. At these
frequencies,
the
impedance
of a
copper
bar is
so
great
that a
potential
difference of several hundred volts can
be maintained between two
points
of a short and thick
bar,
and
it is
possible
to
keep
an
ordinary
incandescent
lamp burning
at
full candle
power by attaching
the terminals of the
lamp
to two
points
of the bar no more than a few inches
apart,
When the
frequency
is
extremely high,
nodes are found to exist on such a
bar,
and it is
easy
to locate them
by
means of a
lamp.
By converting
the
high
tension
discharges
of a low
frequency
coil in this
manner,
it was found
practicable
to
keep
a few
lamps
burning
on the
ordinary
circuit in the
laboratory,
and
by bring-
ing
the undulation to a low
pitch,
it was
possible
to
operate
small
motors.
This
plan
likewise allows of
converting high
tension
discharges
of one direction into low tension unidirectional
currents, by
ad-
justing
the circuit so that there are no oscillations. In
passing
the
oscillating discharges through
the
primary
of a
specially
constructed
coil,
it is
easy
to obtain enormous
potential
differences
with
only
few turns of the
secondary.
Great difficulties were at first
experienced
in
producing
a suc-
cessful coil on this
plan.
It was found
necessary
to
keep
all
air,
or
gaseous
matter in
general, away
from the
charged
surfaces,
and oil immersion was resorted to. The wires used were
heavily
covered with
gutta-percha
and wound in
oil,
or the air was
pumped
out
by
means of a
Sprengel pump.
The
general arrangement
was the
following:
An
ordinary
induction
coil, operated
from
a low
frequency alternator,
was used to
charge Leyden jars.
The
128 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
jars
were made to
discharge
over a
single
or
multiple gap through
the
primary
of the second coil. To insure the action of the
gap,
the arc was blown out
by
a
magnet
or air blast. To
adjust
the
potential
in the
secondary
a small oil condenser was
used,
or
polished
brass
spheres
of different sizes were screwed on the
terminals and their distance
adjusted.
When the conditions were
carefully
determined to suit each
experiment, magnificent
effects were obtained. Two
wires,
stretched
through
the
room,
each
being
connected to one of the
terminals of the
coil,
emitted streams so
powerful
that the
light
from them allowed
distinguishing
the
objects
in the room
;
the
wires became luminous even
though
covered with thick and
most excellent insulation. When two
straight wires,
or two con-
centric circles of
wire,
are connected to the
terminals,
and set at
the
proper
distance,
a uniform luminous sheet is
produced
be-
tween them. It was
possible
in this
way
to cover an ana of
more than one meter
square completely
with the streams.
By
attaching
to one terminal a
large
circle of wire and to the other
terminal a small
sphere,
the streams are focused
upon
the
sphere,
produce
a
strongly lighted spot upon
the
same,
and
present
the
appearance
of a luminous cone. A
very
thin wire
glued upon
a
plate
of hard rubber of
great thickness,
on the
opposite
side of
which is fastened a tinfoil
coating,
is rendered
intensely
luminous
when the
coating
is connected to the other terminal of the coil.
Such an
experiment
can be
performed
also with low
frequency
currents,
but much less
satisfactorily.
When the terminals of such a
coil,
even of a
very
small
one,
are
separated by
a rubber or
glass plate,
the
discharge spreads
over the
plate
in the form of
streams,
threads or brilliant
sparks,
and affords a
magnificent display,
which cannot be
equaled by
the
largest
coil
operated
in the usual
ways. By
a
simple adjust-
ment it is
possible
to
produce
with the coil a succession of bril-
liant
sparks, exactly
as with a Holtz machine.
Under certain
conditions,
when the
frequency
of the oscillation
is
very great, white, phantom-like
streams are seen to break forth
from the terminals of the coil. The chief
interesting
feature
about them
is,
that
they
stream
freely against
the outstretched
hand or other
conducting object
without
producing any
sensa-
tion,
and the hand
may
be
approached very
near to the terminal
without a
spark
being
induced to
jump.
This is due
presumably
to the fact that a considerable
portion
of the
energy
is carried
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 129
away
or
dissipated
in the
streamers,
and the difference of
poten-
tial between the terminal and the hand is diminished.
It is found in such
experiments
that the
frequency
of the
vibration and the
quickness
of succession of the
sparks
between
the knobs affect to a marked
degree
the
appearance
of the
streams. When the
frequency
is
very low,
the air
gives way
in
more or less the same manner as
by
a
steady
difference of
poten-
tial,
and the streams consist of distinct
threads,
generally mingled
with thin
sparks,
which
probably correspond
to the successive
discharges occurring
between the knobs. But when the fre-
quency
is
very high,
and the arc of the
discharge produces
a
sound which is loud and smooth
(which
indicates both that oscil-
lation takes
place
and that the
sparks
succeed each other with
great rapidity),
then the luminous streams formed are
perfectly
uniform.
They
are
generally
of a
purplish hue,
but when the
molecular vibration is increased
by raising
the
potential, they
as-
sume a white color.
The luminous
intensity
of the streams increases
rapidly
when
the
potential
is
increased;
and with
frequencies
of
only
a few
hundred
thousand,
could the coil be made to withstand a suffi-
ciently high potential difference,
there is no doubt that the
space
around a wire could be made to emit a
strong light,
merely by
the
agitation
of the molecules of the air at
ordinary
pressure.
Such
discharges
of
very high frequency
which render lumi-
nous the air at
ordinary pressure
we have
very likely
occasion to
witness in the aurora borealis. From
many
of these
experi-
ments it seems reasonable to infer that sudden cosmic disturb-
ances,
such as
eruptions
on the
sun,
set the electrostatic
charge
of the earth in an
extremely rapid
vibration,
and
produce
the
glow by
the violent
agitation
of the air in the
upper
and even in
the lower strata. It is
thought
that if the
frequency
were low?
or even more so if the
charge
were not at all
vibrating,
the
lower dense strata would break down as in a
lightning discharge.
Indications of such
breaking
down have been
repeatedly
ob-
served,
but
they
can be attributed to the fundamental disturb-
ances,
which are few in
number,
for the
superimposed
vibration
would be so
rapid
as not to allow a
disruptive
break.
The
study
of these
discharge phenomena
has led Mr. Tesla to
the
recognition
of some
important
facts. It was
found,
as
already
stated, that
uascous
matter must be most
carefully
excluded from
130
INVENTIONS
OP' NIKOLA TESLA.
any
dielectric which is
subjected
to
great, rapidly changing
elec-
trostatic stresses. Since it is difficult to exclude the
gas perfectly
when solid insulators are
used,
it is
necessary
to resort to
liquid
dielectrics.
When a solid dielectric is
used,
it matters little how
thick and how
good
it
is;
if air be
present,
streamers
form,
which
gradually
heat the dielectric and
impair
its
insulating
power,
and the
discharge finally
breaks
through.
Under ordi-
nary
conditions
the best insulators are those which
possess
the
highest specific
inductive
capacity,
but such insulators are not
the best to
employ
when
working
with these
high frequency
currents,
for in most cases the
higher specific
inductive
capacity
is rather a
disadvantage.
The
prime quality
of the
insulating
medium for these currents is
continuity.
For this reason
prin-
cipally
it is
necessary
to
employ liquid insulators,
such as oils.
If two metal
plates,
connected to the terminals of the
coil,
are
immersed in oil and set a distance
apart,
the coil
may
be
kept
working
for
any length
of time without a break
occurring,
or
without the oil
being warmed,
but if air bubbles are
introduced,
they
become luminous
;
the air
molecules, by
their
impact
against
the
oil,
heat
it,
and after some time cause the insulation
to
give way.
If,
instead of the
oil,
a solid
plate
of the best
dielectric,
even several times thicker than the oil
intervening
between the metal
plates,
is
inserted between the
latter,
the air
having
free access to the
charged
surfaces,
the dielectric i vari-
ably
is warmed and breaks down.
The
employment
of oil is advisable or
necessary
even with low
frequencies,
if the
potentials
are such that streamers
form,
but
only
in such
cases,
as is evident from the
theory
of the action.
If the
potentials
are so low that streamers do not
form,
then it
is even
disadvantageous
to
employ
oil,
for it
may, principally by
confining
the
heat,
be the cause of the
breaking
down of the in-
sulation.
The exclusion of
gaseous
matter is not
only
desirable on ac-
count of the
safety
of the
apparatus,
but also on account of
economy, especially
in a
condenser,
in which considerable waste
of
power may
occur
merely owing
to the
presence
of
air,
if the
electric
density
on the
charged
surfaces is
great.
In the course of these
investigations
a
phenomenon
of
special
scientific interest was observed. It
may
be ranked
among
the
brush
phenomena,
in fact it is a kind of brush which forms
at,
or
near,
a
single
terminal in
high
vacuum. In a bulb with a con-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 131
ducting
electrode,
even if the latter be of
aluminum,
the brush
has
only
a
very
short
existence,
but it can be
preserved
for a con-
siderable
length
of time in a bulb devoid of
any conducting
elec-
trode. To observe the
phenomenon
it is found best to
employ
a
large spherical
bulb
having
in its centre a small bulb
supported
on a tube sealed to the neck of the former. The
large
bulb be-
ing
exhausted to a
high degree,
and the inside of the small bulb
being
connected to one of the terminals of the
coil,
under certain
conditions there
appears
a
misty
haze around the small
bulb,
which,
after
passing through
some
stages,
assumes the form of a
brush, generally
at
right angles
to the tube
supporting
the small
bulb. When the brush assumes this form it
may
be
brought
to
a state of extreme sensitiveness to electrostatic and
magnetic
in-
fluence. The bulb
hanging straight down,
and all
objects being
remote from
it,
the
approach
of the observer within a few
paces
will cause the brush to
fly
to the
opposite side,
and if he walks
around the bulb it will
always keep
on the
opposite
side. It
may
begin
to
spin
around the terminal
long
before it reaches that sen-
sitive
stage.
When it
begins
to turn
around, principally,
but
also
before,
it is affected
by
a
magnet,
and at a certain
stage
it is
susceptible
to
magnetic
influence to an
astonishing degree.
A
small
permanent magnet,
with its
poles
at a distance of no more
than two centimetres will affect it
visibly
at a distance of two me-
tres, slowing
down or
accelerating
the rotation
according
to how
it is held
relatively
to the brush.
When the bulb
hangs
with the
globe down,
the rotation is al-
ways
clockwise. In the southern
hemisphere
it would occur in
the
opposite direction,
and on the
(magnetic) equator
the brush
should not turn at all. The rotation
may
be reversed
by
a
mag-
net
kept
at some distance. The brush rotates
best,
seemingly,
when it is at
right angles
to the lines of force of the earth. It,
very likely rotates,
when at its maximum
speed,
in
synchronism
with the
alternations, say, 10,000
times a second. The rotation
can be slowed down or accelerated
by
the
approach
or recession
of the
observer,
or
any conducting body,
but it cannot be re-
versed
by putting
the bulb in
any position. Very
curious
experi-
ments
may
be
performed
with the brush when in its most sensi-
tive state. For
instance,
the brush
resting
in one
position,
the
experimenter may, by selecting
a
proper position, approach
the
hand at a certain considerable distance to the
bulb,
and he
may
cjuisi' the brush to
pass
oft bv
merely stiffening
the muscles of
132 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
the
arm,
the mere
change
of
configuration
of the arm and the
consequent imperceptible displacement being
sufficient to disturb
the delicate balance. When it
begins
to rotate
slowly,
and tin-
hands are held at a
proper
distance,
it is
impossible
to make even
the
slightest
motion without
producing
a visible effect
upon
the
brush. A metal
plate
connected to the other terminal of the coil
affects it at a
great
distance, slowing
down the rotation often to
one turn a second.
Mr. Tesla
hopes
that this
phenomenon
will
prove
a valuable
aid in the
investigation
of the nature of the forces
acting
in an
electrostatic or
magnetic
field. If there is
any
motion which is
measurable
going
on in the
space,
such a brush would be
apt
to
reveal it. It
is,
so to
speak,
a beam of
light, frictionless,
devoid
of inertia. On account of its marvellous sensitiveness to electro-
static or
magnetic
disturbances it
may
be the means of
sending
signals through
submarine cables with
any speed,
and even of
transmitting intelligence
to a
.distance
without wires.
In
operating
an induction coil with these
rapidly alternating
currents,
it is
astonishing
to
note,
for the first
time,
the
great
importance
of the relation of
capacity,
self-induction,
and fre-
quency
as
bearing upon
the
general
result. The combined effect
of these elements
produces many
curious effects. For instance.
two metal
plates
are connected to the terminals and set at a small
distance,
so that an arc is formed between them. This arc
/>/v-
vents a
strong
current from
flowing through
the coil. If the art-
be
interrupted by
the
interposition
of a
glass plate,
the
capacity
of the condenser obtained counteracts the
self-induction,
and a
stronger
current is made to
pass.
The effects of
capacity
are the
most
striking,
for in these
experiments,
since the self-induction
and
frequency
both are
high,
the critical
capacity
is
very small,
and need be but
slightly
varied to
produce
a
very
considerable
change.
The
experimenter brings
his
body
in contact with the
terminals of the
secondary
of the
coil,
or attaches to one or both
terminals insulated bodies of
very
small
bulk,
such as exhausted
bulbs,
and he
produces
a considerable rise or fall of
potential
on
the
secondary,
and
greatly
affects the flow of the current
through
the
primary
coil.
In
many
of the
phenomena observed,
the
presence
of the
air,
or,
generally speaking,
of a medium of a
gaseous
nature
(using
this term not to
imply specific properties,
but in contradistinction
to
homogeneity
or
perfect
continuity) plays
an
important part.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 133
as it allows
energy
to be
dissipated by
molecular
impact
or bom-
bardment. The action is thus
explained:
When an insulated
body
connected to a terminal of the coil is
suddenly charged
to
high potential,
it acts
inductively upon
the
surrounding air,
or
whatever
gaseous
medium there
might
be. The molecules or
atoms which are near it
are,
of
course,
more
attracted,
and move
through
a
greater
distance than the further ones. When the
nearest molecules strike the
body they
are
repelled,
and collisions
occur at all distances within the inductive distance. It is now
clear
that,
if the
potential
be
steady,
bat little loss of
energy
can
be caused in this
way,
for the molecules which are nearest to
the
body having
had an additional
charge imparted
to them
by
contact,
are not attracted until
they
have
parted,
if not with
all,
at least with most of the additional
charge,
which can be accom-
plished only
after a
great many
collisions. This is inferred from
the fact that with a
steady potential
there is but little loss in
dry
air. When the
potential,
instead of
being steady,
is
alternating,
the conditions are
entirely
different. In this case a
rhythmical
bombardment
occurs,
no matter whether the molecules after
coming
in contact with the
body
lose the
imparted charge
or
not, and,
what is
more,
if the
charge
is not
lost,
the
impacts
are
all the more violent.
Still,
if the
frequency
of the
impulses
be
very small,
the loss caused
by
the
impacts
and collisions would
not be serious unless the
potential
was excessive. But when
extremely high frequencies
and more or less
high potentials
are
used,
the loss
may
be
very great,
The total
energy
lost
per
unit
of time is
proportionate
to the
product
of the number of
impacts
per second,
or the
frequency
and the
energy
lost in each
impact.
But the
energy
of an
impact
must be
proportionate
to the
square
of the electric
density
of the
body,
on the
assumption
that the
charge imparted
to the molecule is
proportionate
to that
density.
It is concluded from this that the total
energy
lost must be
pro-
portionate
to the
product
of the
frequency
and the
square
of the
electric
density;
but this law needs
experimental
confirmation.
Assuming
the
preceding
considerations to be
true, then, by
ra-
pidly alternating
the
potential
of a
body
immersed in an insulat-
ing gaseous medium, any
amount of
energy may
be
dissipated
into
space.
Most of that
energy, then,
is not
dissipated
in the
form of
long
ether
waves, propagated
to considerable
distance,
as is
thought
most
generally,
but is consumed in
impact
and
collisional losses that
is,
heat vibrations on the surface and in
134 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
the
vicinity
of the
body.
To reduce the
dissipation
it is neces-
sary
to work with a small electric
density
the
smaller,
the
higher
the
frequency.
The behavior of a
gaseous
medium to such
rapid
alternations
of
potential
makes it
appear plausible
that electrostatic dis-
turbances of the
earth, produced by
cosmic
events, may
have
great
influence
upon
the
meteorological condition^.
When such
disturbances occur both the
frequency
of the vibrations of the
charge
and the
potential
are in all
probability
excessive,
and the
energy
converted into heat
may
be considerable. Since the
density
must be
unevenly
distributed,
either in
consequence
of
the
irregularity
of the earth's
surface,
or on account of the
condition of the
atmosphere
in various
places,
the effect
pro-
duced would
accordingly vary
from
place
to
place.
Considerable
variations in the
temperature
and
pressure
of the
atmosphere
may
in this manner be caused at
any point
of the surface of the
earth. The variations
may
be
gradual
or
very sudden, according
to the nature of the
original disturbance,
and
may produce
rain
and
storms,
or
locally modify
the weather in
any way.
From
many experiences gathered
in the course of these inves-
tigations
it
appears
certain that in
lightning discharges
the air is
an element of
importance.
For
instance, during
a storm a
stream
may
form on a nail or
pointed projection
of a
building.
If
lightning
strikes somewhere in the
neighborhood*
the harm-
less static
discharge may,
in
consequence
of the oscillations set
up,
assume the character of a
high-frequency
streamer,
and the
nail or
projection may
be
brought
to a
high temperature by
the
violent
impact
of the air molecules.
Thus,
it is
thought,
a
building may
be set on fire without the
lightning striking
it. In
like manner small metallic
objects may
be fused and volatilized
as
frequently
occurs in
lightning discharges merely
because
they
are surrounded
by
air. Were
they
immersed in a
practi-
cally
continuous
medium,
such as
oil, they
would
probably
be
safe,
as the
energy
would have to
spend
itself elsewhere.
An
instructive
experience having
a
bearing
on this
subject
is
the
following:
A
glass
tube of an inch or so in diameter and
several inches
long
is
taken,
and a
platnium
wire sealed into
it,
the wire
running through
the center of the tube from end to
end. The tube is exhausted to a moderate
degree.
If a
steady
current is
passed
through
the wire it is heated
uniformly
in all
parts
and the
gas
in the tube is of no
consequence.
But if
high
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENT*. 135
frequency discharges
are directed
through
the
wire,
it is heated
more on the ends than in the middle
portion,
and if the fre-
quency,
or rate of
charge,
is
high enough,
the wire
might
as
well be cut in the middle as
not,
for most of the
heating
on the
ends is due to the rarefied
gas.
Here the
gas might only
act as
a conductor of no
impedance, diverting
the current from the
wire as the
impedance
of the latter is
enormously increased,
and
merely heating
the ends of the wire
by
reason of their resistance
to the
passage
of the
discharge.
But it is not at all
necessary
that
the
gas
in the tube should he
conducting
;
it
might
be at an ex-
tremely
low
pressure,
still the ends of the wire would be heated
;
however,
as is ascertained
by experience, only
the two ends
would in such case not be
electrically
connected
through
the
gaseous
medium.
Now,
what with these
frequencies
and
poten-
tials occurs in an exhausted
tube,
occurs in the
lightning discharge
at
ordinary pressure.
From the
facility
with which
any
amount of
energy may
be
carried off
through
a
gas,
Mr. Tesla infers that the best w
T
ay
to
render harmless a
lightning discharge
is to afford it in some
way
a
passage through
a volume of
gas.
The
recognition
of some of the above facts has a
bearing upon
far-reaching
scientific
investigations
in which
extremely high
frequencies
and
potentials
are used. In such cases the air is an
important
factor to be considered.
So,
for
instance,
if two wires
are attached to the terminals of the
coil,
and the streamers issue
from'
them,
there is
dissipation
of
energy
in the form of heat
and
light,
and the wires behave like a condenser of
larger capac-
ity.
If the wires be immersed in
oil,
the
dissipation
of
energy
is
prevented,
or at least
reduced,
and the
apparent capacity
is
diminished. The action of the air would seem to make it
very
difficult to
tell,
from the measured or
computed capacity
of a
condenser in which the air is acted
upon,
its actual
capacity
or
vibration
period, especially
if the condenser is of
very
small sur-
face and is
charged
to a
very high potential.
As
many import-
ant results are
dependant upon
the correctness of the estimation
of the vibration
period,
this
subject
demands the most careful
scrutiny
of
investigators.
In
Leyden jars
the loss due to the
presence
of air is
compara-
tively small, principally
on account of the
great
surface of the
coatings
and the small external
action,
but if there are streamers
on the
top,
the loss
may
be
considerable,
and the
period
of vibra-
136 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tion is affected. In a
resonator,
the
density
is
small,
but the
frequency
is
extreme,
and
may
introduce a considerable error.
It
appears
certain,
at
any rate,
that the
periods
of vibration of a
charged body
in a
gaseous
and in a continuous
medium,
such
as
oil,
are
different,
on account of the action of the
former,
as
explained.
Another fact
recognized,
which is of some
consequence,
is,
that in similar
investigations
the
general
considerations of static
screening
are not
applicable
when a
gaseous
medium is
present.
This is evident from the
following experiment
: A short and
wide
glass
tube is taken and covered with a substantial
coating
of
bronze
powder, barely allowing
the
light
to shine a little
through.
The tube is
highly
exhausted and
suspended
on a metallic
clasp
from the end of a wire. When the wire is connected with one
of the terminals of the
coil,
the
gas
inside of the tube is
lighted
in
spite
of the metal
coating.
Here the metal
evidently
does
not screen the
gas
inside as it
ought to,
even if it be
very
thin
and
poorly conducting.
Yet,
in a condition of rest the metal
coating,
however
thin,
screens the inside
perfectly.
One of the most
interesting
results arrived at in
pursuing
these
experiments,
is the demonstration of the fact that a
gaseous
me-
dium, upon
which vibration is
impressed by rapid changes
of
electrostatic
potential,
is
rigid.
In illustration of this result an
experiment
made
by
Mr. Tesla
may by
cited : A
glass
tube about
one inch in diameter and three feet
long,
with outside condenser
coatings
on the
ends,
was exhausted to a certain
point, when,
the
tube
being suspended freely
from a wire
connecting
the
upper
coat-
ing
to one of the terminals of the
coil,
the
discharge appeared
in
the form of a luminous thread
passing through
the axis of the tube.
Usually
the thread was
sharply
defined in the
upper part
of the
tube and lost itself in the lower
part.
When a
magnet
or the
finger
was
quickly passed
near the
upper part
of the luminous
thread,
it was
brought
out of
position by magnetic
or electro-
static
influence,
and a transversal vibration like that of a sus-
pended cord,
with one or more distinct
nodes,
was set
up,
which
lasted for a few minutes and
gradually
died out.
By suspending
from the lower condenser
coating
metal
plates
of different
sizes,
the
speed
of the vibration was varied. This vibration would
seem to show
beyond
doubt that the thread
possessed rigidity,
at least to transversal
displacements.
Many experiments
were tried to demonstrate this
property
in
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 137
air at
ordinary pressure. Though
no
positive
evidence has been
obtained,
it is
thought,
nevertheless,
that a
high frequency
brush
or
streamer,
if the
frequency
could be
pushed
far
enough,
would
be
decidedly rigid.
A small
sphere might
then be moved within
it
quite freely,
but if tin-own
against
it the
sphere
would rebound.
An
ordinary
flame cannot
possess rigidity
to a marked
degree
because the vibration is directionless
;
but an electric
arc,
it is
believed,
must
possess
that
property
more or less. A luminous
band excited in a bulb
by repeated discharges
of a
Leyden jar
must also
possess rigidity,
and if deformed and
suddenly
released
should vibrate.
From like considerations other conclusions of interest are
readied. The most
probable
medium
filling
the
space
is one
consisting
of
independent
carriers immersed in an
insulating
fluid. If
through'
this medium enormous electrostatic stresses
are assumed to
act,
which
vary rapidly
in
intensity,
it would
allow the motion of a
body through it, yet
it would be
rigid
and
elastic,
although
the fluid itself
might
be devoid of these
pro-
perties. Furthermore,
on the
assumption
that the
independent
carriers are of
any configuration
such that the fluid resistance to
motion in one direction is
greater
than in
another,
a stress of
that nature would cause the carriers to
arrange
themselves in
groups,
since
they
would turn to each other their sides of the
greatest
electric
density,
in which
position
the fluid resistance to
approach
would be smaller than to
receding.
If in a medium of
the above characteristics a brush would be formed
by
a
steady
potential,
an
exchange
of the carriers would
go
on
continually,
and there would be less carriers
per
unit of volume in the brush
than in the
space
at some distance from the
electrode,
this cor-
responding
to rarefaction. If the
potential
were
rapidly chang-
ing,
the result would be
very
different
;
the
higher
the
freqency
of the
pulses,
the slower would be the
exchange
of the carriers
;
finally,
the motion of translation
through
measurable
space
would
cease, and,
with a
sufficiently high frequency
and
intensity
of the
stress,
the carriers would be drawn towards the
electrode,
and
compression
would result.
An
interesting
feature of these
high frequency
currents is that
they
allow of
operating
all kinds of devices
by connecting
the de-
vice with
only
one
leading
wire to the electric source. In
fact,
under certain conditions it
may
be more economical to
supply
the
electrical
energy
witli one lead than with two.
138 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
An
experiment
of
special
interest shown
by
Mr.
Tesla,
is the
running, by
the use of
only
one insulated
line,
of a motor
oper-
ating
on the
principle
of the
rotating magnetic
field enunciated
by
Mr. Tesla. A
simple
form of such a motor is obtained
by
winding upon
a laminated iron core a
primary
and close to it a
secondary coil, closing
the ends of the latter and
placing
a
freely
movable metal disc within the influence of the
moving
field.
The
secondary
coil
may,
however,
be omitted. When one of the
ends of the
primary
coil of the motor is connected to one of the
terminals of the
high frequency
coil arid the other end to an
insulated metal
plate,
which,
it should be
stated,
is not
absolutely
necessary
for the success of the
experiment,
the disc is set in
rotation.
Experiments
of this kind seem to
bring
it within
possibility
to
operate
a motor at
any point
of the earth's surface from a cen-
tral
source,
without
any
connection to the same
except through
the earth.
If, by
means of
powerful machinery, rapid
variations
of the earth's
potential
were
produced,
a
grounded
wire
reaching
up
to some
height
would be traversed
by
a current which could
be increased
by connecting
the free end of the wire to a
body
of
some size. The current
might
be converted to low tension and
used to
operate
a motor or other device. The
experiment,
which
would be one of
great
scientific
interest,
would
probably
best
succeed on a
ship
at sea. In this
manner,
even if it were not
possible
to
operate machinery, intelligence might
be transmitted
quite certainly.
In the course of this
experimental study special
attention was
devoted to the
heating
effects
produced by
these
currents,
which
are not
only striking,
but
open up
the
possibility
of
producing
a
more efficient illumiuant. It is sufficient to attach to the coil
terminal a thin wire or
filament,
to have the
temperature
of the
latter
perceptibly
raised. If the wire or filament be enclosed in
a
bulb,
the
heating
effect is increased
by preventing
the circula-
tion of the air. If the air in the bulb be
strongly compressed,
the
displacements
are
smaller,
the
impacts
less
violent,
and the
heating
effect is diminished. On the
contrary,
if the air in the
bulb be
exhausted,
an inclosed
lamp
filament is
brought
to in-
candescence,
and
any
amount of
light may
thus be
produced.
The
heating
of the inclosed
lamp
filament
depends
on so
many things
of a different
nature,
that it is difficult to
give
a
generally applicable
rule under which the maximum
heating
ITIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HTGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 139
occurs. As
regards
the size of the
bull),
it is ascertained that at
ordinary
or
only slightly differing atmospheric pressures,
when
air is a
good insulator,
the filament is heated more in a small
bulb,
because of the better confinement of heat in this case. At
lower
pressures,
when air becomes
conducting,
the
heating
ef-
fect is
greater
in a
large bull),
but at
excessively high degrees
of
exhaustion there seems to
be, beyond
a certain and rather small
size of the
vessel,
no
perceptible
difference in the
heating.
The
shape
of the vessel is also of some
importance,
and it has
been found of
advantage
for reasons of
economy
to
employ
a
spherical
bulb with the electrode mounted in its
centre,
where
the
rebounding
molecules collide.
It is desirable on account of
economy
that all the
energy sup-
plied
to the bulb from the source should reach without loss the
body
to be heated. The loss in
conveying
the
energy
from the
source to the
body may
be reduced
by employing
thin wires
heavily
coated with
insulation,
and
by
the use of electrostatic
screens. It is to be
remarked,
that the
screen,
cannot be con-
nected to the
ground
as under
ordinary
conditions.
In the bulb itself a
large portion
of the
energy' supplied may
be lost
by
molecular bombardment
against
the wire
connecting
the
body
to be heated with the source. Considerable
improve-
ment was effected
by covering
the
glass
stem
containing
the wire
with a
closely fitting conducting
tube. This tube is made to
project
a little above the
glass,
and
prevents
the
cracking
of the
latter near the heated
body.
The effectiveness of the
conducting
tube is limited to
very high degrees
of exhaustion. It diminishes
the
energy
lost in bombardment for two
reasons; first,
the
charge given up by
the atoms
spreads
over a
greater area,
and
hence the electric
density
at
any point
is
small,
and the atoms
are
repelled
with less
energy
than if
they
would strike
against
a
good insulator; secondly,
as the tube is electrified
by
the atoms
which first come in contact with
it,
the
progress
of the
following-
atoms
against
the tube is more or less checked
by
the
repulsion
which the electrified tube must exert
upon
the
similarly
electrified
atoms.
This,
it is
thought, explains why
the
discharge through
a bulb is established with much
greater facility
when an
insulator,
than when a
conductor,
is
present.
During
the
investigations
a
great many
bulbs of different con-
struction,
with electrodes of different
material,
were
experimented
upon,
and a number of observations of interest were made. Mr.
140 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Tesla has found tlmt the deterioration of the electrode is the
less,
the
higher
the
frequency.
This was to be
expected,
as then the
heating
is effected
by many
small
impacts,
instead
by
fewer and
more violent
ones,
which
quickly
shatter the structure. The de-
terioration is also smaller when the vibration is harmonic. Thus
an
electrode,
maintained at a certain
degree
of
heat,
lasts much
longer
with currents obtained from an
alternator,
than with
those obtained
by
means of a
disruptive discharge.
One of the
most durable electrodes was obtained from
strongly compressed
carborundum,
which is a kind of carbon
recently produced by
Mr. E. G.
Acheson,
of
Monongahela City,
Pa. From
experi-
ence,
it is
inferred,
that to be most
durable,
the electrode should
be in the form of a
sphere
with a
highly polished
surface.
In some bulbs
refractory
bodies were mounted in a carbon
cup
and
put
under the molecular
impact.
It was observed in
such
experiments
that the carbon
cup
was heated at
first,
until a
higher temperature
was
reached;
then most of the bombard-
ment was directed
against
the
refractory body,
and the carbon
was relieved. In
general,
when different bodies were mounted
in the
bulb,
the hardest fusible would be
relieved,
and would
remain at a
considerably
lower
temperature.
This was necessi-
tated
by
the fact that most of the
energy supplied
would find
its
way through
the
body
\vhioh was more
easily
fused or
"evap-
orated."
Curiously enough
it
appeared
in some of the
experiments
made,
that a
body
was fused in a bulb under the molecular im-
pact by
evolution" of less
light
than when fused
by
the
applica-
tion of heat in
ordinary ways.
This
may
be ascribed to a
loosening
of the structure of the
body
under the violent
impacts
and
changing
stresses.
Some
experiments
seem to indicate that under certain condi-
tions a
body, conducting
or
nonconducting, may,
when bom-
barded,
emit
light,
which to all
appearances
is due to
phosphor-
escence,
but
may
in
reality
be caused
by
the incandescence of an
infinitesimal
layer,
the mean
temperature
of the
body being
comparatively
small. Such
might
be the case if each
single
rhythmical impact
were
capable
of
instantaneously exciting
the
retina,
and the
rhythm
were
just high enough
to cause a continuous
impression
in the
eye. According
to this
view,
a coil
operated
by disruptive discharge
would be
eminently adapted
to
produce
such a
result,
and it is found
by experience
that its
power
of
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 141
exciting phosphorescence
is
extraordinarily great.
It is
capable
of
exciting phosphorescence
at
comparatively
low
degrees
of
exhaustion,
and also
projects
shadows at
pressures
far
greater
than those at which the mean free
path
is
comparable
to the
dimensions of the vessel. The latter observation is of some im-
portance,
inasmuch as it
may modify
the
generally accepted
views
in
regard
to the "radiant state"
phenomena.
A
thought
which
early
and
naturally suggested
itself to JVI r.
Tesla,
was to utilize the
great
inductive effects of
high frequency
currents to
produce light
in a sealed
glass
vessel without the use
of
leading
in wires.
Accordingly, many
bulbs were constructed
in which the
energy necessary
to maintain a button or filament
at
high incandescence,
was
supplied through
the
glass by
either
electrostatic or
electrodynamic
induction. It was
easy
to
regu-
late the
intensity
of the
light
emitted
by
means of an
externally
applied
condenser
coating
connected to an insulated
plate,
or
simply by
means of a
plate
attached to the bulb which at the
same time
performed
the function of a shade.
A
subject
of
experiment,
which has been
exhaustively
treated
in
England by
Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
has been followed
up
inde-
pendently by
Mr. Tesla from the
beginning
of this
study, namely,
to excite
by electrodynamic
induction a luminous band in a closed
tube or bulb. In
observing
the behavior of
gases,
and the
luminous
phenomena obtained,
the
importance
of the electro-
static effects was noted and it
appeared
desirable to
produce
enormous
potential differences, alternating
with extreme
rapidity.
Experiments
in this direction led to some of the most interest-
ing
results arrived at in the course of these
investigations.
It
was found that
by rapid
alternations of a
high
electrostatic
po-
tential,
exhausted tubes could be
lighted
at considerable distances
from a conductor connected to a
properly
constructed
coil,
and
that it was
practicable
to establish with the coil an
alternating
electrostatic
field, acting through
the whole room and
lighting
a
tube wherever it was
placed
within the four walls.
Phosphores-
cent bulbs
may
be excited in such a
field,
and it is
easy
to
regu-
late the effect
by connecting
to the bulb a small insulated metal
plate.
It was likewise
possible
to maintain a filament or button
mounted in a tube at
bright
incandescence, and,
in one
experi-
ment,
a mica vane was
spun by
the incandescence of a
platinum
wire.
Coming
now to the lecture delivered in
Philadelphia
and St.
142
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Louis,
it
may
be remarked that to the
superficial reader,
Mr.
Tesla's
introduction, dealing
with the
importance
of the
eye,
might
appear
as a
digression,
but the
thoughtful
reader will find therein
much food for meditation and
speculation. Throughout
his dis-
course one can trace Mr. Tesla's effort to
present
in a
popular
way thoughts
and views on the electrical
phenomena
which have
in recent
years captivated
the scientific
world,
but of which the
general public
has even
yet merely
received an
inkling.
Mr.
Tesla also dwells rather
extensively
on his well-known method of
high-frequency
conversion
;
and the
large
amount of detail in-
formation will be
gratefully
received
by
students and
experi-
menters in this
virgin
field. The
employment
of
apt analogies
in
explaining
the fundamental
principles
involved makes it
easy
for all to
gain
a clear idea of their nature.
Again,
the ease with
which,
thanks to Mr. Tesla's
efforts,
these
high-frequency
cur-
rents
may
now be obtained from circuits
carrying
almost
any
kind of
current,
cannot fail to result in an extensive
broadening
of this field of
research,
which offers so
many possibilities.
M r.
Tesla,
true
philosopher
as he
is,
does not hesitate to
point
out
defects in some of his
methods,
and indicates the lines which t<>
him seem the most
promising.
Particular stress is laid
by
him
upon
the
employment
of a medium in which the
discharge
electrodes should be immersed in order that this method of con-
version
may
be
brought
to the
highest perfection.
He has evi-
dently
taken
pains
to
give
as much useful information as
possible
to those who wish to follow in his
path,
as he shows in detail the
circuit
arrangements
to be
adopted
in all
ordinary
cases met with
in
practice,
and
although
some of these methods were described
by
him two
years
before,
the additional information is still
timely
and welcome.
In his
experiments
he dwells first on some
phenomena pro-
duced
by
electrostatic
force,
which he considers in the
light
of
modern theories to be the most
important
force in nature for us
to
investigate.
At the
very
outset he shows a
strikingly
novel
experiment illustrating
the effect of a
rapidly varying
electrosta-
tic force in a
gaseous medium, by touching
with one hand one of
the terminals of a
200,000
volt transformer and
bringing
tin-
other hand to the
opposite
terminal. The
powerful
streamers
which issued from his hand and astonished his audiences formed
a
capital
illustration of some of the views
advanced,
and afforded
Mr. Tesla an
opportunity
of
pointing
out the true reasons
why.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 143
with these
currents,
such an amount of
energy
can be
passed
through
the
body
with
impunity.
He then showed
by experi-
ment the difference between a
steady
and a
rapidly varying
force
upon
the dielectric. This difference is most
strikingly
illustrated
in the
experiment
in which a bulb attached to the end of a wire
in connection with one of the terminals of the transformer is
ruptured, although
all extraneous bodies are remote from the
bulb. He next illustrates how mechanical motions are
produced
by
a
varying
electrostatic force
acting through
a
gaseous
medium.
The
importance
of the action of the air is
particularly
illustrated
by
an
interesting experiment.
Taking up
another class of
phenomena, namely,
those of
dyna-
mic
electricity,
Mr. Tesla
produced
in a number of
experiments
a
variety
of effects
by
the
employment
of
only
a
single
wire
with the evident intent of
impressing upon
his audience the idea
that electric vibration or current can be transmitted witli
ease,
without
any
return circuit
;
also how currents so transmitted can
be converted and used for
many practical purposes.
A number
of
experiments
are then
shown, illustrating
the effects of fre-
quency,
self-induction and
capacity;
then a number of
ways
of
operating
motive and other devices
by
the use of a
single
lead.
A number of novel
impedance phenomena
are also shown which
cannot fail to arouse interest.
Mr. Tesla next dwelt
upon
a
subject
which he thinks of
great
importance,
that
is,
electrical
resonance,
which he
explained
in a
popular way.
He
expressed
his firm conviction that
by
observ-
ing proper conditions, intelligence,
and
possibly
even
power,
can
be transmitted
through
the medium or
through
the
earth;
and
he considers this
problem worthy
of serious and immediate con-
sideration.
Coming
now to the
light phenomena
in
particular,
lie illustrated
the four distinct kinds of these
phenomena
in an
original way,
which to
many
must have been a revelation. Mr. Tesla attributes
these
light
effects to molecular or atomic
impacts produced by
a
varying
electrostatic stress in a
gaseous
medium. Fie illustrated
in a series of novel
experiments
the effect of the
gas
surround-
ing
the conductor and shows
beyond
a doubt that with
high
fre-
quency
and
high potential currents,
the
surrounding gas
is of
paramount importance
in the
heating
of the conductor. He
attributes the
heating partially
to a conduction current and
par-
tially to
bombardment,
and demonstrates that in manv cases the
144 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
heating may
be
practically
due to the bombardment alone. He
pointed
out also that the skin effect is
largely
modilied
by
the
presence
of the
gas
or of an atomic medium in
general.
He
showed also some
interesting experiments
in which the effect of
convection is illustrated.
Probably
one of the most curious ex-
periments
in this connection is that in which a thin
platinum
wire
stretched
along
the axis of an exhausted tube is
brought
to in-
candescence at certain
points corresponding
to the
position
of
the
striae,
while at others it remains dark. This
experiment
throws an
interesting light upon
the nature of the strife and
may
lead to
important
revelations.
Mr. Tesla also demonstrated the
dissipation
of
energy through
an atomic medium and dwelt
upon
the behavior of vacuous
space
in
conveying heat,
and in this connection showed the curious
behavior of an electrode
stream,
from which he concludes that
the molecules of a
gas probably
cannot be acted
upon directly
at measurable distances.
Mr. Tesla summarized the chief results arrived at in
pursuing
his
investigations
in a manner which will serve as a valuable
guide
to all who
may engage
in this work.
Perhaps
most inter-
est will centre on his
general
statements
regarding
the
phenomena
of
phosphorescence,
the most
important
fact revealed in this di-
rection
being
that when
exciting
a
phosphorescent
bulb a certain
definite
potential gives
the most economical result.
The lectures will now be
presented
in the order of their date
of
delivery.
CHAPTER XXVI.
EXPEEIMENTS WlTH ALTERNATE CURRENTS OF VERY HlGH FRE-
QUENCY
AND THEIR APPLICATION TO METHODS OF ARTIFICIAL
ILLUMINATION.
J
THERE is no
subject
more
captivating,
more
worthy
of
study,
than nature. To understand this
great
mechanism,
to discover
the forces which are
active,
and the laws which
govern
them,
is
the
highest
aim of the intellect of man.
Nature has stored
up
in the universe infinite
energy.
The
eternal
recipient
and transmitter of this infinite
energy
is the
ether. The
recognition
of the existence of
ether,
and of the
functions it
performs,
is one of the most
important
results of
modern scientific research. The mere
abandoning
of the idea of
action at a
distance,
the
assumption
of a medium
pervading
all
space
and
connecting
all
gross
matter,
has freed the minds of
thinkers of an ever
present doubt, and, by opening
a new horizon
new and unforeseen
possibilities
has
given
fresh interest to
phenomena
witli which we are familiar of old. It has been a
great step
towards the
understanding
of the forces of nature and
their multifold manifestations to our senses. It has been for
the
enlightened
student of
physics
what the
understanding
of
the mechanism of the firearm or of the steam
engine
is for the
barbarian. Phenomena
upon
which we used to look as wonders
baffling explanation,
we now see in a different
light.
The
spark
of an induction
coil,
the
glow
of an incandescent
lamp,
the mani-
festations of the mechanical forces of currents and
magnets
are
no
longer beyond
our
grasp
;
instead of the
incomprehensible,
as
before,
their observation
suggests
now in our minds a
simple
mechanism,
and
although
as to its
precise
nature all is still con-
jecture, yet
we know that the truth cannot be much
longer
hid-
den,
and
instinctively
we feel that the
understanding
is
dawning
upon
us. We still admire these beautiful
phenomena,
these
1. A lecture delivered before the American Institute of Electrical
Engineers,
at Columbia
College,
N.
Y., May
20,
1891.
146 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
strange
forces,
but we are
helpless
no
longer ;
we can in a certain
measure
explain
them,
account for
them,
and we are
hopeful
of
finally succeeding
in
unraveling
the
mystery
which surrounds
them.
Iri how far we can understand the world around us is the ulti-
mate
thought
of
every
student of nature. The coarseness of our
senses
prevents
us from
recognizing
the ulterior construction of
matter,
and
astronomy,
this
grandest
and most
positive
of natural
sciences,
can
only
teach us
something
that
happens,
as it
were,
in
our immediate
neighborhood
;
of the remoter
portions
of the
boundless
universe,
with its numberless stars and
suns,
we know
nothing.
But far
beyond
the limit of
perception
of our senses
the
spirit
still can
guide
us,
and so we
may hope
that even these
unknown worlds
infinitely
small and
great may
in a measure
become known to us.
Still,
even if this
knowledge
should reacli
us,
the
searching
mind will find a
barrier,
perhaps
forever unsur-
passable,
to the true
recognition
of that which seems to
be,
the
mere
appearcmce
of which is the
only
and slender basis of all
our
philosophy.
Of all the forms of nature's
immeasurable,
all-pervading
energy,
which ever and ever
changing
and
moving,
like a soul
animates the inert
universe, electricity
and
magnetism
are
per-
haps
the most
fascinating.
The effects of
gravitation,
of heat
and
light
we observe
daily,
and soon we
get
accustomed to
them,
and soon
they
lose for us the character of the marvelous
and wonderful
;
but
electricity
and
magnetism,
with their
singular
relationship,
with their
seemingly
dual
character, unique -among
the forces in
nature,
with their
phenomena
of
attractions,
repul-
sions and
rotations, strange
manifestations of
mysterious agents,
stimulate and excite the mind to
thought
and research. "What is
electricity,
and what is
magnetism
? These
questions
have been
asked
again
and
again.
The most able intellects have
ceaselessly
wrestled with the
problem ;
still the
question
has not as
yet
been
fully
answered. But while we cannot even
to-day
state what
these
singular
forces
are,
we have made
good headway
to-
wards the solution of the
problem.
We are now confident that
electric and
magnetic phenomena
are attributable to
ether,
and
we are
perhaps justified
in
saying
that the effects of static elec-
tricity
are effects of ether under
strain,
and those of
dynamic
electricity
and
electro-magnetism
effects of ether in motion. But
this still leaves the
question,
as to what
electricity
and
magnetism
arc,
unanswered.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 147
First,
we
naturally inquire,
What is
electricity,
and is there
such a
thing
as
electricity
? In
interpreting
electric
phenomena,
we
may speak
of
electricity
or of an electric
condition,
state or
effect. If we
speak
of electric effects we must
distinguish
two
such
effects, opposite
in character and
neutralizing
each
other,
as
observation shows that two such
opposite
effects exist. This is
unavoidable,
for in a medium of the
properties,
of
ether,
we can-
not
possibly
exert a
strain,
or
produce
a
displacement
or motion
of
any kind,
without
causing
in the
surrounding
medium an
equivalent
and
opposite
effect. But if we
speak
of
electricity,
meaning
a
thing,
we
must,
I
think,
abandon the idea of two
electricities,
as the existence of two such
things
is
highly improb-
able. For how can we
imagine
that there should be two
things,
equivalent
in
amount,
alike in their
properties,
but of
opposite
character,
botli
clinging
to
matter,
both
attracting
and
completely
neutralizing
each other? Such an
assumption, though suggested
by many phenomena, though
most convenient for
explaining
them,
has little to commend it. If there is such a
thing
as elec-
tricity,
there can be
only
one such
thing, and,
excess and want
of that one
thing, possibly;
but more
probably
its condition de-
termines the
positive
and
negative
character. The old
theory
of
Franklin, though falling
short in some
respects, is,
from a certain
point
of
view,
after
all,
the most
plausible
one.
Still,
in
spite
of
this,
the
theory
of the two electricities is
generally accepted,
as it
apparently explains
electric
phenomena
in a more satisfac-
tor manner. But a
theory
which better
explains
the facts is not
necessarily
true.
Ingenious
minds will invent theories to suit
observation,
and almost
every independent
thinker has his own
views on the
subject.
It is not with the
object
of
advancing
an
opinion,
but with
the desire of
acquainting you
better with some of the
results,
which I will
describe,
to show
you
the
reasoning
I have fol-
lowed,
the
departures
I have made that I venture to
express,
in a few
words,
the views and convictions which have led me to
these results.
I adhere to the idea that there is a
thing
which we have been
in the habit of
calling electricity.
The
question is,
What is that
thing? or, What,
of all
tilings,
the existence of which we
know,
have we the best reason to call
electricity
\ We know that it acts
like an
incompressible
fluid
;
that there must be a constant
quan-
tity
of it in nature
;
that it can be neither
produced
nor
destroyed
;
148 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
and,
what is more
important,
the
electro-magnetic theory
of
light
and all facts observed teach us that electric and ether
phenomena
are identical. The idea at once
suggests itself, therefore,
that
electricity might
be called ether. In
fact,
this view has in a cer-
tain sense been advanced
by
Dr.
Lodge.
His
interesting
work
has been read
by everyone
and
many
have been convinced
by
his
arguments.
His
great ability
and the
interesting
nature of
the
subject, keep
the reader
spellbound ;
but when the
impres-
sions
fade,
one realizes that he has to deal
only
with
ingenious
explanations.
I must
confess,
that I cannot believe in two elec-
tricities,
much less in a
doubly-constituted
ether. The
puzzling
behavior of the ether as a solid to waves of
light
and
heat,
and
as a fluid to the motion of bodies
through it,
is
certainly
ex-
plained
in the most natural and
satisfactory
manner
by assuming
it to be in
motion,
as Sir William Thomson has
suggested ;
but
regardless
of
this,
there is
nothing
which would enable us to
conclude with
certainty that,
while a fluid is not
capable
of trans-
mitting
transverse vibrations of a few hundred or thousand
per
second,
it
might
not be
capable
of
transmitting
such vibrations
when
they range
into hundreds of million millions
per
second.
Nor can
anyone prove
that there are transverse ether waves
emitted from an alternate current
machine, giving
a small num-
ber of alternations
per
second
;
to such slow
disturbances,
the
ether,
if at
rest, may
behave as a true fluid.
Returning
to the
subject,
and
bearing
in mind that the exist-
ence of two electricities
is,
to
say
the
least, highly improbable,
we must
remember,
that we have no evidence of
electricity,
nor
can we
hope
to
get
it,
unless
gross
matter is
present. Electricity,
therefore,
cannot be called ether in the broad sense of the term
;
but
nothing
would seem to stand in the
way
of
calling electricity
ether associated with
matter,
or bound
ether; or,
in other
words,
that the so-called static
charge
of the molecule is ether associated
in some
way
with the molecule.
Looking
at it in that
light,
we
would be
justified
in
saying,
that
electricity
is concerned in all
molecular actions.
Now,
precisely
what the ether
surrounding
the molecules
is,
wherein it differs from ether in
general,
can
only
be
conject-
ured. It cannot differ in
density,
ether
being incompressible
;
it
must, therefore,
be under some strain or in
motion,
and the
latter is the most
probable.
To understand its
functions,
it
would be necessary to have an exact idea of the
physical
con-
v
'
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 149
struction of
matter,
of
which,
of
course,
we can
only
form a
mental
picture.
But of all the views on
nature,
the one which assumes one
matter and one
force,
and a
perfect uniformity throughout,
is
the most scientific and most
likely
to be true. An infinitesimal
world,
with the molecules and their atoms
spinning
and
moving
in
orbits,
in much the same manner as celestial
bodies,
carrying
with them and
probably spinning
with them
ether,
or in other
words, carrying
with them static
charges,
seems to
my
mind the
most
probable view,
and one
which,
in a
plausible manner,
ac-
counts for most of the
phenomena
observed. The
spinning
of
the molecules and their ether sets
up
the ether tensions or elec-
trostatic strains
;
the
equalization
of ether tensions sets
up
ether
motions or electric
currents,
and the orbital movements
produce
the effects of electro and
permanent magnetism.
About fifteen
years ago,
Prof. Rowland demonstrated a most
interesting
and
important fact, namely,
that a static
charge
car-
ried around
produces
the effects of an electric current.
Leaving
out of consideration the
precise
nature of the
mechanism,
which
produces
the attraction and
repulsion
of
currents,
and
conceiving
the
electrostatically charged
molecules in
motion,
this
experimen-
tal fact
gives'
us a fair idea of
magnetism.
We can conceive lines
or tubes of force which
physically
exist,
being
formed of rows
of directed
moving
molecules
;
we can see that these lines must be
closed,
that
they
must tend to shorten and
expand,
etc. It like-
wise
explains
in a reasonable
way,
the most
puzzling phenomenon
of
all, permanent magnetism,
and,
in
general,
lias all the beauties
of the
Ampere theory
without
possessing
the vital defect of the
same, namely,
the
assumption
of molecular currents. Without
enlarging
further
upon
the
subject,
1 would
say,
that I look
upon
all
electrostatic,
current and
magnetic phenomena
as
being
due
to electrostatic molecular forces.
The
preceding
remarks I have deemed
necessary
to a full
understanding
of the
subject
as it
presents
itself to
my
mind.
Of all these
phenomena
the most
important
to
study
are the
current
phenomena,
on account of the
already
extensive and ever-
growing
use of currents for industrial
purposes.
It is now a cen-
tury
since the first
practical
source of current was
produced,
and,
ever
since,
the
phenomena
which
accompany
the flow of
currents have been
diligently studied,
and
through
the
untiring
efforts of scientific men the
simple
laws which
govern
them have
150 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
been discovered. But these laws are found to hold
good only
when the currents are of a
steady
character. When the currents
are
rapidly varying
in
strength, quite
different
phenomena,
often
unexpected, present
themselves,
and
quite
different laws hold
good,
which even now have not been determined as
fully
as is
desirable, though through
the
work, principally,
of
English
scien-
tists, enough knowledge
has been
gained
on the
subject
to enable
us to treat
simple
cases which now
present
themselves in
daily
practice.
The
phenomena
which are
peculiar
to the
changing
character
of the currents are
greatly
exalted when the rate of
change
is
increased,
hence the
study
of these currents is
considerably
facil-
itated
by
the
employment
of
properly
constructed
apparatus.
It was with this and other
objects
in view that I constructed
alternate current machines
capable
of
giving
more than two
million reversals of current
per minute,
and to this circumstance
it is
principally due,
that I am able to
bring
to
your
attention
some of the results thus far
reached,
which I
hope
will
prove
to
be a
step
in advance on account of their direct
bearing upon
one
of the most
important problems, namely,
the
production
of a
practical
and efficient source of
light.
The
study
of such
rapidly alternating
currents is
very
interest-
ing. Nearly every experiment
discloses
something
new.
Many
results
may,
of
course,
be
predicted,
but
many
more are unfore-
seen. The
experimenter
makes
many interesting
observations.
For
instance,
we take a
piece
of iron and hold it
against
a
magnet.
Starting
from low alternations and
running up higher
and
higher
we feel the
impulses
succeed each other faster and
faster,
get
weaker and
weaker,
and
finally disappear.
We then observe a
continuous
pull ;
the
pull,
of
course,
is not continuous
;
it
only
appears
so to us
;
our sense of touch is
imperfect.
We
may
next establish an arc between the electrodes and
observe,
as the alternations
rise,
that the note which
accompanies
alternating
arcs
gets
shriller and
shriller, gradually weakens,
and
finally
ceases. The air
vibrations,
of
course, continue,
but
they
are too weak to be
perceived ;
our sense of
hearing
fails us.
We observe the small
physiological effects,
the
rapid heating
of
the iron cores and
conductors,
curious inductive
effects,
interest-
ing
condenser
phenomena,
and still more
interesting light phe-
nomena with a
high
tension induction coil. All these
experi-
ments and observations would be of the
greatest
interest to the
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 151
student,
but their
description
would lead me too far from the
principal subject. Partly
for this
reason,
and
partly
on account
of their
vastly greater importance,
I will confine
myself
to the
description
of the
light
effects
produced by
these currents.
In the
experiments
to this end a
high
tension induction coil or
equivalent apparatus
for
converting
currents of
comparatively
low into currents of
high
tension is used.
If
you
will be
sufficiently
interested in the results I shall de-
scribe as to enter into an
experimental study
of this
subject ;
if
you
will be convinced of the truth of the
arguments
I shall advance
your
aim will be to
produce high frequencies
and
high potentials
j
in other
words, powerful
electrostatic effects. You will then en-
counter
many difficulties, which,
if
completely overcome,
would
allow us to
produce truly
wonderful results.
First will be met the
difficulty
of
obtaining
the
required
fre-
quencies by
means of mechanical
apparatus, and,
if
they
be ob.
tained
otherwise,
obstacles of a different nature will
present
themselves. Next it will be found difficult to
provide
the
requi-
site insulation without
considerably increasing
the size of the
apparatus,
for the
potentials required
are
high, and, owing
to the
rapidity
of the
alternations,
the insulation
presents peculiar
diffi-
culties.
So,
for
instance,
when a
gas
is
present,
the
discharge
may work, by
the molecular bombardment of the
gas
and con-
sequent heating, through
as much as an inch of the best solid
insulating material,
such as
glass,
hard
rubber, porcelain, sealing
wax,
etc.
;
in
fact,
through any
known
insulating
substance. The
chief
requisite
in the insulation of the
apparatus is, therefore,
the
exclusion of
any gaseous
matter.
In
general my experience
tends to show that bodies which
possess
the
highest specific
inductive
capacity,
such as
glass,
afford a rather inferior insulation to
others, which,
while
they
are
good insulators,
have a much smaller
specific
inductive
capacity,
such as
oils,
for
instance,
the dielectric losses
being
no doubt
greater
in the former. The
difficulty
of
insulating,
of
course,
only
exists when the
potentials
are
excessively high,
for with
potentials
such as a few thousand volts there is no
particular
diffi-
culty
encountered in
conveying
currents from a machine
giving^
say, 20,000
alternations
per second,
to
quite
a distance. This
number of
alternations, however,
is
by
far too small for
many
purposes, though quite
sufficient for some
practical applications.
This
difficulty
of
insulating
is
fortunately
not a vital drawback
;
153 INVENTIONS
OP NIKOLA TESLA.
it affects
mostly
the size of the
apparatus, for,
when
excessively
high potentials
would be
used,
the
light-giving
devices would be
located not far from the
apparatus,
and often
they
would be
quite
close to it. As the air-bombardment of the insulated wire is de-
pendent
on condenser
action,
the loss
may
be reduced to a trifle
by using excessively
thin wires
heavily
insulated.
Another
difficulty
will be encountered in the
capacity
and self-
induction
necessarily possessed by
the coil. If the coil be
large,
that
is,
if it contain a
great length
of
wire,
it will be
generally
unsuited for
excessively high frequencies ;
if it be
small,
it
may
be well
adapted
for such
frequencies,
but the
potential might-
then not be as
high
as desired. A
good insulator,
and
prefera-
bly
one
possessing
a small
specific
inductive
capacity,
would
afford a two-fold
advantage. First,
it would enable us to con-
struct a
very
small coil
capable
of
withstanding
enormous differ-
ences of
potential ;
and
secondly,
such a small
coil, by
reason of
its smaller
capacity
and
self-induction,
would be
capable
of a
quicker
and more
vigorous
vibration. The
problem
then of con-
structing
a coil or induction
apparatus
of
any
kind
possessing
the
requisite qualities
I
regard
as one of no small
importance,
and it has
occupied
me for a considerable time.
The
investigator
who desires to
repeat
the
experiments
which
I will
describe,
with an alternate current
machine, capable
of
supplying
currents of the desired
frequency,
and an induction
coil,
will do well to take the
primary
coil out and mount the sec-
ondary
in such a manner as to be able to look
through
the tube
upon
which the
secondary
is wound. He will then be able to
observe the streams which
pass
from the
primary
to the insulat-
ing tube,
and from their
intensity
he will know
jiow
far he can
strain the coil. Without this
precaution
he is sure to
injure
the insulation. This
arrangment permito, however,
an
easy
exchange
of the
primaries,
which is desirable in these
experi-
ments.
The selection of the
type
of machine best suited for the
pur-
pose
must be left to the
judgment
of the
experimenter.
There
are here illustrated three distinct
types
of
machines, which,
besides
others,
I have used in
my experiments.
Fig.
97
represents
the machine used in
my experiments
before
this Institute. The field
magnet
consists of a
ring
of
wrought
iron with 384
pole projections.
The armature
comprises
a steel
disc to which is fastened a
thin, carefully
welded rim of
wrought
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 153
iron.
Upon
the rim are wound several
layers
of
fine,
well
annealed iron
wire, which,
when
wound,
is
passed through
shellac. The armature wires are wound around brass
pins,
wrapped
with silk thread. The diameter of the armature wire
in this
type
of machine should not be more than of the thick-
ness of the
pole projections,
else the local action will be con-
siderable.
Fig.
98
represents
a
larger
machine of a different
type.
The
field
magnet
of this machine consists of two like
parts
which
either enclose an
exciting coil,
or else are
independently
wound.
FIG. 97.
Each
part
has 480
pole projections,
the
projections
of one
facing
those of the other. The armature consists of a wheel of hard
bronze,
carrying
the conductors which revolve between the
pro-
jections
of the field
magnet.
To wind the armature
conductors,
I have found it most convenient to
proceed
in the
following
manner. I construct a
ring
of hard bronze of the
required
size.
This
ring
and the rim of the wheel are
provided
with the
proper
number of
pins,
and both fastened
upon
a
plate.
The
armature conductors
being wound,
the
pins
are cut off and the
ends of the conductors fastened
by
two
rings
which screw to the
154 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
bronze
ring
and the rim of the
wheel, respectively.
The whole
may
then be taken off and forms a solid structure. The con-
ductors in such a
type
of machine should consist of sheet
copper,
the thickness of
which,
of
course, depends
on the thickness of
the
pole projections;
or else twisted thin wires should be em-
ployed.
Fig.
99 is a smaller
machine,
in
many respects
similar to the
former, only
here the armature conductors and the
exciting
coil
are
kept stationary,
while
only
a block of
wrought
iron is re-
volved.
It would be
uselessly lengthening
this
description
were I to
dwell more 011 the details of construction of these machines.
Besides, they
have been described somewhat more
elaborately
in
The Electrical
Engineer,
of March
18,
1891. I deem it
well,
however,
to call the attention of the
investigator
to two
things,
the
importance
of
which, though
self
evident,
he is nevertheless
apt
to underestimate
; namely,
to the local action in the con-
ductors which must be
carefully avoided,
and to the
clearance,
which must be small. I
may add,
that since it is desirable to use
very high peripheral speeds,
the armature should be of
very
large
diameter in order to avoid
impracticable
belt
speeds.
Of
SIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 155
the several
types
of these machines which have been constructed
by me,
I have found that the
type
illustrated in
Fig.
97 caused
me the least trouble in
construction,
as well as in
maintenance,
and on the
whole,
it has been a
good experimental
machine.
In
operating
an induction coil with
very rapidly alternating
currents, among
the first luminous
phenomena
noticed are natur-
ally
those
presented by
the
high-tension discharge.
As the num-
ber of alternations
per
second is
increased,
or as the number
being high
the current
through
the
primary
is
varied,
the dis-
charge gradually changes
in
appearance.
It would be difficult to
describe the minor
changes
which
occur,
and the conditions which
i
FIG. 99.
bring
them
about,
but one
may
note five distinct forms of the
discharge.
First,
one
may
observe a
weak,
sensitive
discharge
in the form
of a
thin,
feeble-colored thread.
(Fig. lOOa.)
It
always
occurs
when,
the number of alternations
per
second
being high,
the cur-
rent
through
the
primary
is
very
small. In
spite
of the exces-
sively
small
current,
the rate of
change
is
great,
and the differ-
ence of
potential
at the terminals of the
secondary
is therefore
considerable,
so that the arc is established at
great
distances
;
but
the
quantity
of
"
electricity
"
set in motion is
insignificant, barely
sufficient to maintain a
thin,
threadlike arc. It is
excessively
sensitive and
may
be made so to such a
degree
that the mere act
of
breathing
near the coil will affect
it,
and unless it is
perfectly
156 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
well
protected
from currents of
air,
it
wriggles
around
constantly.
Nevertheless,
it is in this form
excessively persistent,
and when
the terminals are
approached
to, say,
one-third of the
striking
distance,
it can be blown out
only
with
difficulty.
This
excep-
tional
persistency,
when
short,
is
largely
due to the arc
being
excessively
thin
; presenting,
therefore,
a
very
small surface
to the blast. Its
great
sensitiveness,
when
very long,
is
probably
due to the motion of the
particles
of dust
suspended
in the air.
When the current
through
the
primary
is
increased,
the dis-
charge gets
broader and
stronger,
and the effect of the
capacity
of the coil becomes visible
until, finally,
under
proper
conditions,
a white
naming arc, Fig.
100
B,
often as thick as one's
finger,
and
striking
across the whole
coil,
is
produced.
It
develops
remark-
able
heat,
and
may
be further characterized
by
the absence of
the
high
note which
accompanies
the less
powerful discharges.
To take a shock from the coil under these conditions would not
FIG. lOOa. FIG. lOOh.
be
advisable, although
under different
conditions,
the
potential
being
much
higher,
a shock from the coil
may
be taken with
impunity.
To
produce
this kind of
discharge
the number of
alternations
per
second must not be too
great
for the coil used
;
and, generally speaking,
certain relations between
capacity,
self-
induction and
frequency
must be observed.
The
importance
of these elements in an alternate current cir-
cuit is now
well-known,
and under
ordinary conditions,
the
gen-
eral rules are
applicable.
But in an induction coil
exceptional
conditions
prevail. First,
the self-induction is of little
importance
before the arc is
established,
when it asserts
itself,
but
perhaps
never as
prominently
as in
ordinary
alternate current
circuits,
because the
capacity
is distributed all
along
the
coil,
and
by
reason
of the fact that the coil
usually discharges through very great
resistances
;
hence the currents are
exceptionally
small.
Secondly,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 157
the
capacity goes
on
increasing
continually
as the
potential
rises,
in
consequence
of
absorption
which takes
place
to a considerable
extent.
Owing
to this there exists no critical
relationship
between
these
quantities,
and
ordinary
rules would not seem to be
appli-
cable. As the
potential
is increased either in
consequence
of the
increased
frequency
or of the increased current
through
the
primary,
the amount of the
energy
stored becomes
greater
and
greater,
and the
capacity gains
more and more in
importance.
Up
to a certain
point
the
capacity
is
beneficial,
but after that it
begins
to be an enormous drawback. It follows from this that
each coil
gives
the best result with a
given frequency
and
primary
current. A
very large coil,
when
operated
with currents of
very
high frequency, may
not
give
as much as incli
spark. By adding
capacity
to the
terminals,
the condition
may
be
improved,
but
what the coil
really
wants is a lower
frequency.
When the
flaming discharge occurs,
the conditions are evi-
dently
such that the
greatest
current is made to flow
through
the
circuit. These conditions
may
be attained
by varying
the fre-
quency
within wide
limits,
but the
highest frequency
at which
the
flaming
arc can still be
produced, determines,
for a
given
primary current,
the maximum
striking
distance of the coil. In
the
flaming discharge
the eclat effect of the
capacity
is not
per-
ceptible ;
the rate at which the
energy
is
being
stored then
just
equals
the rate at which it can be
disposed
of
through
the circuit.
This kind of
discharge
is the severest test for a coil
;
the
break,
when it
occurs,
is of the nature of that in an
overcharged Ley
den
jar.
To
give
a
rough approximation
I would state
that,
with an
ordinary
coil
of, say 10,000
ohms
resistance,
the most
powerful
arc would be
produced
with about
12,000
alternations
per
second.
When the
frequency
is increased
beyond
that
rate,
the
poten-
tial,
of
course, rises,
but the
striking
distance
may, nevertheless,
diminish,
paradoxical
as it
may
seem. As the
potential
rises the
coil attains more and more the
properties
of a static machine
until, finally,
one
may
observe the beautiful
phenomenon
of the
streaming discharge, Fig. 101,
which
may
be
produced
across the
whole
length
of the coil. At that
stage
streams
begin
to issue
freely
from all
points
and
projections.
These streams will also be
seen to
pass
in abundance in the
space
between the
primary
and
the
insulating
tube. When the
potential
is
excessively high they
will
always appear,
even if the
frequency
be
low,
and even if the
primary
be surrounded
by
as much as an inch of
wax,
hard nib-
15g
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
her, glass,
or
any
other
insulating
substance.
This limits
greatly
the'
output
of the
coil,
but I will later show how I have been able
to overcome
to a considerable
extent this
disadvantage
in the
ordinary
coil.
Besides
the
potential,
the
intensity
of the streams
depends
on
the
frequency
;
but
if the coil be
very large they
show them-
selves,
no matter how low the
frequencies
used. For
instance,
in a
very large
coil of a resistance
of
67,000 ohms,
constructed
by
me some time
ago, they appear
with as low as 100 alternations
per
second and
less,
the insulation
of the
secondary being
f
inch
of ebonite.
When
very
intense
they produce
a noise similar to
that
produced by
the
charging
of a Holtz
machine,
but much
more
powerful,
and
they
emit a
strong
smell of ozone. The
lower the
frequency,
the more
apt they
are to
suddenly injure
the coil. With
excessively high frequencies they may pass freely
FIG. 101.
without
producing any
other effect than to heat the insulation
slowly
and
uniformly.
The existence of these streams shows the
importance
of con-
structing
an
expensive
coil so as to
permit
of one's
seeing
through
the tube
surrounding
the
primary,
and the latter should
be
easily exchangeable ;
or else the
space
between the
primary
and
secondary
should be
completely
filled
up
with
insulating
material so as to exclude all air. The non-observance of this
simple
rule in the construction of commercial coils is
responsible
for the destruction of
many
an
expensive
coil.
At the
stage
when the
streaming discharge
occurs,
or with
somewhat
higher frequencies,
one
may, by approaching
the ter-
minals
quite nearly,
and
regulating properly
the effect of
capac-
ity, produce
a veritable
spray
of small silver-white
sparks,
or a
bunch of
excessively
thin
silvery
threads
(Fig. 102)
amidst a
powerful
brush each
spark
or thread
possibly corresponding
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 159
to one alternation.
This,
when
produced
under
proper
condi-
tions,
is
probably
the most beautiful
discharge,
and when an air
blast is directed
against it,
it
presents
a
singular appearance.
The
spray
of
sparks,
when received
through
the
body,
causes
some
inconvenience, whereas,
when the
discharge simply
streams,
no
tiling
at all is
likely
to be felt if
large conducting
objects
are held in the hands to
protect
them from
receiving
small burns.
If the
frequency
is still more
increased,
then the coil refuses
to
give any spark
unless at
comparatively
small
distances,
and the
fifth
typical
form of
discharge may
be observed
(Fig. 103).
The
tendency
to stream out and
dissipate
is then so
great
that when
the brush is
produced
at one terminal no
sparking
occurs,
even
if,
as I have
repeatedly tried,
the
hand,
or
any conducting object,
is held within the stream
;
and,
what is more
singular,
the lumi-
FIG. 103.
FIG. 104.
nous stream is not at all
easily
deflected
by
the
approach
of a
conducting body.
At this
stage
the streams
seemingly pass
with the
greatest
freedom
through
considerable
thicknesses of
insulators,
and it is
particularly interesting
to
study
their behavior. For this
pur-
pose
it is convenient to connect to the terminals of the coil two
metallic
spheres
which
may
be
placed
at
any
desired
distance,
Fig.
104.
Spheres
are
preferable
to
plates,
as the
discharge
can
be better observed.
By inserting
dielectric bodies between the
.spheres,
beautiful
discharge phenomena may
be observed. If
the
spheres
be
quite
close and a
spark
be
playing
between
them, by
interposing
a thin
plate
of ebonite between the
spheres
the
spark
instantly
ceases and the
discharge spreads
into an
intensely
lumi-
nous circle several inches in
diameter, provided
the
spheres
are
160
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
sufficiently large.
The
passage
of the streams
heats, and,
after
a
while, softens,
the rubber so much that two
plates may
be
made to stick
together
in this manner. If the
spheres
are so far
apart
that no
spark
occurs,
even if
they
are far
beyond
the strik-
ing
distance, by inserting
a thick
plate
of
glass
the
discharge
is
instantly
induced to
pass
from the
spheres
to the
glass
in the
form of luminous streams. It
appears
almost as
though
these
streams
pass through
the dielectric. In
reality
this is not the
case,
as the streams are due to the molecules of the air which
are
violently agitated
in the
space
between the
oppositely charged
.surfaces of the
spheres.
When no dielectric other than air is
present,
the bombardment
goes
on,
but is too weak to be visible
;
by inserting
a dielectric the inductive effect is much
increased,
and
besides,
the
projected
air molecules find an obstacle and the
bombardment becomes so intense that the streams become lumi-
nous. If
by any
mechanical means we could effect such a vio-
lent
agitation
of the molecules we could
produce
the same
phe-
nomenon. A
jet
of air
escaping through
a small hole under
enormous
pressure
and
striking against
an
insulating substance,
such as
glass, may
be luminous in the
dark,
and it
might
be
pos-
sible to
produce
a
phosphorescence
of the
glass
or other insulators
in this manner.
The
greater
the
specific
inductive
capacity
of the
interposed
dielectric,
the more
powerful
the effect
produced. Owing
to
this,
the streams show themselves with
excessively high poten-
tials even if the
glass
be as much as one and one-half to two
inches thick. But besides the
heating
due to
bombardment,
some
heating goes
on
undoubtedly
in
th^
dielectric, being ap-
parently greater
in
glass
than in ebonite. I attribute this to the
greater specific
inductive
capacity
of the
glass,
in
consequence
of
which,
with the same
potential difference,
a
greater
amount of
energy
is taken
up
in it than in rubber. It is like
connecting
to
a
battery
a
copper
and a brass wire of the same dimensions. The
copper wire,
though
a more
perfect conductor,
would heat more
by
reason of its
taking
more current. Thus what is otherwise
considered a virtue of the
glass
is here a defect. Glass
usually
gives way
much
quicker
than ebonite
;
when it is heated to a cer-
tain
degree,
the
discharge suddenly
breaks
through
at one
point,
assuming
then the
ordinary
form of an arc.
The
heating
effect
produced by
molecular bombardment of
the dielectric
would,
of
course,
diminish as the
pressure
of the
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 161
air is
increased,
and at enormous
pressure
it would be
negligible,
unless the
frequency
would increase
correspondingly.
It will be often observed in these
experiments
that when the
spheres
are
beyond
the
striking distance,
the
approach
of a
glass
plate,
for
instance, may
induce the
spark
to
jump
between the
spheres.
This occurs when the
capacity
of the
spheres
is some-
what below the critical value which
gives
the
greatest
difference
of
potential
at the terminals of the coil.
By approaching
a di-
electric,
the
specific
inductive
capacity
of the
space
between the
spheres
is
increased,
producing
the same effect as if the
capacity
of the
spheres
were increased. The
potential
at the terminals
may
then rise so
high
that the air
space
is cracked. The
experi-
ment is best
performed
with dense
glass
or mica.
Another
interesting
observation is that a
plate
of
insulating
material,
when the
discharge
is
passing through it,
is
strongly
attracted
by
either of the
spheres,
that is
by
the nearer
one,
this
being obviously
due to the smaller mechanical effect of the bom-
bardment on that
side,
and
perhaps
also to the
greater
electrifica-
tion.
From the behavior of the dielectrics in these
experiments,
we
may
conclude that the best insulator for these
rapidly alternating
currents would be the one
possessing
the smallest
specific
induc-
tive
capacity
and at the same time one
capable
of
withstanding
the
greatest
differences of
potential
;
and thus two
diametrically
opposite ways
of
securing
the
required
insulation are
indicated,
namely,
to use either a
perfect
vacuum or a
gas
under
great press-
ure
;
but the former would be
preferable. Unfortunately
neither
of these two
ways
is
easily
carried out in
practice.
It is
especially interesting
to note the behavior of an exces-
sively high
vacuum in these
experiments.
If a test
tube, provided
with external electrodes and exhausted to the
highest possible
degree,
be connected to the terminals of the
coil, Fig. 105,
the
electrodes of the tube are
instantly brought
to a
high temperature
and the
glass
at each end of the tube is rendered
intensely phos-
phorescent,
but the middle
appears comparatively dark,
and for a
while remains cool.
When the
frequency
is so
high
that the
discharge
shown in
Fig.
103 is
observed,
considerable
dissipation
no doubt occurs in
the coil. Nevertheless the coil
may
be worked for a
long time,
as the
heating
is
gradual.
In
spite
of the fact that the difference of
potential may
be
182 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
enormous,
little is felt when the
discharge
is
passed through
the
body, provided
the hands are armed. This is to some extent due
to the
higher frequency,
but
principally
to the fact that less en-
ergy
is available
externally,
when the difference of
potential
reaches an enormous
value, owing
to the circumstance
that,
with
the rise of
potential,
the
energy
absorbed in the coil increases as
the
square
of the
potential. Up
to a certain
point
the
energy
available
externally
increases with the rise of
potential,
then it
begins
to fall off
rapidly. Thus,
with the
ordinary high
tension
induction
coil,
the curious
paradox exists, that,
while with a
given
current
through
the
primary
the shock
might
be
fatal,
with
many
times that current it
might
be
perfectly harmless,
even if the
frequency
be the same. With
high frequencies
and
excessively
high potentials
when the terminals are not connected to bodies
of some
size, practically
all the
energy supplied
to the
primary
is
FIG. 10"). FIG. l<m.
taken
up by
the coil. There is no
breaking through,
no local in-
jury,
but all the material,
insulating
and
conducting,
is
uniformly
heated.
To avoid
misunderstanding
in
regard
to the
physiological
effect of
alternating
currents of
very high frequency,
I think it
necessary
to state
that,
while it is an undeniable fact that
they
are
incomparably
less
dangerous
than currents of low
frequencies,
it
should not be
thought
that
they
are
altogether
harmless.
What has
just
been said refers
only
to currents from an
ordinary
high
tension
induction
coil,
which currents are
necessarily very
small
;
if
received
directly
from a machine or from a
secondary
of low
resistance,
they produce
more or less
powerful effects,
and
may
cause serious
injury, especially
when used in
conjunction
with
condensers.
HIGH
FfiEQ
UENOY AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 163
The
streaming discharge
of a
high
tension induction coil differs
in
many respects
from that of a
powerful
static machine. In
color it has neither the violet of the
positive,
nor the
brightness
of the
negative,
static
discharge,
but lies somewhere
between,
being,
of
course, alternatively positive
and
negative.
But since
the
streaming
is more
powerful
when the
point
or terminal is
electrified
positively,
than when electrified
negatively,
it follows
that the
point
of the brush is more like the
positive,
and the root
more like the
negative,
static
discharge.
In the
dark,
when the
brush is
very powerful,
the root
may appear
almost white. The
wind
produced by
the
escaping streams, though
it
may
be
very
strong
often indeed to such a
degree
that it
may
be felt
quite
a
distance from the coil
is, nevertheless, considering
the
quantity
of the
discharge,
smaller than that
produced by
the
positive
FIG. 107. FIG. 108.
brush of a static
machine,
and it affects the flame much less
powerfully.
From the nature of the
phenomenon
we can con-
clude that the
higher
the
frequency,
the smaller
must,
of
course,
be the wind
produced by
the
streams,
and with
sufficiently high
frequencies
no wind at all would be
produced
at the
ordinary
atmospheric pressures.
With
frequencies
obtainable
by
means
of a
machine,
the mechanical effect is
sufficiently great
to
revolve,
with considerable
speed, large pin-wheels,
which in the dark
present
a beautiful
appearance owing
to the abundance of the
streams
(Fig. 106).
In
general,
most of the
experiments usually performed
with a
static machine can be
performed
with an induction coil when
operated
witli
very rapidly alternating
currents. The effects
pro-
duced, however,'
are much more
striking, being
of
incomparably
164 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
greater power.
When a small
length
of
ordinary
cotton covered
wire, Fig.
107,
is attached to one terminal of the
coil,
the streams
issuing
from all
points
of the wire
may
be so intense as to
produce
a considerable
light
effect. When the
potentials
and
frequencies
are
very high,
a wire insulated with
gutta percha
or rubber and
attached to one of the
terminals, appears
to be covered with a
luminous film. A
very
thin bare wire when attached to a ter-
minal emits
powerful
streams and vibrates
continually
to and fro
or
spins
in a
circle, producing
a
singular
effect
(Fig. 108).
Some
of these
experiments
have been described
by
me in The Electrical
W(M,
of
February 21,
1891.
Another
peculiarity
of the
rapidly alternating discharge
of the
induction coil is its
radically
different behavior with
respect
to
points
and rounded surfaces.
If a thick
wire, provided
with a ball at one end and with a
point
at the
other,
be attached to the
positive
terminal of a static
machine, practically
all the
charge
will be lost
through
the
point,
on account of the
enormously greater tension, dependent
on the
radius of curvature. But if such a wire is attached to one of the
terminals of the induction
coil,
it will be observed that with
very
high frequencies
streams issue from the ball almost as
copiously
as from the
point (Fig.
109).
It is
hardly
conceivable that we could
produce
such a condi-
tion to an
equal degree
in a static
machine,
for the
simple
reason,
that the tension increases as the
square
of the
density,
which in
turn is
proportional
to the radius of curvature
;
hence,
with a
steady potential
an enormous
charge
would be
required
to make
streams issue from a
polished
ball while it is connected with a
point.
But with an induction coil the
discharge
of which alter-
nates with
great rapidity
it is different, Here we have to deal
with two distinct tendencies.
First,
there is the
tendency
to
escape
which exists in a condition of
rest,
and which
depends
OH
the radius of
curvature; second,
there is the
tendency
to dissi-
pate
into the
surrounding
air
by
condenser
action,
which de-
pends
on the surface. When one of these tendencies is a maxi-
mum,
the other is at a
minimum. At the
point
the luminous
stream is
principally
due to the air molecules
coming bodily
in
contact with the
point ; they
are attracted and
repelled, charged
and
discharged, and,
their atomic
charges being
thus
disturbed,
vibrate and emit
light
waves. At the
ball,
on the
contrary,
there
is no doubt that the effect is to a
great
extent
produced
indue-
&IGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 166
tively,
the air molecules not
necessarily coining
in contact with
the
ball,
though they undoubtedly
do so. To convince ourselves
of this we
only
need to exalt the condenser
action,
for
instance,
by enveloping
the
ball,
at some
distance, by
a better conductor
than the
surrounding medium,
the conductor
being,
of
course,
insulated
;
or else
by surrounding
it with a better dielectric and
approaching
an insulated
conductor;
in both cases the streams
will break forth more
copiously. Also,
the
larger
the ball with
a
given frequency,
or the
higher
the
frequency,
the more will
the ball have the
advantage
over the
point. But,
since a certain
intensity
of action is
required
to render the streams
visible,
it is
obvious that in the
experiment
described the ball should not be
taken too
large.
In
consequence
of this two-fold
tendency,
it is
possible
to
pro-
duce
by
means of
points,
effects identical to those
produced by
FIG. 109. FIG. 110.
capacity. Thus,
for
instance, by attaching
to one terminal of
the coil a small
length
of soiled
wire,
presenting many points
and
offering great facility
to
escape,
the
potential
of the coil
may
be raised to the same value as
by attaching
to the terminal
a
polished
ball of a surface
many
times
greater
than that of the
wire.
An
interesting experiment, showing
the effect of the
points,
may
be
performed
in the
following
manner : Attach to one of
the terminals of the coil a cotton covered wire about two feet in
length,
and
adjust
the conditions so that streams issue from the
wire. In this
experiment
the
primary
coil should be
preferably
placed
so that it extends
only
about half
way
into the
secondary
coil. Now touch the free terminal of the
secondary
with a con-
ducting object
held in the
hand,
or else connect it to an insulated
166 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
body
of some size. In this manner the
potential
on the wire
may
be
enormously
raised. The effect of this will be either to
increase,
or to
diminish,
the streams. If
they
increase,
the wire
is too short
;
if
they
diminish,
it is too
long. By adjusting
the
length
of the
wire,
a
point
is found where the
touching
of the
other terminal does not at all affect the streams. In this case
the rise of
potential
is
exactly
counteracted
by
the
drop through
the coil. It will be observed that small
lengths
of wire
produce
considerable difference in the
magnitude
and
luminosity
of the
streams. The
primary
coil is
placed
sidewise for two reasons:
First,
to increase the
potential
at the wire
; and, second,
to in-
crease the
drop through
the coil. The sensitiveness is thus
aug-
mented.
There is still another and far more
striking peculiarity
of the
brush
discharge produced by very rapidly alternating
currents.
To observe this it is best to
replace
the usual terminals of the
coil
by
two metal columns insulated with a
good
thickness of
ebonite. It is also well to close all fissures and cracks with wax
so that the brushes cannot form
anywhere except
at the
tops
of
the columns. If the conditions are
carefully adjusted
which,
of
course,
must be left to the skill of the
experimenter
so that
the
potential
rises to an enormous
value,
one
may produce
two
powerful
brushes several inches
long, nearly
white at their
roots,
which in the dark bear a
striking
resemblance to two flames of
a
gas escaping
under
pressure (Fig. 110).
But
they
do not
only
resemble, they
are veritable
flames,
for
they
are hot.
Certainly
they
are not as hot as a
gas burner,
but
they
would be so
if
the
frequency
cmd the
potential
would be
sufficiently high.
Produced
with,
say, twenty
thousand alternations
per second,
the heat is
easily perceptible
even if the
potential
is not
excessively high.
The heat
developed is,
of
course,
due to the
impact
of the air
molecules
against
the terminals and
against
each other.
As,
at
the
ordinary pressures,
the mean free
path
is
excessively small,
it is
possible
that in
spite
of the enormous initial
speed imparted
to each molecule
upon coming
in contact with the
terminal,
its
progress by
collision with other molecules is retarded to such
an
extent,
that it does not
get away
far from the
terminal,
but
may
strike the same
many
times in succession. The
higher
the
frequency,
the less the molecule is able to
get away,
and this the
more
so,
as for a
given
effect the
potential required
is smaller
;
and a
frequency
is conceivable
perhaps
even obtainable at
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 167
which
practically
the same molecules would strike the terminal.
Under such conditions the
exchange
of the molecules would be
very slow,
and the heat
produced at,
and
very near,
the terminal
would be excessive. But if the
frequency
would
go
on
increasing
constantly,
the heat
produced
would
begin
to diminish for ob-
vious reasons. In the
positive
brush of a static machine the ex-
change
of the molecules is
very rapid,
the stream is
constantly
of one
direction,
and there are fewer collisions
;
hence the
heating
effect must be
very
small.
Anything
that
impairs
the
facility
of
exchange
tends to increase the local heat
produced. Thus,
if
a bulb be held over the terminal of the coil so as to enclose the
brush,
the air contained in the bulb is
very quickly brought
to
a
high temperature.
If a
glass
tube be held over the brush so
as to allow the
draught
to
carry
the brush
upwards, scorching
hot
air
escapes
at the
top
of the tube.
Anything
held within the
brush
is,
of
course, rapidly heated,
and the
possibility
of
using
such
heating
effects for some
purpose
or other
suggests
itself.
When
contemplating
this
singular phenomenon
of the hot
brush,
we cannot
help being
convinced that a similar
process
must take
place
in the
ordinary flame,
and it seems
strange
that
after all these centuries
past
of
familiarity
with the
flame, now,
in this era of electric
lighting
and
heating,
we are
finally
led to
recognize,
that since time immemorial we
have,
after
all, always
had
"
electric
light
and heat
"
at our
disposal.
It is also of no
little interest to
contemplate,
that we have a
possible way
of
producing by
other than chemical means a veritable
flame,
which would
give light
and heat without
any
material
being
consumed,
without
any
chemical
process taking place,
and to
accomplish this,
we
only
need to
perfect
methods of
producing
enormous
frequencies
and
potentials.
I have no doubt that if
the
potential
could be made to alternate with sufficient
rapidity
and
power,
the brush formed at the end of a wire would lose its
electrical characteristics and would become flamelike. The flame
must be due to electrostatic molecular action.
This
phenomenon
now
explains
in a manner which can
hardly
be doubted the
frequent
accidents
occurring
in storms. It is well
known that
objects
are often set on fire without the
lightning
striking
them. We shall
presently
see how this can
happen.
On a nail in a
roof,
for
instance,
or on a
projection
of
any kind,
more or less
conducting,
or rendered so
by dampness,
a
powerful
brush
may appear.
If the
lightning
strikes somewhere in the
168 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
neighborhood
the enormous
potential may
be made to alternate
or fluctuate
perhaps many
million times a second. The air
molecules are
violently
attracted and
repelled,
and
by
their im-
pact produce
such a
powerful heating
effect that a lire is started.
It is conceivable that a
ship
at sea
may,
in this
manner,
catch fire
at
many points
at once. When we
consider,
that even with the
comparatively
low
frequencies
obtained from a
dynamo machine,
and with
potentials
of no more than one or two hundred thous-
and
volts,
the
heating
effects are
considerable,
we
may imagine
how much more
powerful they
must be with
frequencies
and
po-
tentials
many
times
greater;
and the above
explanation seems,
to
say
the
least, very probable.
Similar
explanations may
have been
suggested,
but I am not aware
that, up
to the
present,
the heat-
ing
effects of a brush
produced by
a
rapidly alternating potential
FIG. ill.
have been
experimentally demonstrated,
at least not to such a
remarkable
degree.
By preventing completely
the
exchange
of the air
molecules^
the local
heating
effect
may
be so exalted as to
bring
a
body
to
incandescence.
Thus,
for
instance,
if a small
button,
or
prefer-
ably
a
very
thin wire or filament be enclosed in an unexhausted
globe
and connected with the terminal of the
coil,
it
may
be
rendered incandescent. The
phenomenon
is made much more
interesting by
the
rapid spinning
round in a circle of the
top
of
the
filament,
thus
presenting
the
appearance
of a luminous fun-
nel,
Fig. Ill,
which widens when the
potential
is increased.
When the
potential
is small the end of the filament
may perf
orm
irregular motions,
suddenly changing
from one to the
other,
or
it
may
describe an
ellipse;
but when the
potential
is
very
high
it
always spins
in a circle
;
and so does
generally
a thin
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 169
straight
wire attached
freely
to the terminal of the coil. These
motions
are,
of
course,
due to the
impact
of the
molecules,
and
the
irregularity
in the distribution of the
potential, owing
to the
roughness
and
dissymmetry
of the wire or filament. With a
perfectly symmetrical
and
polished
wire such motions would
probably
not occur. That the motion is not
likely
to be due to
others causes is evident from the fact that it is not of a definite
direction,
and that in a
very highly
exhausted
globe
it ceases
altogether.
The
possibility
of
bringing
a
body
to incandescence
in an exhausted
globe,
or even when not at all
enclosed,
would
seem to afford a
possible way
of
obtaining light eifects, which,
in
perfecting
methods of
producing rapidly alternating potentials,
might
be rendered available for useful
purposes.
In
employing
a commercial
coil,
the
production
of
very power-
ful brush effects is attended with considerable
difficulties,
for
FIG. 112*.
when these
high frequencies
and enormous
potentials
are
used,
the best insulation is
apt
to
give way. Usually
the coil is insu-
lated well
enough
to stand the strain from convolution to convo-
lution,
since two double silk covered
paraffined
wires will with-
stand a
pressure
of several thousand
volts;
the
difficulty
lies
principally
in
preventing
the
breaking through
from the secon-
dary
to the
primary,
which is
greatly
facilitated
by
the streams
issuing
from the latter. In the
coil,
of
course,
the strain is
great-
est from section to
section,
but
usually
in a
larger
coil there are
so
many
sections that the
danger
of a sudden
giving way
is not
very great.
No
difficulty
will
generally
be encountered in that
direction,
and
besides,
the
liability
of
injuring
the coil
internally
is
very
much reduced
by
the fact that the effect most
likely
to
be
produced
is
simply
a
gradual heating,
which,
when far
enough
1?0 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
advanced,
could not fail to be observed. The
principal necessity
is then to
prevent
the streams between the
primary
and the
tube,
not
only
on account of the
heating
and
possible injury,
but also
because the streams
may
diminish
very considerably
the
potential
difference available at the terminals. A few hints as to how
this
may
be
accomplished
will
probably
be found useful in most
of these
experiments
with the
ordinary
induction coil.
One of the
ways
is to wind a short
primary, Fig. 112a,
so that
the difference of
potential
is not at that
length great enough
to
cause the
breaking
forth of the streams
through
the
insulating
tube. The
length
of the
primary
should be determined
by expe-
riment. Both the ends of the coil should be
brought
out on one
end
through
a
plug
of
insulating
material
fitting
in the tube as
illustrated. In such a
disposition
one terminal of the
secondary
is attached to a
body,
the surface of which is determined with the
FIG. 112b.
greatest
care so as to
produce
the
greatest
rise in the
potential.
At the other terminal a
powerful
brush
appears,
which
may
be
experimented upon.
The above
plan
necessitates the
employment
of a
primary
of
comparatively
small
size,
and it is
apt
to heat when
powerful
ef-
fects are desirable for a certain
length
of time. In such a case it
is better to
employ
a
larger coil, Fig. 112b,
and introduce it
from one side of the
tube,
until the streams
begin
to
appear.
In
this case the nearest terminal of the
secondary may
be connected
to the
primary
or to the
ground,
which is
practically
the same
thing,
if the
primary
is connected
directly
to the machine. In the
case of
ground
connections it is well to determine
experimentally
the
frequency
which is best suited under the conditions of the
test. Another
way
of
obviating
the
streams,
more or
less,
is to
Iimil
FRKQURNOY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. Ill
make the
primary
in sections and
supply
it from
separate,
well
insulated sources.
In
many
of these
experiments,
when
powerful
effects are
wanted for a short
time,
it is
advantageous
to use iron cores with
the
primaries.
In such case a
very large primary
coil
may
be
wound and
placed
side
by
side witli the
secondary, and,
the near-
est terminal of the latter
being
connected to the
primary,
a lami-
nated iron core is introduced
through
the
primary
into the sec-
ondary
as far as the streams will
permit.
Under these conditions
an
excessively powerful brush,
several inches
long,
which
may
be
appropriately
called
"
St. Elmo's hot
fire," may
be caused to
appear
at the other terminal of the
secondary, producing striking
effects. It is a most
powerful ozonizer,
so
powerful indeed,
that
only
a few minutes are sufficient to fill the whole room with the
smell of
ozone,
and it
undoubtedly possesses
the
quality
of excit-
ing
chemical affinities.
For the
production
of
ozone,
alternating
currents of
very
high frequency
are
eminently suited,
not
only
on account of the
advantages they
offer in the
way
of conversion but also because
of the
fact,
that the
ozonizing
action of a
discharge
is
dependent
on the
frequency
as well as on the
potential,
this
being
undoubt-
edly
confirmed
by
observation.
In these
experiments
if an iron core is used it should be care-
fully watched,
as it is
apt
to
get excessively
hot in an
incredibly
short time. To
give
an idea of the
rapidity
of the
heating,
I
will
state,
that
by passing
a
powerful
current
through
a coil with
many turns,
the
inserting
within the same of a thin iron wire for
no more than one second's time is sufficient to heat the wire to
something
like 100 C.
But this
rapid heating
need not
discourage
us in the use
of iron cores in connection with
rapidly alternating
currents.
I have for a
long
time been convinced that in the industrial distri-
bution
by
means of
transformers,
some such
plan
as the
following
might
be
practicable.
We
may
use a
comparatively
small iron
core, subdivided,
or
perhaps
not even subdivided. We
may
sur-
round this core with a considerable thickness of material which
is
fire-proof
and conducts the heat
poorly,
and on
top
of that we
may place
the
primary
and
secondary windings. By using
either
higher frequencies
or
greater magnetizing forces,
we
may by
hysteresis
and
eddy
currents heat the iron core so far as to
bring
it
nearly
to its maximum
permeability, which,
as
Hopkinson
has
172 INVENTION'S
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
shown, may
be as much as sixteen times
greater
than that at or-
dinary temperatures.
If the iron core were
perfectly
enclosed,
it would not be deteriorated
by
the
heat, and,
if the enclosure of
tire-proof
material would be
sufficiently thick, only
a limited
amount of
energy
could be radiated in
spite
of the
high
tem-
perature.
Transformers have been constructed
by
me on that
plan,
but for lack of
time,
no
thorough
tests have as
yet
been
made.
Another
way
of
adapting
the iron core to
rapid alternations,
or, generally speaking, reducing
the frictional
losses,
is to
pro-
duce
by
continuous
magnetization
a flow of
something
like seven
thousand or
eight
thousand lines
per square
centimetre
through
the
core,
and then work with weak
magnetizing
forces and
pre-
ferably high frequencies
around the
point
of
greatest permeabil-
ity.
A
higher efficiency
of conversion and
greater output
are
obtainable in this manner. I have also
employed
this
principle
in connection with machines in which there is no reversal of
polarity.
In these
types
of
machines,
as
long
as there are
only
few
pole projections,
there is no
great gain,
as the maxima and
minima of
magnetization
are far from the
point
of maximum
permeability
;
but when the number of the
pole projections
is
very great,
the
required
rate of
change may
be
obtained,
without
the
magnetization varying
so far as to
depart greatly
from the
point
of maximum
permeability,
and the
gain
is considerable.
The above described
arrangements
refer
only
to the use of
commercial coils as
ordinarily
constructed. If it is desired to
construct a coil for the
express purpose
of
performing
with it
such
experiments
as I have
described, or, generally, rendering
it
capable
of
withstanding
the
greatest possible
difference of
poten-
tial,
then a construction as indicated in
Fig.
113 will be found of
advantage.
The coil in this case is formed of two
independent
parts
which are wound
oppositely,
the connection between both
being
made near the
primary.
The
potential
in the middle
being
zero,
there is not much
tendency
to
jump
to the
primary
and not
much insulation is
required.
In some cases the middle
point
may, however,
be connected to the
primary
or to the
ground.
In
such a coil the
places
of
greatest
difference of
potential
are far
apart
and the coil is
capable
of
withstanding
an enormous strain.
The two
parts may
be movable so as to allow a
slight adjustment
of the
capacity
effect.
As to the manner of
insulating
the
coil,
it will be found con-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 173
venient to
proceed
in the
following way
:
First,
the wire should
be boiled in
paraffine
until all the air is out
;
then the coil is
wound
by running
the wire
through
melted
paraffine, merely
for
the
purpose
of
fixing
the wire. The coil is then taken off from
the
spool,
immersed in a
cylindrical
vessel filled with
pure
melted
wax and boiled for a
long
time until the bubbles cease to
appear.
The whole is then left to cool down
thoroughly,
and then the
mass is taken out of the vessel and turned
up
in a lathe. A coil
made in this manner and with care is
capable
of
withstanding
enormous
potential
differences.
It
may
be found convenient to immerse the coil in
paraffine
oil
or some other kind of oil
;
it is a most effective
way
of
insulating,
principally
on account of the
perfect
exclusion of
air,
but it
may
FIG. 113.
be found
that,
after
all,
a vessel filled with oil is not a
very
con-
venient
thing
to handle in a
laboratory.
If an
ordinary
coil can be
dismounted,
the
primary may
be
taken out of the tube and the latter
plugged up
at one
end,
filled
with
oil,
and the
primary
reinserted. This affords an excellent
insulation and
prevents
the formation of the streams.
Of all the
experiments
which
may
be
performed
with
rapidly
alternating
currents the most
interesting
are those which concern
the
production
of a
practical
illuminant. It cannot be denied
that the
present methods,
though they
were brilliant
advances,
are
very
wasteful. Some better methods must be
invented,
some
more
perfect apparatus
devised. Modern research has
opened
new
possibilities
for the
production
of an efficient source of
light,
and the attention of all has been turned in the direction indicated
174 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
by
able
pioneers. Many
have been carried
away by
the enthusiasm
and
passion
to
discover,
but in their zeal to reach
results,
some
have been misled.
Starting
with the idea of
producing
electro-
magnetic
waves, they
turned their
attention, perhaps,
too much
to the
study
of
electro-magnetic effects,
and
neglected
the
study
of electrostatic
phenomena. Naturally, nearly every investigator
availed himself of an
apparatus
similar to that used in earlier
experiments.
But in those forms of
apparatus,
while the electro-
magnetic
inductive effects are
enormous,
the electrostatic effects
are
excessively
small.
In the Hertz
experiments,
for
instance,
a
high
tension induc-
tion coil is short circuited
by
an
arc,
the resistance of which is
very small,
the
smaller,
the more
capacity
is attached to the ter-
minals
;
and the difference of
potential
at these is
enormously
diminished. On the other
hand,
when the
discharge
is not
pass-
ing
between the
terminals,
the static effects
may
be
considerable,
but
only qualitatively so,
not
quantitatively,
since their rise and
fall is
very sudden,
and since their
frequency
is small. In neither
case, therefore,
are
powerful
electrostatic effects
perceivable.
Similar conditions exist
when,
as in some
interesting experiments
of Dr.
Lodge, Ley
den
jars
are
discharged disruptively.
It has
been
thought
and I believe asserted that in such cases
most of the
energy
is radiated into
space.
In the
light
of the
experiments
which I have described
above,
it will now not be
thought
so. I feel safe in
asserting
that in such cases 'most of
the
energy
is
partly
taken
up
and converted into heat in the arc
of the
discharge
and in the
conducting
and
insulating
material of
the
jar,
some
energy being,
of
course, given
off
by
electrification
of the air
;
but the amount of the
directly
radiated
energy
is
very
small.
When a
high
tension induction
coil, operated by
currents alter-
nating only 20,000
times a
second,
has its terminals closed
through
even a
very
small
jar, practically
all the
energy passes through
the dielectric of the
jar,
which is
heated,
and the electrostatic
effects manifest themselves
outwardly only
to a
very
weak
degree.
Now the external circuit of a
Leyden jar,
that
is,
the arc and the
connections of the
coatings, may
be looked
upon
as a circuit
gen-
erating alternating
currents of
excessively high frequency
and
fairly high potential,
which is closed
through
the
coatings
and
the dielectric between
them,
and from the above it is evident
that the external electrostatic effects must be
very small,
even if a
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 175
recoil circuit be used. These conditions make it
appear
that with
the
apparatus usually
at
hand,
the observation of
powerful
elec-
trostatic effects was
impossible,
and what
experience
has been
gained
in that direction is
only
due to the
great ability
of the
investigators.
But
powerful
electrostatic eifects are a sitw
qua
-non of
light
production
on the lines indicated
by theory. Electro-magnetic
eifects are
primarily unavailable,
for the reason that to
produce
the
required
effects we would have to
pass
current
impulses
through
a
conductor, which, long
before the
required frequency
of the
impulses
could be
reached,
would cease to transmit them.
On the other
hand,
electro-magnetic
waves
many
times
longer
than those of
light,
and
producible by
sudden
discharge
of a con-
denser,
could not be
utilized,
it would
seem, except
we avail our-
selves of their effect
upon
conductors as in the
present methods,
which are wasteful. We could not affect
by
means of such waves
the static molecular or atomic
charges
of a
gas,
cause them to vi-
brate and to emit
light. Long
transverse waves
cannot, apparently,
produce
such
effects,
since
excessively
small
electro-magnetic
disturbances
may pass readily through
miles of air. Such dark
waves,
unless
they
are of the
length
of true
light waves, cannot,
it would
seem,
excite luminous radiation in a Geissler
tube,
and
the luminous
effects,
which are
producible by
induction in a tube
devoid of
electrodes,
I am inclined to consider as
being
of an elec-
trostatic nature.
To
produce
such luminous
effects, straight
electrostatic thrusts
are
required; these,
whatever be their
frequency, may
disturb
the molecular
charges
and
produce light.
Since current
impulses
of the
required frequency
cannot
pass through
a conductor of
measurable
dimensions,
we must work with a
gas,
and then the
production
of
powerful
electrostatic effects becomes an
imperative
necessity.
It has occurred to
me, however,
that electrostatic effects are in
many ways
available for the
production
of
light.
For
instance,
we
may place
a
body
of some
refractory
material in a
closed,
and
preferably
more or less
exhausted,
globe,
connect it to a source of
high, rapidly alternating potential, causing
the molecules of the
gas
to strike it
many
times a second at enormous
speeds,
and in
this
manner,
with trillions of invisible
hammers, pound
it until it
gets
incandescent
;
or we
may place
a
body
in a
very highly
ex-
hausted
globe,
in a
non-striking vacuum, and, by employing very
176 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
high frequencies
and
potentials,
transfer sufficient
energy
from it
to other bodies in the
vicinity,
or in
general
to the
surroundings,
to maintain it at
any degree
of incandescence
;
or we
may, by
means of such
rapidly alternating high potentials,
disturb the
ether carried
by
the molecules of a
gas
or their static
charges,
causing
them to viorate and to emit
light.
But,
electrostatic eifects
being dependent upon
the
potential
and
frequency,
to
produce
the most
powerful
action it is desira-
ble to increase both as far as
practicable.
It
may
be
possible
to
obtain
quite
fair results
by keeping
either of these factors
small,
provided
the other is
sufficiently great ;
but we are limited in
both directions.
My experience
demonstrates that we cannot
go
below a certain
frequency, for, first,
the
potential
then becomes
so
great
that it is
dangerous
;
and, secondly,
the
light production
is less efficient.
I have found
that, by using
the
ordinary
low
frequencies,
the
physiological
effect of the current
required
to maintain at a cer-
tain
degree
of
brightness
a tube four feet
long, provided
at the
ends with outside and inside condenser
coatings,
is so
powerful
that,
I
think,
it
might produce
serious
injury
to those not accus-
tomed to such shocks
; whereas,
with
twenty
thousand alterna-
tions
per second,
the tube
may
be maintained at the same
degree
of
brightness
without
any
effect
being
felt. This is due
princi-
pally
to the fact that a much smaller
potential
is
required
to
pro-
duce the same
light effect,
and also to the
higher efficiency
in the
light production.
It is evident that the efficiencv in such cases
is the
greater,
the
higher
the
frequency,
for the
quicker
the
pro-
cess of
charging
and
discharging
the
molecules,
the less
energy
will be lost in the form of dark radiation.
But, unfortunately,
we cannot
go beyond
a certain
frequency
on account of the diffi-
culty
of
producing
and
conveying
the effects.
I have stated above that a
body
inclosed in an unexhausted
bulb
may
be
intensely
heated
by simply connecting
it with a
source of
rapidly alternating potential.
The
heating
in such a
case
is,
in all
probability,
due
mostly
to the bombardment of the
molecules of the
gas
contained in the bulb. When the bulb is
exhausted,
the
heating
of the
body
is much more
rapid,
and there
is no
difficulty
whatever in
bringing
a wire or filament to
any
degree
of incandescence
by simply connecting
it to one terminal
of a coil of the
proper
dimensions.
Thus,
if the well-known
ap-
paratus
of Prof.
Crookes,
consisting
of a bent
platinum
wire with
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 177
vanes mounted over it
(Fig. 114),
be connected to one terminal of
the coil either one or both ends of the
platinum
wire
being
con-
nected the wire is rendered almost
instantly incandescent,
and
the mica vanes are rotated as
though
a current from a
battery
were used. A thin carbon
filament, or, preferably,
a button of
some
refractory
material
(Fig. 115),
even if it be a
comparatively
poor conductor,
inclosed in an exhausted
globe, may
be rendered
highly
incandescent
;
and in this manner a
simple lamp capable
of
giving any
desired candle
power
is
provided.
The success of
lamps
of this kind would
depend largely
on the
selection of the
light-giving
bodies contained within the bulb.
Since,
under the conditions
described, refractory
bodies which
are
very poor
conductors and
capable
of
withstanding
for a
long
time
excessively high degrees
of
temperature may
be
used,
such
illuminating
devices
may
be rendered successful.
It
might
be
thought
at first that if the
bulb, containing
the
FIG. 114. FIG. 115.
filament or button of
refractory material,
be
perfectly
well ex-
hausted that
is,
as far as it can be done
by
the use of the best
apparatus
the
heating
would be much less
intense,
and that in
a
perfect
vacuum it could not occur at all. This is not confirmed
by my experience; quite
the
contrary,
the better the vacuum
the more
easily
the bodies are
brought
to incandescence. This
result is
interesting
for
many
reasons.
At the outset of this work the idea
presented
itself to
me,
whether two bodies of
refractory
material enclosed in a bulb ex-
hausted to such a
degree
that the
discharge
of a
large
induction
coil, operated
in the usual
manner,
cannot
pass through,
could be
rendered incandescent
by
mere condenser action.
Obviously,
to
reach this result enormous
potential
differences and
very high
frequencies
are
required,
as is evident from a
simple
calcula-
tion.
178 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
But such a
lamp
would
possess
a vast
advantage
over an ordi-
nary
incandescent
lamp
in
regard
to
efficiency.
It is well-known
that the
efficiency
of a
lamp
is to some extent a function of the
degree
of
incandescence,
and
that,
could we but work a filament
at
many
times
higher degrees
of
incandescence,
the
efficiency
would be much
greater.
In an
ordinary lamp
this is
impractic-
able on account of the destruction of the
filament,
and it has been
determined
by experience
how far it is advisable to
push
the in-
candescence. It is
impossible
to tell how much
higher efficiency
could be obtained if the filament could withstand
indefinitely,
as the
investigation
to this end
obviously
cannot be carried be-
yond
a certain
stage
;
but there are reasons for
believing
that it
would be
very
considerably higher.
An
improvement might
be
made in the
ordinary lamp by employing
a short and thick car-
bon
;
but then the
leading-in
wires would have to be
thick, and,
besides,
there are
many
other considerations which render such a
modification
entirely impracticable.
But in a
lamp
as above de-
scribed,
the
leading
in wires
may
be
very small,
the incandescent
refractory
material
may
be in the
shape
of blocks
offering
a
very
small
radiating surface,
so that less
energy
would be
required
to
keep
them at the desired incandescence
;
and in addition to
this,
the
refractory
material need not be
carbon,
but
may
be manufac-
tured from mixtures of
oxides,
for
instance,
with carbon or other
material,
or
may
be selected from bodies which are
practically
non-conductors,
and
capable
of
withstanding
enormous
degrees
of
temperature.
All this would
point
to the
possibility
of
obtaining
a much
higher efficiency
with such a
lamp
than is obtainable in
ordinary
lamps.
In
my experience
it has been demonstrated that the
blocks are
brought
to
high degrees
of incandescence with much
lower
potentials
than those determined
by
calculation,
and the
blocks
may
be set at
greater
distances from each other. We
may
freely assume,
and it is
probable,
that the molecular bombard-
ment is an
important
element in the
heating,
even if the
globe
be exhausted with the utmost
care,
as I have done
;
for
although
the number of the molecules
is, comparatively speaking, insign-
ificant, yet
on account of the mean free
path being very great,
there are fewer
collisions,
and the molecules
may
reach much
higher speeds,
so that the
heating
effect due to this cause
may
be
considerable,
as in the Crookes
experiments
with radiant
matter.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL VUlillENTt*. 179
But it is likewise
possible
that we have to deal here with an
increased
facility
of
losing
the
charge
in
very high vacuum,
when
the
potential
is
rapidly alternating,
in which case most of the
heating
would be
directly
due to the
surging
of the
charges
in
the heated bodies. Or else the observed fact
may
be
largely
attributable to the effect of the
points
which I have mentioned
above,
in
consequence
of which the blocks or filaments contained
in the vacuum are
equivalent
to condensers of
many
times
greater
surface than that calculated from their
geometrical
dimen-
sion^.
Scientific men still differ in
opinion
as to whether a
charge should,
or should
not,
be lost in a
perfect vacuum,
or in
other
words,
whether ether
is,
or is
not,
a conductor. If the
FIG. 116. FIG. 117.
former were the
case,
then a thin filament enclosed in a
perfectly
exhausted
globe,
and connected to a source of
enormous, steady
potential,
would be
brought
to incandescence.
Various forms of
lamps
on the above described
principle,
with
the
refractory
bodies in the form of
filaments, Fig. 116,
or
blocks,
Fig. 117,
have been constructed and
operated by me,
and investi-
gations
are
being
carried on in this line. There is no
difficulty
in
reaching
such
high degrees
of incandescence that
ordinary
car-
bon is to all
appearance
melted and volatilized. If the vacuum
could be made
absolutely perfect,
such a
lamp, although inopera-
tive with
apparatus ordinarily used, would,
if
operated
with cur-
180 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
rents of the
required
character,
afford an illuminant which would
never be
destroyed,
and which would be far more efficient than
an
ordinary
incandescent
lamp.
This
perfection
can,
of
course,
never be
reached,
and a
very
slow destruction and
gradual
diminu-
tion in size
always
occurs,
as in incandescent filaments
; but there
is no
possibility
of a sudden and
premature disabling
which oc-
curs in the latter
by
the
breaking
of the
filament,
especially
when the incandescent bodies are in the
shape
of blocks.
With these
rapidly alternating potentials
there
is, however,
no
necessity
of
enclosing
two blocks in a
globe,
but a
single block,
as in
Fig.
115,
or
filament,
Fig.
118, may
be used. The
poten-
tial in this case must of course be
higher,
but is
easily obtainable,
and besides it is not
necessarily dangerous.
The
facility
with which the button or filament in such a
lamp
FIG. 118.
is
brought
to
incandescence,
other
things being equal, depends
on the size of the
globe.
If a
perfect
vacuum could be
obtained,
the size of the
globe
would not be of
importance,
for then the
heating
would be
wholly
due to the
surging
of the
charges,
and
all the
energy
would be
given
off to the
surroundings by
radia-
tion. But this can never occur in
practice.
There is
always
some
gas
left in the
globe,
and
although
the exhaustion
may
be
carried to the
highest degree,
still the
space
inside of the bulb
must be considered as
conducting
when such
high potentials
are
used,
and I assume
that,
in
estimating
the
energy
that
may
be
given
off from the filament to the
surroundings,
we
may
consider
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURREN1S. 181
the inside surface of the bulb as one
coating
of a
condenser,
the
air and other
objects surrounding
the bulb
forming
the other
coating.
When the alternations are
very
low there is no doubt
that a considerable
portion
of the
energy
is
given
off
by
the elec-
trification, of the
surrounding
air.
In order to
study
this
subject better,
I carried on some
experi-
ments with
excessively high potentials
and low
frequencies.
I
then observed that when the hand is
approached
to the
bulb,
the filament
being
connected with one terminal of the
coil,
a
powerful
vibration is
felt, being
due to the attraction and
repul-
sion of the molecules of the air which are electrified
by
induc-
tion
through
the
glass.
In some cases when the action is
very
intense I have been able to hear a
sound,
which must be due to
the same cause.
When the alternations are
low,
one is
agt
to
get
an
excessively
FIG. 119. FIG. 120.
powerful
shock from the bulb. In
general,
when one attaches
bulbs or
objects
of some size to the terminals of the
coil,
one
should look out for the rise of
potential,
for it
may happen
that
by merely connecting
a bulb or
plate
to the
terminal,
the
poten-
tial
may
rise to
many
times its
original
value. When
lamps
are
attached to the
terminals,
as illustrated in
Fig. 119,
then the
capacity
of the bulbs should be such as to
give
the maximum
rise of
potential
under the
existing
conditions. In this man-
ner one
may
obtain the
required potential
with fewer turns of
wire.
The life of such
lamps
as described above
depends,
of
course,
largely
on the
degree
of
exhaustion,
but to some extent also on
the
shape
of the block of
refractory
material.
Theoretically
it
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
would seem that a small
sphere
of carbon enclosed in a
sphere
of
glass
would not suffer deterioration from molecular bombard-
ment, for,
the matter in the
globe being
radiant,
the molecules
would move in
straight lines,
and would seldom strike the
sphere
obliquely.
An
interesting thought
in connection with such a
lamp is,
that in it
"
electricity
"
and electrical
energy apparently
must move in the same lines.
The use of
alternating
currents of
very high frequency
makes
it
possible
to
transfer, by
electrostatic or
electromagnetic
induc-
tion
through
the
glass
of a
lamp,
sufficient
energy
to
keep
a fila-
FIG. 121a. FIG. 121b.
ment at incandescence and so do
away
with the
leading-in
wires.
Such
lamps
have been
proposed,
but for want of
proper appara-
tus
they
have not been
successfully operated. Many
forms of
lamps
on this
principle
with continuous and broken filaments
have been constructed
by
me and
experimented upon.
When
using
a
secondary
enclosed within the
lamp,
a condenser is ad-
vantageously
combined with the
secondary.
When the transfer-
ence is effected
by
electrostatic
induction,
the
potentials
used
are,
of
course, very high
with
frequencies
obtainable from a machine.
For
instance,
with a condenser surface of
forty square centimetres,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 183
which is not
impracticably large,
and with
glass
of
good quality
1 ram.
thick,
using
currents
alternating twenty
thousand times
a
second,
the
potential required
is
approximately
9,000
volts.
This
may
seem
large,
but since each
lamp may
be included
in- the
secondary
of a transformer of
very
small
dimensions,
it
would not be
inconvenient, and, moreover,
it would not
produce
fatal
injury.
The transformers would all be
preferably
in series.
The
regulation
would offer no
difficulties,
as with currents of such
frequencies
it is
very easy
to maintain a constant current.
In the
accompanying engravings
some of the
types
of
lamps
of
this kind are shown.
Fig.
120 is such a
lamp
with a broken fila-
ment,
and
Figs.
121 A and 121 B one with a
single
outside and
inside
coating
and a
single
filament. I have also made
lamps
with two outside and inside
coatings
and a continuous
loop
con-
necting
the latter. Such
lamps
have been
operated by
me with
current
impulses
of the enormous
frequencies
obtainable
by
the
disruptive discharge
of condensers.
The
disruptive discharge
of a condenser is
especially
suited for
operating
such
lamps
with no outward electrical connections
by
means of
electromagnetic
induction,
the
electromagnetic
in-
ductive effects
being excessively high
;
and I have been able to
produce
the desired incandescence with
only
a few short turns of
wire. Incandescence
may
also be
produced
in this manner in a
simple
closed filament.
Leaving
now out of consideration the
practicability
of such
lamps,
I would
only say
that
they possess
a beautiful and desir-
able
feature, namely,
that
they
can be
rendered,
at
will,
more or
less brilliant
simply by altering
the relative
position
of the out-
side and inside condenser
coatings,
or
inducing
and induced cir-
cuits.
When a
lamp
is
lighted by connecting
it to one terminal
only
of the
source,
this
may
be facilitated
by providing
the
globe
with
an outside condenser
coating,
which serves at the same time as a
reflector,
and
connecting
this to an insulated
body
of some size.
Lamps
of this kind are illustrated in
Fig.
122 and
Fig.
123.
Fig.
124 shows the
plan
of connection. The
brilliancy
of the
lamp may,
in this
case,
be
regulated
within wide limits
by vary-
ing
the size of the insulated metal
plate
to which the
coating
is
connected.
It is likewise
practicable
to
light
with one
leading
wire
lamps
such as illustrated in
Fig.
116 and
Fig. 117, by connecting
one
184 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
terminal of the
lamp
to one terminal of the
source,
and the
other to an insulated
body
of the
required
size. In all cases
the insulated
body
serves to
give
off the
energy
into the sur-
rounding space,
and is
equivalent
to a return wire.
Obviously,
in the two last-named
cases,
instead of
connecting
the wires to
an insulated
body,
connections
may
be made to the
ground.
The
experiments
which will
prove
most
suggestive
and of
most interest to the
investigator
are
probably
those
performed
with exhausted tubes. As
might
be
anticipated,
a source of such
rapidly alternating potentials
is
capable
of
exciting
the tubes at
a considerable
distance,
and the
light
effects
produced
are re-
markable.
During my investigations
in this line I endeavored to excite
FIG. 122. FIG. 123.
tubes,
devoid of
any electrodes, by electromagnetic
induction,
making
the tube the
secondary
of the induction
device,
and
passing through
the
primary
the
discharges
of a
Leyden jar.
These tubes were made of
many shapes,
and I was able to
obtain luminous effects which I then
thought
were due
wholly
to
electromagnetic
induction. But on
carefully investigating
the
phenomena
I found that the effects
produced
were more
of an electrostatic nature. It
may
be attributed to this cir-
cumstance that this mode of
exciting
tubes is
very wasteful,
namely,
the
primary
circuit
being closed,
the
potential,
and
consequently
the electrostatic inductive
effect,
is much dimin-
ished.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 185
When an induction
coil, operated
as above
described,
is
used,
there is no doubt that the tubes are excited
by
electrostatic in-
duction,
and that
electromagnetic
induction has
little,
if
any-
thing,
to do with the
phenomena.
This is evident from
many experiments.
For
instance,
if a
tube be taken in one
hand,
the observer
being
near the
coil,
it is
brilliantly lighted
and remains so no matter in what
position
it is
held
relatively
to the observer's
body.
Were the action electro-
magnetic,
the tube could not be
lighted
when the observer's
body
is
interposed
between it and the
coil,
or at least its lumi-
nosity
should be
considerably
diminished. When the tube is
held
exactly
over the centre of the coil the latter
being
wound
in sections and the
primary placed symmetrically
to the sec-
ondary
it
may
remain
completely dark,
whereas it is rendered
intensely
luminous
by moving
it
slightly
to the
right
or left
from the centre of the coil. It does not
light
because in the
FIG. 124.
middle both halves of the coil neutralize each
other,
and the
electric
potential
is zero. If the action were
electromagnetic,
the tube should
light
best in the
plane through
the centre of the
coil,
since the
electromagnetic
effect there should be a maximum.
When an arc is established between the
terminals,
the tubes and
lamps
in the
vicinity
of the coil
go out,
but
light up again
when the arc is
broken,
on account of the rise of
potential.
Yet
the
electromagnetic
effect should be
practically
the same in both
cases.
By placing
a tube at some distance from the
coil,
and nearer to
one terminal
preferably
at a
point
on the axis of the coil one
may light
it
by touching
the remote terminal with an insulated
body
of some size or with the
hand, thereby raising
the
potential
at that terminal nearer to the tube. If the tube is shifted nearer
to the coil so that it is
lighted by
the action of the nearer termi-
186 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TEBLA.
nal,
it
may
be made to
go
out
by holding,
on an insulated
sup-
port,
the end of a wire connected to the remote
terminal,
in the
vicinity
of the nearer
terminal, by
this means
counteracting
the
action of the latter
upon
the tube. These effects are
evidently
electrostatic.
Likewise,
when a tube is
placed
at a considerable
distance from the
coil,
the observer
may, standing upon
an insu-
lated
support
between coil and
tube, light
the latter
by approach-
ing
the hand to it
;
or he
may
even render it luminous
by simply
stepping
between it and the coil. This would be
impossible
with
electro-magnetic induction,
for the
body
of the observer would
act as a screen.
When the coil is
energized by excessively
weak
currents,
the
experimenter may, by touching
one terminal of the coil with the
tube, extinguish
the
latter,
and
may again light
it
by bringing
it
out of contact with the terminal and
allowing
a small arc to form.
This is
clearly
due to the
respective lowering
and
raising
of the
potential
at that terminal. In the above
experiment,
when the
tube is
lighted through
a small
arc,
it
may go
out when the arc is
broken,
because the electrostatic inductive effect alone is too
weak,
though
the
potential may
be much
higher
;
but when the
arc is
established,
the electrification of the end of the tube is
much
greater,
and it
consequently lights.
If a tube is
lighted by holding
it near to the
coil,
and in the
hand which is
remote, by grasping
the tube
anywhere
with the
other
hand,
the
part
between the hands is rendered
dark,
and the
singular
effect of
wiping
out the
light
of the tube
may
be
pro-
duced
by passing
the hand
quickly along
the tube and at the
same time
withdrawing
it
gently
from the
coil,
judging prop-
erly
the distance so that the tube remains dark afterwards.
If the
primary
coil is
placed sidewise,
as in
Fig.
112 B for in-
stance,
and an exhausted tube be introduced from the other side
in the hollow
space,
the tube is
lighted
most
intensely
because of
the increased condenser
action,
and in this
position
the striae are
most
sharply
defined. In all these
experiments described,
and in
many others,
the action is
clearly
electrostatic.
The effects of
screening
also indicate the electrostatic nature
of the
phenomena
and show
something
of the nature of electri-
fication
through
the air. For
instance,
if a tube is
placed
in the
direction of the axis of the
coil,
and an insulated metal
plate
be
interposed,
the tube will
generally
increase in
brilliancy,
or if it
l>e too far from the coil to
light,
it
may
even be rendered lumin-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 187
ous
by interposing
an insulated metal
plate.
The
magnitude
of
the effects
depends
to some extent on the size of the
plate.
But if
the metal
plate
be
connected'by
a wire to the
ground,
its
interpo-
sition will
always
make the tube
go
out even if it be
very
near the
coil. In
general,
the
interposition
of a
body
between the coil and
tube,
increases or diminishes the
brilliancy
of the
tube,
or its
facility
to
light up, according
to whether it increases or dimin-
ishes the electrification. When
experimenting
with an insulated
plate,
the
plate
should not be taken too
large,
else it will
generally
produce
a
weakening
effect
by
reason of its
great facility
for
giv-
ing
off
energy
to the
surroundings.
If a tube be
lighted
at some distance from the
coil,
and a
plate
of hard rubber or other
insulating
substance be
interposed,
the
tube
may
be made to
go
out. The
interposition
of the dielectric
in this case
only slightly
increases the inductive
effect,
but dimin-
ishes
considerably
the electrification
through
the air.
In all
cases, then,
when we excite
luminosity
in exhausted
tubes
by
means of such a
coil,
the effect is due to the
rapidly
alternating
electrostatic
potential ; and, furthermore,
it must be
attributed to the harmonic alternation
produced directly by
the
machine,
and not to
any superimposed
vibration which
might
be
thought
to exist. Such
superimposed
vibrations are
impossible
when we work with an alternate current machine. If a
spring
be
gradually tightened
and
released,
it does not
perform independ-
ent vibrations
;
for this a sudden release is
necessary.
So with
the alternate currents from a
dynamo
machine
;
the medium is
harmonically
strained and
released,
this
giving
rise to
only
one
kind of waves
;
a sudden contact or
break,
or a sudden
giving
way
of the
dielectric,
as in the
disruptive discharge
of a
Leyden
jar,
are essential for the
production
of
superimposed
waves.
In all the last described
experiments,
tubes devoid of
any
elec-
trodes
may
be
used,
and there is no
difficulty
in
producing by
their means sufficient
light
to read
by.
The
light
effect
is,
how-
ever, considerably
increased
by
the use of
phosphorescent
bodies
such as
yttria,
uranium
glass,
etc. A
difficulty
will be found
when the
phosphorescent
material is
used,
for with these
power-
ful
effects,
it is carried
gradually away,
and it is
preferable
to use
material in the form of a solid.
Instead of
depending
on induction at a distance to
light
the
tube,
the same
may
be
provided
with an external
and,
if de-
sired,
also with an internal condenser
coating,
and it
may
then
188 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
be
suspended anywhere
in the room from a conductor connected
to one terminal of the
coil,
and in this manner a soft illumination
may
be
provided.
The ideal
way
of
lighting
a hall or room
would, however,
be
FIG. 125.
to
produce
such a condition in it that an
illuminating
device
could be moved and
put anywhere,
and that it is
lighted,
no mat-
ter where it is
put
and without
being electrically
connected to
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 189
anything.
I have been able to
produce
such a condition
by
creat-
ing
in the room a
powerful, rapidly alternating
electrostatic
field. For this
purpose
I
suspend
a sheet of metal a distance
from the
ceiling
on
insulating
cords and connect it to one termi-
nal of the induction
coil,
the other terminal
being preferably
con-
nected to the
ground.
Or else I
suspend
two sheets as illustrated
in
Fig. 125,
each sheet
being
connected with one of the terminals
of the
coil,
and their size
being carefully
determined. An ex-
hausted tube
may
then be carried in the hand
anywhere
be-
tween the sheets or
placed anywhere,
even a certain distance
beyond
them
;
it remains
always
luminous.
In such an electrostatic field
interesting phenomena may
be
observed, especially
if the alternations are
kept
low and the
po-
tentials
excessively high.
In addition to the luminous
phenomena
mentioned,
one
may
observe that
any
insulated conductor
gives
sparks
when the hand or another
object
is
approached
to
it,
and
the
sparks may
often be
powerful.
When a
large conducting
object
is fastened on an
insulating support,
and the hand
ap-
proached
to
it,
a
vibration,
due to the
rythmical
motion of the
air molecules is
felt,
and luminous streams
may
be
perceived
when the hand is held near a
pointed projection.
'
When a tele-
phone
receiver is made to touch with one or both of its terminals
an insulated conductor of some
size,
the
telephone
emits a loud
sound
;
it also emits a sound when a
length
of wire is attached to
one or both
terminals,
and with
very powerful
fields a sound
may
be
perceived
even without
any
wire.
How far this
principle
is
capable
of
practical application,
the
future will tell. It
might
be
thought
that electrostatic effects
are unsuited for such action at a distance.
Electromagnetic
in-
ductive
effects,
if available for the
production
of
light, might
be
thought
better suited. It is true the electrostatic effects dimin-
ish
nearly
with the cube of the distance from the
coil,
whereas
the
electromagnetic
inductive effects diminish
simply
with the
distance. But when we establish an electrostatic field of
force,
the condition is
very different,
for
then,
instead of the differen-
tial effect of both the
terminals,
we
get
their
conjoint
effect.
Besides,
I would call attention to the
effect,
that in an alternat-
ing
electrostatic
field,
a
conductor,
such as an exhausted tube?
for
instance,
tends to take
up
most of the
energy,
whereas in an
electromagnetic alternating
field the conductor tends to take
up
tlie least
energy,
the waves
being
reflected with but little- loss.
190 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
This is one reason why
it is difficult to excite an exhausted
tube,
at a
distance, by electromagnetic
induction. I have wound coils
of
very large
diameter and of
many
turns of
wire,
and connected
a Geissler tube to the ends of the coil with the
object
of
exciting
the tube at a distance
;
but even with the
powerful
inductive
effects
producible by Ley
den
jar discharges,
the tube could not
be excited unless at a
very
small
distance, although
some
judg-
ment was used as to the dimensions of the coil. I have also
found that even the most
powerful Leyden jar discharges
are
capable
of
exciting only
feeble luminous effects in a closed ex-
hausted
tube,
and even these effects
upon thorough
examination
I have been forced to consider of an electrostatic nature.
How then can we
hope
to
produce
the
required
effects at a
distance
by
means of
electromagnetic
action,
when even in the
closest
proximity
to the source of
disturbance,
under the most
advantageous
conditions,
we can excite but faint
luminosity
'*
It
is true that when
acting
at a distance we have the resonance to
help
us out. We can connect an exhausted
tube,
or whatever
the
illuminating
device
may be,
with an insulated
system
of the
proper capacity,
and so it
may
be
possible
to increase the effect
qualitatively,
and
only qualitatively,
for we would not
get
more
energy through
the device. So we
may, by
resonance
effect,
obtain the
required
electromotive force in an exhausted
tube,
and
excite faint luminous
effects,
but we cannot
get enough energy
to
render the
light practically
available,
and a
simple
calculation,
based on
experimental results,
shows that even if all the
energy
which a tube would receive at a certain distance from the source
should be
wholly
converted into
light,
it would
hardly satisfy
the
practical requirements.
Hence the
necessity
of
directing, by
means of a
conducting circuit,
the
energy
to the
place
of trans-
formation. But in so
doing
we cannot
very sensibly depart
from
present methods,
and all we could do would be to
improve
the
1
apparatus.
From these considerations it would seem that if this ideal
way
of
lighting
is to be rendered
practicable
it will be
only by
the use
of electrostatic effects. In such a case the most
powerful
electro-
static inductive effects are needed
;
the
apparatus employed
must,
therefore,
be
capable
of
producing high
electrostatic
potentials
changing
in value with extreme
rapidity. High frequencies
are
especially wanted,
for
practical
considerations make it desirable
to
keep
down the
potential. By
the
employment
of
machines,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 191
or,
generally speaking,
of
any
mechanical
apparatus,
but low
frequencies
can be reached
;
recourse
must, therefore,
be had to
some other means. The
discharge
of a condenser affords us a
means of
obtaining frequencies by
far
higher
than are obtainable
mechanically,
and I have
accordingly employed
condensers in the
experiments
to the above end.
When the terminals of a
high
tension induction
coil, Fig. 120,
are connected to a
Leyden jar,
and the latter is
discharging
dis-
ruptively
into a
circuit,
we
may
look
upon
the arc
playing
be-
tween the knobs as
being
a source of
alternating,
or
generally
speaking, undulating currents,
and then we have to deal with
the familiar
system
of a
generator
of such
currents,
a circuit con-
nected to
it,
and a condenser
bridging
the circuit. The condenser
in such case is a veritable
transformer,
and since the
frequency
is
excessive,
almost
any
ratio in the
strength
of the currents in both
the branches
may
be obtained. In
reality
the
analogy
is not
quite
complete,
for in the
disruptive discharge
we have most
generally
a fundamental instantaneous variation of
comparatively
low fre-
quency,
and a
superimposed
harmonic
vibration,
and the laws
governing
the flow of currents are not the same for both.
In
converting
in this
manner,
the ratio of conversion should
not be too
great,
for the loss in the arc between the knobs in-
creases with the
square
of the
current,
and if the
jar
be
discharged
through very
thick and short
conductors,
with the view of ob-
taining
a
very rapid oscillation,
a
very
considerable
portion
of the
energy
stored is lost. On the other
hand,
too small ratios are not
practicable
for
many
obvious reasons.
As the converted currents flow in a
practically
closed
circuit,
the electrostatic effects are
necessarily small,
and I therefore con-
vert them into currents or effects of the
required
character. I
have effected such conversions in several
ways.
The
preferred
plan
of connections is illustrated in
Fig.
127. The manner of
oper-
ating
renders it
easy
to obtain
by
means of a small and
inexpen-
sive
apparatus
enormous differences of
potential
which have been
usually
obtained
by
means of
large
and
expensive
coils. For this
it is
only necessary
to take an
ordinary
small
coil, adjust
to it a
condenser and
discharging circuit, forming,
the
primary
of an
auxiliary
small
coil,
and convert
upward.
As the inductive effect
of the
primary
currents is
excessively great,
the second coil need
have
comparatively
but
very
few turns.
By properly adjusting
the
elements,
remarkable results
may
be secured.
192 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
In
endeavoring
to obtain tlie
required
electrostatic effects in
this
manner,
I
have,
as
might
be
expected,
encountered
many
difficulties which I have been
gradually overcoming,
but I am not
as
yet prepared
to dwell
upon
my experiences
in this direction.
I believe that the
disruptive discharge
of a condenser will
play
an
important part
in the
future,
for it offers vast
possibilities,
not
only
in the
way
of
producing light
in a more efficient manner
and in the line indicated
by theory,
but also in
many
other re-
spects.
For
years
the efforts of inventors have been directed towards
obtaining
electrical
energy
from heat
by
means of the thermo-
pile.
It
might
seem invidious to remark that but few know
what is the real trouble with the
thermopile.
It is not the in-
efficiency
or small
output though
these are
great
drawbacks
but the fact that the
thermopile
has its
phylloxera,
that
is,
that
by
constant use it is
deteriorated,
which has thus far
prevented
its
FIG. 126.
introduction on an industrial scale. Now that all modern re-
search seems to
point
with
certainty
to the use of
electricity
of ex-
cessively high tension,
the
question
must
present
itself to
many
whether it is not
possible
to obtain in a
practicable
manner this
form of
energy
from heat. We have been used to look
upon
an electrostatic machine as a
plaything,
and somehow we
couple
with it the idea of the inefficient and
impractical.
But now we
must think
differently,
for now w
r
e know that
everywhere
we
have to deal with the same
forces,
and that it is a mere
question
of
inventing proper
methods or
apparatus
for
rendering
them
available.
In the
present systems
oij
electrical
distribution,
the
employ-
ment of the iron with its wonderful
magnetic properties
allows
us to reduce
considerably
the size of the
apparatus ; but,
in
spite
of
this,
it is still
very
cumbersome. The more we
progress
in
the
study
of electric and
magnetic phenomena,
the more we be-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 193
come convinced that the
present
methods will be short-lived. For
the
production
of
light,
at
least,
such
heavy machinery
would
seem to be
unnecessary.
The
energy required
is
very small,
and
if
light
can be obtained as
efficiently as, theoretically,
it
appears
possible,
the
apparatus
need have but a
very
small
output.
There
being
a
strong probability
that the
illuminating
methods
of the future will involve the use of
very high potentials,
it seems
very
desirable to
perfect
a contrivance
capable
of
converting
the
energy
of heat into
energy
of the
requisite
form.
Nothing
to
speak
of has been done towards this
end,
for the
thought
that
electricity
of some
50,000
or
100,000
volts
pressure
or
more,
even
if
obtained,
would be unavailable for
practical purposes,
has de-
terred inventors from
working
in this direction.
In
Fig.
126 a
plan
of connections is shown for
converting
currents of
high,
into currents of
low,
tension
by
means of the
disruptive discharge
of a condenser. This
plan
has been used
by
FIG. 127.
me
frequently
for
operating
a few incandescent
lamps required
in the
laboratory.
Some difficulties have been encountered in the
arc of the
discharge
which I have been able to overcome to a
great
extent
;
besides
this,
and the
adjustment necessary
for the
proper
working,
no other difficulties have been met
with,
and it was
easy
to
operate ordinary lamps,
and even
motors,
in this manner.
The line
being
connected to the
ground,
all the wires could be
handled with
perfect impunity,
no matter how
high
the
potential
at the terminals of the condenser. In these
experiments
a
high
tension induction
coil, operated
from a
battery
or from an alter-
nate current
machine,
was
employed
to
charge
the condenser
;
but
the induction coil
might
be
replaced by
an
apparatus
of a differ-
ent
kind, capable
of
giving electricity
of such
high
tension. In
this
manner,
direct or
alternating
currents
may
be
converted,
and
in both cases the
current-impulses may
be of
any
desired fre-
quency.
"When the currents
charging
the condenser are of the
194 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
same
direction,
and it is desired that the converted currents
should also he of one
direction,
the resistance of the
discharg-
ing
circuit
should,
of
course,
be so chosen that there are no
oscillations.
In
operating
devices on the above
plan
I have observed curi-
ous
phenomena
of
impedance
which are of interest. For instance
if a thick
copper
bar be
bent,
as indicated in
Fig. 128,
and shunted
by
ordinary
incandescent
lamps, then, by passing
the
discharge
between the
knobs,
the
lamps
may
be
brought
to incandescence
although they
are short-circuited. When a
large
induction coil
FIG. 128.
is
employed
it is
easy
to obtain
rendered evident
by
the different
degree
of
brilliancy
of the
lamps,
as shown
roughly
in
Fig.
12S. The nodes are never
clearly
delined,
but
they
are
simply
maxima and minima of
potentials
along
the bar. This is
probably
due to the
irregularity
of the arc
between the knobs. In
general
when the above-described
plan
of conversion from
high
to low tension is
used,
the behavior of
the
disruptive discharge may
be
closely
studied. The nodes
may
also be
investigated by
means of an ordinarv Cardew voltmeter
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 195
which should be well insulated. Geissler tubes
may
also be
lighted
across the
points
of the bent bar
;
in this
case,
of
course,
it is better to
employ
smaller
capacities.
I have found it
prac-
ticable to
light up
in this manner a
lamp,
and even a Geissler
tube,
shunted
by
a
short, heavy
block of
metal,
and this result
seems at first
very
curious. In
fact,
the thicker the
copper
bar
in
Fig. 128,
the better it is for the success of the
experiments,
as
they appear
more
striking.
When
lamps
with
long
slender fila-
ments are used it w
T
ill be often noted that the filaments are from
time to time
violently vibrated,
the vibration
being
smallest at
the nodal
points.
This vibration seems to be due to an electro-
static action between the filament and the
glass
of the bulb.
In some of the above
experiments
it is
preferable
to use
special
lamps having
a
straight
filament as shown in
Fig.
129. When
such a
lamp
is used a still more curious
phenomenon
than those
Fro. 129.
described
may
be observed. The
lamp may
be
placed
across the
copper
bar and
lighted,
and
by using
somewhat
larger capacities,
or,
in other
words,
smaller
frequencies
or smaller
impulsive
im-
pedances,
the filament
may
be
brought
to
any
desired
degree
of
incandescence. But Avhen the
impedance
is
increased,
a
point
is
reached when
comparatively
little current
passes through
the
carbon,
and most of it
through
the rarefied
gas
;
or
perhaps
it
may
be more correct to state that the current divides
nearly
evenly through
both,
in
spite
of the enormous difference in the
resistance,
and this would be true unless the
gas
and the filament
behave
differently.
It is then noted that the whole bulb is bril-
liantly illuminated,
and the ends of the
leading-in
wires become
incandescent and often throw off
sparks
in
consequence
of the
violent
bombardment,
but the carbon filament remains dark.
This is illustrated in
Fig.
129. Instead of the filament a
single
196 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
wire
extending through
the whole bulb
may
be
used,
and in this
case the
phenomenon
would seem to be still more
interesting.
From the above
experiment
it will be
evident,
that when ordi-
nary lamps
are
operated by
the converted
currents,
those should
be
preferably
taken in which the
platinum
wires are far
apart,
and the
frequencies
used should not be too
great,
else the dis-
charge
will occur at the ends of the filament or in the base of the
lamp
between the
leading-in
wires,
and the
lamp might
then be
damaged.
In
presenting
to
you
these results of
my investigation
on the
subject
under
consideration,
I have
paid only
a
passing
notice to
facts
upon
which I could have dwelt at
length,
and
among many
observations I have selected
only
those which I
thought
most
likely
to interest
you.
The field is wide and
completely
unex-
plored,
and at
every step
a new truth is
gleaned,
a novel fact
observed.
How far the results here borne out are
capable
of
practical
applications
will be decided in the future. As
regards
the
pro-
duction of
light,
some results
already
reached are
encouraging
and make me confident in
asserting
that the
practical
solution of
the
problem
lies in the direction I have endeavored to indicate.
Still,
whatever
may
be the immediate outcome of these
experi-
ments I am
hopeful
that
they
will
only prove
a
step
in further
development
towards the ideal and final
perfection.
The
possi-
bilities which are
opened by
modern research are so vast that
even the most reserved must feel
sanguine
of the future. Emi-
nent scientists consider the
problem
of
utilizing
one kind of
radiation without the others a rational one. In an
apparatus
de-
signed
for the
production
of
light by
conversion from
any
form
of
energy
into that of
light,
such a result can never be
reached,
for no matter what the
process
of
producing
the
required
vibra-
tions,
be it
electrical,
chemical or
any
other,
it will not be
possi-
ble to obtain the
higher light
vibrations without
going through
the lower heat vibrations. It is the
problem
of
imparting
to a
body
a certain
velocity
without
passing through
all lower veloci-
ties. But there is a
possibility
of
obtaining energy
not
only
in
the form of
light,
but motive
power,
and
energy
of
any
other
form,
in some more direct
way
from the medium. The time will
be when this will be
accomplished,
and the time has come when
one
may
utter such words before an
enlightened
audience with-
out
being
considered a
visionary.
AVe are
whirling through
moil
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 197
endless
space
with an inconceivable
speed,
all around us
every-
thing
is
spinning, everything
is
moving, everywhere
is
energy.
There must be some
way
of
availing
ourselves of this
energy
more
directly. Then,
with the
light
obtained from the
medium,
with the
power
derived from
it,
with
every
form of
energy
obtained without
effort,
from the store forever
inexhaustible,
humanity
will advance with
giant
strides. The mere
contempla-
tion of these
magnificent possibilities expands
our
minds, strength-
ens our
hopes
and fills our hearts with
supreme delight.
CHAPTEE XXVII.
EXPERIMENTS WITH ALTERNATE CURRENTS OF HIGH POTENTIAL
AND HlGH
FREQUENCY.
1
I CANNOT find words to
express
how
deeply
I feel the honor of
addressing
some of the foremost thinkers of the
present
time,
and so
many
able scientific
men, engineers
and
electricians,
of
the
country greatest
in scientific achievements.
The results which I have the honor to
present
before such a
gathering
I cannot call
my
own. There are
among you
not a
few who can
lay
better claim than
myself
on
any
feature of
merit which this work
may
contain. I need not mention
many
names which are world-known names of those
among you
who
are
recognized
as the leaders in this
enchanting
science
;
but
one,
at
least,
I must mention a name which could not be omitted in
a demonstration of this kind. It is a name associated with the
most beautiful invention ever made : it is Crookes !
When I was at
college,
a
good
while
ago,
I
read,
in a translation
(for
then I was not familiar with
your magnificent language),
the
description
of his
experiments
on radiant matter. I read it
only
once in
my
life that time
yet every
detail about that charm-
ing
work I can remember to this
day.
Few are the
books,
let me
say,
which can make such an
impression upon
the mind of a
student.
But
if,
on the
present occasion,
I mention this name as one of
many your
Institution can boast
of,
it is because I have more
than one reason to do so. For what I have to tell
you
and to
show
you
this
evening
concerns,
in a
large
measure,
that same
vague
world which Professor Crookes has so
ably explored ; and,
more than
this,
when I trace back the mental
process
which led
me to these advances which even
by myself
cannot be consid-
ered
trifling,
since
they
are so
appreciated by you
I believe
that their real
origin,
that which started me to work in this
1. Lecture delivered before the Institution of Electrical
Engineers,
London,
February,
1892.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 199
direction,
and
brought
me to
them,
after a
long period
of con-
stant
thought,
was that
fascinating
little book which I read
many
years ago.
And now that I have made a feeble effort to
express my
homage
and
acknowledge
my indebedness to him and others
among you,
I will make a second
effort,
which I
hope you
will
not find so feeble as the
first,
to entertain
you.
Give me leave to introduce the
subject
in a few words.
A short time
ago
I had the honor to
bring
before our Ameri-
can Institute of Electrical
Engineers
some results then arrived
at
by
me in a novel line of work. I need not assure
you
that
the
many
evidences which I have received that
English
scientific
men and
engineers
were interested in this work have been for
me a
great
reward and
encouragement.
I will not dwell
upon
the
experiments already described, except
with the view of com-
pleting,
or more
clearly expressing,
some ideas^ advanced
by
me
before,
and also with the view of
rendering
the
study
here
pre-
sented
self-contained,
and
my
remarks on the
subject
of this
evening's
lecture consistent.
This
investigation, then,
it
goes
without
saying,
deals with
alternating currents,
and to be more
precise,
with
alternating
currents of
high potential
and
high frequency.
Just in how
much a
very high frequency
is essential for the
production
of
the results
presented
is a
question which,
even with
my present
experience,
would embarrass me to answer. Some of the
experi-
ments
may
be
performed
with low
frequencies ;
but
very high
frequencies
are
desirable,
not
only
on account of the
many
effects
secured
by
their
use,
but also as a convenient means of
obtaining,
in the induction
apparatus employed,
the
high potentials,
which in
their turn are
necessary
to the demonstration of most of the ex-
periments
here
contemplated.
Of the various branches of electrical
investigation, perhaps
the
most
interesting
and the most
immediately promising
is that
dealing
with
alternating
currents. The
progress
in this branch
of
applied
science has been so
great
in recent
years
that it
justi-
fies the most
sanguine hopes. Hardly
have we become familiar
with one
fact,
when novel
.experiences
are met and new avenues
of research are
opened.
Even at this hour
possibilities
not
dreamed of before
are, by
the use of these
currents, partly
re-
alized. As in nature all is ebb and
tide,
all is wave
motion,
so it
seems that in all branches of
industry alternating
currents elec-
tric wave motion will have the
sway.
soo INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
One
reason, perhaps, why
this branch of science is
being
so
rapidly developed
is to be found in the interest which is attached
to its
experimental study.
We wind a
simple ring
of iron with
coils
;
we establish the connections to the
generator,
and with
wonder and
delight
we note the effects of
strange
forces which
we
bring
into
play,
which allow us to
transform,
to transmit and
direct
energy
at will. We
arrange
the circuits
properly,
and we
see the mass of iron and wires behave as
though
it were endowed
with
life, spinning
a
heavy armature, through
invisible connec-
tions,
with
great speed
and
power
with the
energy possibly
con-
veyed
from a
great
distance. We observe how the
energy
of an
alternating
current
traversing
the wire manifests itself not so
much in the wire as in the
surrounding space
in the most sur-
prising manner, taking
the forms of
heat, light,
mechanical
energy, and,
most
surprising
of
all,
even chemical
affinity.
All
these observations fascinate
us,
and fill us with an intense desire
to know more about the nature of these
phenomena.
Each
day
we
go
to our work in the
hope
of
discovering,
in the
hope
that
some
one,
no matter
who, may
find a solution of one of the
pend-
ing great problems,
and each
succeeding day
we return to our
task with renewed ardor
;
and even if we are
unsuccessful,
our
work has not been in
vain,
for in these
strivings,
in these
efforts,
we have found hours of untold
pleasure,
and we have directed
our
energies
to the benefit of mankind.
We
may
take at
random,
if
you
choose
any
of the
many
ex-
periments
which
may
be
performed
with
alternating
currents
;
a few of which
only,
and
by
no means the most
striking,
form
the
subject
of this
evening's
demonstration
; they
are all
equally
interesting, equally inciting
to
thought.
Here is a
simple glass
tube from which the air has been
par-
tially
exhausted. I take hold of it
;
I
bring my body
in contact
with a wire
conveying alternating
currents of
high potential,
and
the tube in
my
hand is
brilliantly lighted.
In whatever
position
I
may put it,
wherever I move it in
space,
as far as I can
reach,
its
soft,
pleasing light persists
with undiminished
brightness.
Here is an exhausted bulb
suspended
from a
single
wire.
Standing
on an insulated
support,
I
grasp
it,
and a
platinum
but-
ton mounted in it is
brought
to vivid incandescence.
Here,
attached to a
leading wire,
is another
bulb, which,
as I
touch its metallic
socket,
is filled with
magnificent
colors of
phos-
phorescent light.
I
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 201
Here still
another,
which
by my fingers'
touch casts a shadow
the Crookes shadow of the stem inside of it.
Here, again,
insulated as I stand on this
platform,
I
bring my
body
in contact with one of the terminals of the
secondary
of
this induction coil with the end of a wire
many
miles
long
and
you
see streams of
light
break forth from its distant
end,
which
is set in violent vibration.
Here,
once
more,
I attach these two
plates
of wire
gauze
to the
terminals of the coil
;
I set them a distance
apart,
and I set the
coil to work. You
may
see a small
spark pass
between the
plates.
I insert a thick
plate
of one of the best dielectrics be-
tween
them,
and instead of
rendering altogether impossible,
as
we are used to
expect,
I aid the
passage
of the
discharge,
which,
as I insert the
plate, merely changes
in
appearance
and assumes
the form of luminous streams.
Is
there,
I
ask,
can there
be,
a more
interesting study
than that
of
alternating
currents ?
In all these
investigations,
in all these
experiments,
which are
so
very, very interesting,
for
many years past
ever since the
greatest experimenter
who lectured in this hall discovered its
principle
we have had a
steady companion,
an
appliance
familiar
to
every one,
a
plaything once,
a
thing
of momentous
importance
now the induction coil. There is no dearer
appliance
to the
electrician. From the ablest
among you,
I dare
say,
down to the
inexperienced student,
to
your lecturer,
we all have
passed many
delightful
hours in
experimenting
with the induction coil. We
have watched its
play,
and
thought
and
pondered
over the beau-
tiful
phenomena
which it disclosed to our ravished
eyes.
So
well known is this
apparatus,
so familiar are these
phenomena
to
every one,
that
my courage nearly
fails me when I think that I
have ventured to address so able an
audience,
that I have ven-
tured to entertain
you
with that same old
subject.
Here in
reality
is the same
apparatus,
and here are the same
phenomena, only
the
apparatus
is
operated
somewhat
differently,
the
phenomena
are
presented
in a different
aspect.
Some of the results we find
as
expected,
others
surprise us,
but all
captivate
our
attention,
for
in scientific
investigation
each novel result achieved
may
be the
centre of a new
departure,
each novel fact learned
may
lead to
important developments.
Usually
in
operating
an induction coil we have set
up
a vibra-
tion of moderate
frequency
in the
primary,
either
by
means of an
203 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
interrupter
or
break,
or
by
the use of an alternator. Earlier
English investigators,
to mention
only Spottiswoode
and J. E. H.
Gordon,
have used a
rapid
break in connection with the
coil.
Our
knowledge
and
experience
of
to-day
enables us to see
clearly
why
these coils under the conditions of the test did not disclose
any
remarkable
phenomena,
and
why
able
experimenters
failed
to
perceive many
of the curious effects which have since been
observed.
In the
experiments
such as
performed
this
evening,
we
operate
the coil either from a
specially
constructed alternator
capable
of
giving many
thousands of reversals of current
per second, or, by
disrupt! vely discharging
a condenser
through
the
primary,
we set
up
a vibration in the
secondary
circuit of a
frequency
of
many
hundred thousand or millions
per second,
if we so desire
;
and in
using
either of these means we enter a field as
yet unexplored.
It is
impossible
to
pursue
an
investigation
in
any
novel line
without
finally making
some
interesting
observation or
learning
some useful fact. That this statement is
applicable
to the sub-
ject
of this lecture the
many
curious and
unexpected phenomena
which we observe afford a
convincing proof. By way
of illustra-
tion,
take for instance the most obvious
phenomena,
those of the
discharge
of the induction coil.
Here is a coil which is
operated by
currents
vibrating
with
extreme
rapidity,
obtained
by disruptively discharging
a
Leyden
jar.
It would not
surprise
a student were the lecturer to
say
that the
secondary
of this coil consists of a small
length
of com-
paratively
stout wire
;
it would not
surprise
him were the lecturer
to state
that,
in
spite
of
this,
the coil is
capable
of
giving any
potential
which the best insulation of the turns is able to with-
stand
;
but
although
he
may
be
prepared,
and even be indifferent
as to the
anticipated result,
yet
the
aspect
of the
discharge
of the
coil will
surprise
and interest him.
Every
one is familiar with
the
discharge
of an
ordinary
coil
;
it need not be
reproduced
here.
But,
by way
of
contrast,
here is a form of
discharge
of a
coil,
the
primary
current of which is
vibrating
several hundred
thousand times
per
second. The
discharge
of an
ordinary
coil
appears
as a
simple
line or band of
light.
The
discharge
of this
coil
appears
in the form of
powerful
brushes and luminous
streams
issuing
from all
points
of the two
straight
wires attached
to the terminals of the
secondary. (Fig. 130.)
compare
this
phenomenon
which
you
have
just
witnessed
HIGH
FKEQ
UENCY AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 203
with the
discharge
of a Holtz or Wimshurst machine that other
interesting appliance
so dear to the
experimenter.
What a differ-
ence there is between these
phenomena
! And
yet,
had I made
the
necessary arrangements
which could have been made
easily,
were it not that
they
would interfere with other
experiments
I
could have
produced
with this coil
sparks which,
had I the coil
FIG. 131.
hidden from
your
view and
only
two knobs
exposed,
even the
keenest observer
among you
would find it
difficult,
if not
impos-
sible,
to
distinguish
from those of an influence or friction ma-
chine. This
may
be done in
many ways
for
instance,
by oper-
ating
the induction coil which
charges
the condenser from an
alternating-current
machine of
very
low
frequency,
and
prefer-
ably adjusting
the
discharge
circuit so that there are no oscillations
set
up
in it. We then obtain in the
secondary circuit,
if the
knobs are of the
required
size and
properly set,
a more or less
204 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
rapid
succession of
sparks
of
great intensity
and small
quantity,
which
possess
the same
brilliancy,
and are
accompanied by
the
same
sharp crackling
sound,
as those obtained from a friction or
influence machine.
Another
way
is to
pass through
two
primary circuits, having
a
common
secondary,
two currents of a
slightly
different
period,
which
produce
in the
secondary
circuit
sparks occurring
at com-
paratively long
intervals.
But,
even with the means at hand
this
evening,
I
may
succeed in
imitating
the
spark
of a Holtz
machine. For this
purpose
I establish between the terminals of
the coil which
charges
the condenser a
long, unsteady arc,
which
is
periodically interrupted by
the
upward
current of air
produced
by
it. To increase the current of air I
place
on each side of the
arc,
and close to
it,
a
large plate
of mica. The condenser
charged
from this coil
discharges
into the
primary
circuit of a second
coil
through
a small air
gap,
which is
necessary
to
produce
a
sudden rush of current
through
the
primary.
The scheme of
connections in the
present experiment
is indicated in
Fig.
131.
G is an
ordinarily
constructed
alternator,
supplying
the
pri-
mary
P of an induction
coil,
the
secondary
s of which
charges
the condensers or
jars
c c. The terminals of the
secondary
are
connected to the inside
coatings
of the
jars,
the outer
coatings
being
connected to the ends of the
primary pp
of a second in-
duction coil. This
primary pp
has a small air
gap
a b.
The
secondary
s of this coil is
provided
with knobs or
spheres
K K of the
proper
size and set at a distance suitable for the ex-
periment.
A
long
arc is established between the terminals A B of the first
induction coil. M M are the mica
plates.
Each time the arc is broken between A and B the
jars
are
quickly charged
and
discharged through
the
primary pp, pro-
ducing
a
snapping spark
between the knobs K K.
Upon
the arc
forming
between A and B the
potential falls,
and the
jars
cannot
be
charged
to such
high potential
as to break
through
the air
gap
a ~b until the arc is
again
broken
by
the
draught.
In this manner sudden
impulses,
at
long intervals,
are
pro-
duced in the
primary pp,
which in the
secondary
s
give
a cor-
responding
number of
impulses
of
great intensity.
If the sec-
ondary
knobs or
spheres,
K
K,
are of the
proper size,
the
sparks
show much resemblance to those of a Holtz machine.
But these two
effects,
which to the
e,ye appear
so
very
differ-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 205
eut,
are
only
two of the
many discharge phenomena.
We
only
need to
change
the conditions of the
test,
and
again
we make
other observations of interest.
When,
instead of
operating
the induction coil as in the last
two
experiments,
we
operate
it from a
high frequency alternator,
as in the next
experiment,
a
systematic study
of the
phenomena
is rendered much more
easy.
In such
case,
in
varying
the
strength
and
frequency
of the currents
through
the
primary,
we
may
observe live distinct forms of
discharge,
which I have de-
scribed in
my
former
paper
on the
subject
before the American
Institute of Electrical
Engineers, May 20,
1891.
It would take too much
time,
and it would lead us too far
from the
subject presented
this
evening,
to
reproduce
all these
forms,
but it seems to me desirable to show
you
one of them. It
is a brush
discharge,
which is
interesting
in more than one re-
spect.
Viewed from a near
position
it resembles much a
jet
of
gas escaping
under
great pressure.
We know that the
phenom-
enon is due to the
agitation
of the molecules near the
terminal,
and we
anticipate
that some heat must be
developed by
the im-
pact
of the molecules
against
the terminal or
against
each other.
Indeed,
we find that the brush is
hot,
and
only
a little
thought
leads us to the conclusion
that,
could we but reach
sufficiently
high frequencies,
we could
produce
a brush which would
give
intense
light
and
heat,
and which would resemble in
every par-
ticular an
ordinary flame, save, perhaps,
that both
phenomena
might
not be due to the same
agent save, perhaps,
that chemical
affinity might
not be electrical in its nature.
As the
production
'of heat and
light
is here due to the
impact
of the
molecules,
or atoms of
air,
or
something
else
besides,
and,
as we can
augment
the
energy simply by raising
the
potential,
we
might,
even with
frequencies
obtained from
a
dynamo machine, intensify
the action to such a
degree
as to
bring
the terminal to
melting
heat. But with such low'
frequen-
cies we would have to deal
always
with
something
of the nature
of an electric current. If I
approach
a
conducting object
to the
brush,
a thin little
spark passes, yet,
even with the
frequencies
used this
evening,
the
tendency
to
spark
is not
very great. So,
for
instance,
if I hold a metallic
sphere
at some distance above
the
terminal, you may
see the whole
space
between the terminal
and
sphere
illuminated
by
the streams without the
spark passing;
and with the much
higher frequencies
obtainable
by
the
disrup-
206 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tive
discharge
of a
condenser,
were it not for the sudden
impulses^
which are
comparatively
few in
number, sparking
would not
occur even at
very
small distances.
However,
with
incompar-
ably higher frequencies,
which we
may yet
lind means to
pro-
duce
efficiently,
and
provided
that electric
impulses
of such
high
frequencies
could be transmitted
through
a
conductor,
the elec-
trical characteristics of the brush
discharge
would
completely
vanish no
spark
would
pass,
no shock would he felt
yet
we
would still have to deal with an electric
phenomenon,
but in the
broad,
modern
interpretation
of the word. In
my
first
paper,
be-
fore referred
to,
I have
pointed
out the curious
properties
of the
brush,
and described the best manner of
producing it,
but I have
thought
it worth while to endeavor to
express myself
more
clearly
in
regard
to this
phenomenon,
because of its
absorbing
interest.
When a coil is
operated
with currents of
very high freqency,
beautiful brush effects
may
be
produced,
even if the coil be of
comparatively
small dimensions. The
experimenter may vary
them in
many ways, and,
if it were for
nothing
else, they
afford a
pleasing sight.
What adds to their interest is that
they may
be
produced
with one
single
terminal as well as with two in
fact,
often better with one than with two.
But of all the
discharge phenomena observed,
the most
pleas-
ing
to the
eye,
and the most
instructive,
are those observed with
a coil which is
operated by
means of the
disruptive discharge
of
a condenser. The
power
of the
brushes,
the abundance of the
sparks,
when the conditions are
patiently adjusted,
is often amaz-
ing.
With even a
very
small
coil,
if it be so well insulated as to
stand a difference of
potential
of several thousand volts
per
turn,
the
sparks may
be so abundant that the whole coil
may appear
a
complete
mass of fire.
Curiously enough
the
sparks,
when the terminals of the coil
are set at a considerable
distance,
seem to dart in
every possible
direction as
though
the terminals were
perfectly independent
of
each other. As the
sparks
would soon
destroy
the
insulation,
it
is
necessary
to
prevent
them. This is best done
by immersing
the coil in a
good liquid insulator,
such as boiled-out oil. Immer-
sion in a
liquid may
be considered almost an absolute
necessity
for the continued and successful
working
of such a coil.
It
is,
of
course,
out of the
question,
in an
experimental lecture,
with
only
a few minutes at
disposal
for the
performance
of each
experiment,
to show these
discharge phenomena
to
advantage,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 207
as,
to
produce
each
phenomenon
at its
best,
a
very
careful
adjust-
ment is
required.
But even if
imperfectly produced,
as
they
are
likely
to be this
evening, they
are
sufficiently striking
to interest
an
intelligent
audience.
Before
showing
some of these curious effects I
must,
for the
sake of
completeness, give
a short
description
of the coil and
other
apparatus
used in the
experiments
with the
disruptive
dis-
charge
this
evening.
It is contained in a box u
(Fig. 13:2)
of thick boards of hard
wood,
covered on the outside with a zinc sheet
z,
which is
carefully
soldered all around. It
might
be
advisable,
in a
strictly
scientific
investigation,
when
accuracy
is of
great importance,
to do
away
with the metal
cover,
as it
might
introduce
many errors, princi-
pally
on account of its
complex
action
upon
the
coil,
as a con-
denser of
very
small
capacity
and as an electrostatic and electro-
magnetic
screen. When the coil is used for such
experiments
as
are here
contemplated,
the
employment
of the metal cover offers
some
practical advantages,
but these are not of sufficient
import-
ance to be dwelt
upon.
The coil should be
placed symmetrically
to the metal
cover,
308 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
and the
space
between
should,
of
course,
not be too
small,
cer-
tainly
not less
than, say,
five
centimetres,
but much more if
pos-
sible
; especially
the two sides of the zinc
box,
which are at
right
angles
to the axis of the coil, should be sufficiently remote from
the
latter,
as otherwise
they might impair
its action and be a
source of loss.
The coil consists of two
spools
of hard rubber R
K,
held
apart
at a distance of 10 centimetres
by
bolts c and nuts
w,
likewise of
hard rubber. Each
spool comprises
a tube T of
approximately
8
centimetres inside
diameter,
and 3 millimetres
thick, upon
which
are screwed two
flanges
F
F,
24 centimetres
square,
the
space
be-
tween the
flanges being
about 3 centimetres. The
secondary,
s
s,
of the best
gutta percha-covered wire,
has 26
layers,
10 turns in
each, giving
for each half a total of 260 turns. The two halves
are wound
oppositely
and connected in
series,
the connection be-
tween both
being
made over the
primary.
This
disposition,
be-
sides
being convenient,
has the
advantage
that when the coil is
well balanced that
is,
when both of its terminals
TJ, T,,
are con-
nected to bodies or devices of
equal capacity
there is not much
danger
of
breaking through
to the
primary,
and the insulation
between the
primary
and the
secondary
need not be thick. In
using
the coil it is advisable to attach to both terminals devices of
nearly equal capacity, as,
when the
capacity
of the terminals is
not
equal, sparks
will be
apt
to
pass
to the
primary.
To avoid
this,
the middle
point
of the
secondary may
be connected to the
primary,
but this is not
always practicable.
The
primary
p p is wound in two
parts,
and
oppositely, upon
a wooden
spool w,
and.the four ends are led out of the oil
through
hard rubber tubes t t. The ends of the
secondary
T
t
T
t
are also
led out of the oil
through
rubber tubes t t
v
of
great
thickness.
The
primary
and
secondary layers
are insulated
by
cotton
cloth,
the thickness of the
.insulation,
of
course, bearing
some
propor-
tion to the difference of
potential
between the turns of the differ"
ent
layers.
Each half of the
primary
has four
layers,
24 turns
in
each,
this
giving
a total of 96 turns. When both the
parts
are connected in
series,
this
gives
a ratio of conversion of about
1 :
2.7,
and with the
primaries
in
multiple,
1 : 5.4
;
but in
operating
with
very
rapidly alternating
currents this ratio does not
convey
even an
approximate
idea of the ratio of the E. M. F'S. in the
primary
and
secondary
circuits. The coil is held in
position
in
the oil on wooden
supports,
there
being
about 5 centimetres
HIGH
FRKQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRKNTti. 309
thickness of oil all round. Where the oil is not
specially needed,
the
space
is filled with
pieces
of
wood,
and for this
purpose
principally
the wooden box B
surrounding
the whole is used.
The construction here shown
is,
of
course,
not the best on
general principles,
but I believe it is a
good
and convenient one
for the
production
of effects in which an excessive
potential
and
a
very
small current are needed.
In connection with the coil I use either the
ordinary
form of*
discharger
or a modified form. In the former I have introduced
two
changes
which secure some
advantages,
and which are ob-
vious. If
they
are
mentioned,
it is
only
in the
hope
that some
experimenter may
find them of use.
One of the
changes
is that the
adjustable
knobs A and B
(Fig.
183),
of the
discharger
are held in
jaws
of
brass,
.1
,T, by spring
pressure,
this
allowing
of
turning
them
successively
into different
FIG. 133.
positions,
and so
doing away
with the tedious
process
of
frequent
polishing up.
The other
change
consists in the
employment
of a
strong
elec-
tromagnet
N
s,
which is
placed
with its axis at
right angles
to
the line
joining
the knobs A and
B,
and
produces
a
strong mag-
netic field between them. The
pole pieces
of the
magnet
are
movable and
properly
formed so as to
protrude
between the brass
knobs,
in order to make the field as intense as
possible;
but to
prevent
the
discharge
from
jumping
to the
magnet
the
pole
pieces
are
protected by
a
layer
of
mica,
M
M,
of sufficient thick-
ness;
s
t
s
l
and ,9
2
.?
2
are screws for
fastening
the wires. On each
side one of the screws is for
large
and the other for small wires.
L L are screws for
fixing
in
position
the rods R
K,
which
support
the knobs.
210 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
In another
arrangement
with the
magnet
I take the
discharge
between the rounded
pole pieces themselves,
which in such
case are insulated and
preferably provided
with
polished
brass
caps.
The
employment
of an intense
magnetic
field is of
advantage
principally
when the induction coil or transformer which
charges
the condenser is
operated
by
currents of
very
low
frequency.
In
such a case the number of the fundamental
discharges
between
the knobs
may
be so small as to render the currents
produced
in
the
secondary
unsuitable for
many experiments.
The intense
magnetic
field then serves to blow out the arc between the knobs
as soon as it is
formed,
and the fundamental
discharges
occur in
quicker
succession.
Instead of the
magnet,
a
draught
or blast of air
may
be em-
ployed
with some
advantage.
In this case the arc is
preferably
FIG. 134.
established between the knobs A
B,
in
Fig.
181
(the
knob-
" l>
being generally joined,
or
entirely
done
away with),
as in this
disposition
the arc is
long
and
unsteady,
and is
easily
affected
by
the
draught.
When a
magnet
is
employed
to break the
arc,
it is better to
choose the connection indicated
diagrammatically
in
Fig. 134,
as in this case the currents
forming
the arc are much more
pow-
erful,
and the
magnetic
field exercises a
greater
influence. The
use of the
magnet permits,
however,
of the arc
being replaced by
a vacuum
tube,
but I have encountered
great
difficulties in work-
ing
with an exhausted tube.
The other form of
discharger
used in these and similar
experi-
ments is indicated in
Figs.
135 and 13H. It consists of a number
of brass
pieces
e c
(Fig. 135),
each of which
comprises
a
spherical
middle
portion
/// with an extension e below which is
merely
used
to fasten the
piece
in a lathe when
polishing up
the
discharging
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 211
surface and a column
above,
which consists of a knurled
flange
f
surmounted
by
a threaded stem I
carrying
a nut
w, by
means
of which a wire is fastened to the column. The
flange/
con-
veniently
serves for
holding
the brass
piece
when
fastening
the
FIG. 135.
wire,
and also for
turning
it in
any position
when it becomes
necessary
to
present
a fresh
discharging
surface. Two stout
strips
of hard rubber K
K,
with
planed grooves g g (Fig. 136)
to fit
the middle
portion
of the
pieces
c
c,
serve to
clamp
the latter
and hold them
firmly
in
position by
means of two bolts c c
(of
which
only
one is
shown) passing through
the ends of the
strips.
In the use of this kind of
discharger
I have found three
prin-
cipal advantages
over the
ordinary
form.
First,
the dielectric
strength
of a
given
total widtli of air
space
is
greater
when a
great
many
small air
gaps
are used instead of
one,
which
permits
FIG. 136.
of
working
with a smaller
length
of air
gap,
and that means
smaller loss and less deterioration of the
metal; secondly, by
reason of
splitting
the arc
up
into smaller
arcs,
the
polished
surfaces are made to last much
longer; and, thirdly,
the
appa-
212 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TEftLA.
ratus affords some
gauge
in the
experiments.
I
usually
set the
pieces by putting
between them sheets of uniform thickness at a
certain
very
small distance which is known from the
experiments
of Sir William Thomson to
require
a certain electromotive force
to be
bridged by
the
spark.
It
should,
of
course,
be remembered that the
sparking
distance
is much diminished as the
frequency
is increased.
By taking
any
number of
spaces
the
experimenter
has a
rough
idea of the
electromotive
force,
and he finds it easier to
repeat
an
experi-
ment,
as he has not the trouble of
setting
the knobs
again
and
again.
With this kind of
discharger
I have been able to main-
tain an
oscillating
motion without
any spark being
visible with
the naked
eye
between the
knobs,
and
they
would not show a
very appeciable
rise in
temperature.
This form of
discharge
also lends itself to
many arrangements
of condensers and circuits
which are often
very
convenient and
time-saving.
I have used
it
preferably
in a
disposition
similar to that indicated in
Fig.
131,
when the currents
forming
the arc are small.
I
may
here mention that I have also used
dischargers
with
single
or
multiple
air
gaps,
in which the
discharge
surfaces were
rotated with
great speed.
No
particular advantage
was,
how-
ever, gained by
this
method, except
in cases where the currents
from the condenser were
large
and the
keeping
cool of the sur-
faces was
necessary,
and in cases
Avhen,
the
discharge
not
being
oscillating
of
itself,
the arc as soon as established was broken
by
the air
current,
thus
starting
the vibration at intervals in
rapid
succession. I have also used mechanical
interrupters
in
many
ways.
To avoid the difficulties with frictional
contacts,
the
pre-
ferred
plan adopted
was to establish the arc and rotate
through
it at
great speed
a rim of mica
provided
with
many
holes and
fastened to a steel
plate.
It is
understood,
of
course,
that the
employment
of a
magnet,
air
current,
or other
interrupter, pro-
duces no effect worth
noticing,
unless the
self-induction, capacity
and resistance are so related that there are oscillations set
up
upon
each
interruption.
I will now endeavor to show
you
some of the most
noteworthy
of these
discharge phenomena.
I have stretched across the room two
ordinary
cotton covered
wires,
each about seven metres in
length. They
are
supported
011
insulating
cords at a distance of about
thirty
centimetres. I
attach now to each of the terminals of the coil one of the
wires.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 213
and set the coil in action.
Upon turning
the
lights
off in the
room
yon
see the wires
strongly
illuminated
by
the streams issu-
ing
abundantly
from their whole surface in
spite
of the cotton
covering,
which
may
even be
very
thick. When the
experiment
is
performed
under
good conditions,
the
light
from the wires is
sufficiently
intense to allow
distinguishing
the
objects
in a room.
To
produce
the best result it
is,
of
course, necessary
to
adjust
carefully
the
capacity
of the
jars,
the arc between the knobs and
the
length
of the wires.
My experience
is that calculation of the
length
of the wires
leads,
in such
case,
to no result whatever. The
experimenter
will do best to take the wires at the start
very long,
and then
adjust by cutting
off first
long pieces,
and then smaller
and smaller ones as he
approaches
the
right length.
A convenient
way
is to use an oil condenser of
very
small
capacity, consisting
of two small
adjustable
metal
plates,
in con-
nection with this and similar
experiments.
In such case I take
wires rather short and at the
beginning
set the condenser
plates
at maximum distance. If the streams from the wires increase
by
approach
of the
plates,
the
length
of the wires is about
right ;
if
they diminish,
the wires are too
long
for that
frequency
and
po-
tential. When a condenser is used in connection with
experi-
ments with such a
coil,
it should be an oil condenser
by
all
means,
as in
using
an air condenser considerable
energy might
be wasted.
The wires
leading
to the
plates
in the oil should be
very thin,
heavily
coated with some
insulating compound,
and
provided
with a
conducting covering
this
preferably extending
under the
surface of the oil. The
conducting
cover should not be too near
the
terminals,
or
ends,
of the
wire,
as a
spark
would be
apt
to
jump
from the wire to it. The
conducting coating
is used to
diminish the air
losses,
in virtue of its action as an electrostatic
screen. As to the size of the vessel
containing
the
oil,
and the
size of the
plates,
the
experimenter gains
at once an idea from a
rough
trial. The size of the
plates
in oil
is, however, calculable,
as the dielectric losses are
very
small.
In the
preceding experiment
it is of considerable interest to
know what relation the
quantity
of the
light
emitted bears to
the
frequency
and
potential
of the electric
impulses. My opinion
is that the heat as well as
light
effects
produced
should be
pro-
portionate,
under otherwise
equal
conditions of
test,
to the
product
of
frequency
and
square
of
potential,
but the
experimental
veri-
fication of the
law,
whatever it
may
be,
would be
exceedingly
214 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
difficult. One
thing
is
certain,
at
any rate,
and that
is,
that in
augmenting
the
potential
and
frequency
we
rapidly intensify
the
streams
; and, though
it
may
be
very sanguine,
it is
surely
not
altogether hopeless
to
expect
that we
may
succeed in
producing
a
practical
illuminant on these lines. We would then be
simply
using
burners or
flames,
in which there would be no chemical
process,
no
consumption
of
material,
but
merely
a transfer of
energy,
and which
would,
in all
probability,
emit more
light
and
less heat than
ordinary
flames.
The luminous
intensity
of the streams
is,
of
course, considerably
FIG. 137.
increased when
they
are focused
upon
a small surface. This
may
be shown
by
the
following experiment
:
I attach to one of the terminals of the coil a wire w
(Fig. 137),
bent in a circle of about 30 centimetres in
diameter,
and to the
other terminal I fasten a small brass
sphere s,
the surface of the
wire
being preferably equal
to the surface of the
sphere,
and the
centre of the latter
being
in a line at
right angles
to the
plane
of
the wire circle and
passing through
its centre. When the dis-
charge
is established under
proper conditions,
a luminous hollow
cone is
formed,
and in the dark one-half of the brass
sphere
is
strongly illuminated,
as shown in the cut.
By
some artifice or other it is
easy
to concentrate the streams
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 215
upon
small surfaces and to
produce
very
strong light
effects.
Two thin wires
may
thus be rendered
intensely
luminous.
In order to
intensify
the streams the wires should be
very
thin
and short
;
but as in this case their
capacity
would be
generally
too small for the coil at least for such a one as the
present
it
is
necessary
to
augment
the
capacity
to the
required value, while,
at the same
time,
the surface of the wires remains
very
small.
This
may
be done in
many ways.
Here,
for
instance,
I have two
plates,
K
K,
of hard rubber
(Fig.
188), upon
which I have
glued
two
very
thin wires w
w,
so as to
form a name. The wires
may
be bare or covered with the best
insulation it is immaterial for the success of the
experiment.
Well insulated
wires,
if
anything,
are
preferable.
On the back
FIG. 138.
of each
plate,
indicated
by
the shaded
portion,
is a tinfoil
coating
t t. The
plates
are
placed
in line at a sufficient distance to
pre-
vent a
spark passing
from one wire to the other. The two tin-
foil
coatings
I have
joined by
a conductor
c,
and the two wires I
presently
connect to the terminals of the coil. It is now
easy, by
varying
the
strength
and
frequency
of the currents
through
the
primary,
to find a
point
at which the
capacity
of the
system
is
best suited to the
conditions,
and the wires become so
strongly
luminous
that,
when the
light
in the room is turned off the name
formed
by
them
appears
in brilliant letters.
It is
perhaps preferable
to
perform
this
experiment
with a
coil
operated
from an alternator of
high frequency,
as
then,
216 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
owing
to the harmonic rise and
fall,
the streams are
very uniform,
though they
are less abundant than when
produced
with such a
coil as the
present
one. This
experiment, however, may
be
per-
formed with low
frequencies,
but much less
satisfactorily.
When two
wires,
attached to the terminals of the
coil,
are set
at the
proper distance,
the streams between them
may
be so in-
tense as to
produce
a continuous luminous sheet. To show this
phenomenon
I have here two
circles,
c andc
(Fig. 139),
of rather
stout
wire,
one
being
about 80 centimetres and the other 30 cen-
timetres in diameter. To each of the terminals of the coil I
attach one of the circles. The
supporting
wires are so bent that
FIG. 139.
the circles
may
be
placed
in the same
plane, coinciding
as
nearly
as
possible.
When the
light
in the room is turned off and the
coil set to
work, you
see the whole
space
between the wires uni-
formly
filled with
streams, forming
a luminous
disc,
which could
be seen from a considerable
distance,
such is the
intensity
of the
streams. The outer circle could have been much
larger
than the
present one;
in
fact,
with this coil I have used much
larger
circles,
and I have been able to
produce
a
strongly
luminous
sheet,
covering
an area of more than one
square metre,
which is
a remarkable effect with this
very
small coil. To avoid uncer-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 217
tainty,
the circle has been taken
smaller,
and the area is now
about 0.43
square
metre.
The
frequency
of the
vibration,
and the
quickness
of succes-
sion of the
sparks
between the
knobs,
affect to a marked
degree
the
appearance
of the streams. When the
frequency
is
very
low,
the air
gives way
in more or less the same
manner,
as
by
a
steady
difference of
potential,
and the streams consist of distinct
threads,
generally mingled
with thin
sparks,
which
probably
cor-
respond
to the successive
discharges occurring
between the
knobs. But when the
frequency
is
extremely high,
and the arc
of the
discharge produces
a
very
loud and smooth sound show-
ing
both that oscillation takes
place
and that the
sparks
succeed
each other with
great rapidity
then the luminous streams
formed are
perfectly
uniform. To reach this result
very
small
coils and
jars
of small
capacity
should be used. I take two
tubes of thick Bohemian
glass,
about 5 centimetres in diameter
and 20 centimetres
long.
In each of the tubes I
slip
a
primary
of
very
thick
copper
wire. On the
top
of each tube I wind a
secondary
of much thinner
gutta-percha
covered wire. The two
secondaries I connect in
series,
the
primaries preferably
in
multiple
arc. The tubes are then
placed
in a
large glass vessel,
at a dis-
tance of 10 to 15 centimetres from each
other,
on
insulating sup-
ports,
and the vessel is filled witli boiled-out
oil,
the oil
reaching
about an inch above the tubes. The free ends of the
secondary
are lifted out of the coil and
placed parallel
to each other at a
distance of about ten centimetres. The ends which are
scraped
should be
dipped
in the oil. Two
four-pint jars joined
in series
may
be used to
discharge through
the
primary.
When the ne-
cessary adjustments
in the
length
and distance of the wires above
the oil and in the arc of
discharge
are
made,
a luminous sheet is
produced
between the wires which is
perfectly
smooth and tex-
tureless,
like the
ordinary discharge through
a
moderately
ex-
hausted tube.
I have
purposely
dwelt
upon
this
apparently insignificant
ex-
periment.
In trials of this kind the
experimenter
arrives at the
startling
conclusion
that,
to
pass ordinary
luminous
discharges
through gases,
no
particular degree
of exhaustion is
needed,
but
that the
gas may
be at
ordinary
or even
greater pressure.
To
accomplish this,
a
very high frequency
is essential
;
a
high po-
tential is likewise
required,
but this is
merely
an incidental neces-
sity.
These
experiments
teach us
that,
in
endeavoring
to dis-
218 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
cover novel methods of
producing light by
the
agitation
of
atoms,
or
molecules,
of a
gas,
we need not limit our research to the
vacuum
tube,
but
may
look forward
quite seriously
to the
possi-
bility
of
obtaining
the
light
effects without the use of
any
vessel
whatever,
with air at
ordinary pressure.
Such
discharges
of
very high frequency,
which render luminous
the air at
ordinary pressures,
we have
probably
occasion often to
witness in Nature. I have no doubt that
if,
as
many believe,
the
aurora borealis is
produced by
sudden cosmic
disturbances,
such
as
eruptions
at the sun's
surface,
which set the electrostatic
charge
of the earth in an
extremely rapid vibration,
the red
glow
ob-
served is not confined to the
upper
rarefied strata of the
air,
but
the
discharge
traverses,
by
reason of its
very high frequency,
also the dense
atmosphere
in the form of a
glow,
such as we or-
dinarily produce
in a
slightly
exhausted tube. If the
frequency
were
very low,
or even more
so,
if the
charge
were not at all
vibrating,
the dense air would break down as in a
lightning
dis-
charge.
Indications of such
breaking
down of the lower dense
strata of the air have been
repeatedly
observed at the occurence
of this marvelous
phenomenon ;
but if it does
occur,
it can
only
be attributed to the fundamental
disturbances,
which are few in
number,
for the vibration
produced by
them would be far too
rapid
to allow a
disruptive
break. It is the
original
and
irregular
impulses
which affect the instruments
;
the
superimposed
vibra-
tions
probably pass
unnoticed.
When an
ordinary
low
frequency discharge
is
passed through
moderately
rarefied
air,
the air assumes a
purplish
hue. If
by
some means or other we increase the
intensity
of the
molecular,
or
atomic, vibration,
the
gas changes
to a white color. A similar
change
occurs at
ordinary pressures
with electric
impulses
of
very
high frequency.
If the molecules of the air around a wire are
moderately agitated,
the brush formed is reddish or violet
;
if
the vibration is rendered
sufficiently intense,
the streams become
white. We
may accomplish
this in various
ways.
In the
experi-
ment before shown with the two wires across the
room,
I have
endeavored to secure the result
by pushing
to a
high
value both
the
frequency
and
potential ;
in the
experiment
with the thin
wires
glued
on the rubber
plate
I have concentrated the action
upon
a
very
small surface in other
words,
I have worked with
a
great
electric
density.
A most curious form of
discharge
is observed with such a coil
man
FREQUENCY
AND man POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 219
when the
frequency
and
potential
are
pushed
to the extreme
limit. To
perform
the
experiment, every part
of the coil should
be
heavily insulated,
and
only
two small
spheres or,
better
still,
two
sharp-edged
metal discs
(d d, Fig. 140)
of no more than
a few centimetres in diameter should be
exposed
to the air.
The coil here used is immersed in
oil,
and the ends of the
secondary reaching
out of the oil are covered with an
air-tight
cover of hard rubber of
great
thickness. All
cracks,
if there
are
any,
should be
carefully stopped up,
so that the brush dis-
charge
cannot form
anywhere except
on the small
spheres
or
plates
which are
exposed
to the air. In this
case,
since there
are no
large plates
or other bodies of
capacity
attached to the
terminals,
the coil is
capable
of an
extremely rapid
vibration.
FIG. 140.
The
potential may
be raised
by increasing,
as far as the
experi-
menter
judges proper,
the rate of
change
of the
primary
cur-
rent. With a coil not
widely differing
from the
present,
it is
best to connect the two
primaries
in
multiple
arc
;
but if the
secondary
should have a much
greater
number of turns the
primaries
should
preferably
be used in
series,
as otherwise the
vibration
might
be too fast for the
secondary.
It occurs under
these conditions that
misty
white streams break forth from the
edges
of the discs and
spread
out
phantom-like
into
space.
With this
coil,
when
fairly
well
produced, they
are about 25 to
30 centimetres
long.
When the hand is held
against
them no
sensation is
produced,
and a
spark, causing
a
shock, jumps
from
220 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
the terminal
only upon
the hand
being brought
much nearer.
If the oscillation of the
primary
current is rendered intermittent
by
some means or
other,
there is a
corresponding throbbing
of
the
streams,
and now the hand or other
conducting object may
be
brought
in still
greater proximity
to the terminal without a
spark being
caused to
jump.
Among
the
many
beautiful
phenomena
which
may
be
pro-
duced with such a
coil,
I have here selected
only
those which
ap-
pear
to
possess
some features of
novelty,
and lead us to some
conclusions of interest. One will not tind it at all difficult to
produce
in the
laboratory, by
means of
it, many
other
phenomena
which
appeal
to the
eye
even more than these here
shown,
but
present
no
particular
feature of
novelty.
Early experimenters
describe the
display
of
sparks produced by
an
ordinary large
induction coil
upon
an
insulating plate separat-
ing
the terminals.
Quite
recently
Siemens
performed
some ex-
periments
in which fine effects were
obtained,
which were seen
by many
with interest. No doubt
large coils,
even if
operated
with currents of low
frequencies,
are
capable
of
producing
beautiful effects. But the
largest
coil ever made could
not, by
far, equal
the
magnificent display
of streams and
sparks
obtained
from such a
disruptive discharge
coil when
properly adjusted.
To
give
an
idea,
a coil such as the
present
one will cover
easily
a
plate
of one metre in diameter
completely
with the streams.
The best
way
to
perform
such
experiments
is to take a
very
thin
rubber or a
glass plate
and
glue
on one side of it a narrow
ring
of tinfoil of
very large diameter,
and on the other a circular
washer,
the centre of the latter
coinciding
with that of the
ring,
and the surfaces of both
being preferably equal,
so as to
keep
the coil well balanced. The washer and
ring
should be connected
to the terminals
by heavily
insulated thin wires. It is
easy
in
observing
the effect of the
capacity
to
produce
a sheet of uni-
form
streams,
or a fine network of thin
silvery threads,
or a
mass of loud brilliant
sparks,
which
completely
cover the
plate.
Since I have advanced the idea of the conversion
by
means of
the
disruptive discharge,
in
my paper
before the American In-
stitute of Electrical
Engineers
at the
beginning
of the
past year,
the interest excited in it has been considerable. It affords us a
means for
producing any potentials by
the aid of
inexpensive
coils
operated
from
ordinary systems
of
distribution,
and what
is
perhaps
more
appreciated
it enables us to convert cunvnt* <>!'
HIGH
FliKQ.UENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 231
any frequency
into currents of
any
other lower or
higher
fre-
quency.
But its chief value will
perhaps
be found in the
help
which it will afford us in the
investigations
of the
phenomena
of
phosphorescence,
which a
disruptive discharge
coil is
capable
of
exciting
in innumerable cases where
ordinary coils,
even the
largest,
would
utterly
fail.
Considering
its
probable
uses for
many practical purposes,
and
its
possible
introduction into laboratories for scientific
research,
a few additional remarks as to the construction of such a coil
will
perhaps
not be found
superfluous.
It
is,
of
course,
absolutely necessary
to
employ
in such a coil
wires
provided
with the best insulation.
Good coils
may
be
produced by employing
wires covered with
several
layers
of
cotton,
boiling
the coil a
long
time in
pure wax,
and
cooling
under moderate
pressure.
The
advantage
of such a
coil is that it can be
easily handled,
but it cannot
probably give
as
satisfactory
results as a coil immersed in
pure
oil.
Besides,
it
seems that the
presence
of a
large body
of wax affects the coil
disadvantageously,
whereas this does not seem to be the case with
oil.
Perhaps
it is because the dielectric losses in the
liquid
are
smaller.
I have tried at iirst silk and cotton covered wires with oil im-
mersions,
but I have been
gradually
led to use
gutta-percha
covered
wires,
which
proved
most
satisfactory. Gutta-percha
insulation
adds,
of
course,
to the
capacity
of the
coil,
and
this,
especially
if the coil be
large,
is a
great disadvantage
when ex-
treme
frequencies
are desired
; but,
on the other
hand,
gutta-
percha
will withstand much more than an
equal
thickness of
oil,
and this
advantage
should be secured at
any price.
Once the
coil has been
immersed,
it should never be taken out of the oil
for more than a few
hours,
else the
gutta-percha
will crack
up
and the coil will not be worth half as much as before. Gutta-
percha
is
probably slowly
attacked
by
the
oil,
but after an im-
mersion of
eight
to nine months I have found no ill effects.
I have obtained two kinds of
gutta-percha
wire known in com-
merce : in one the insulation sticks
tightly
to the
metal,
in the
other it does not. Unless a
special
method is followed to
expel
all
air,
it is much safer to use the iirst kind. I wind the coil within
an oil tank so that all interstices are filled
up
with the oil. Be-
tween the
layers
I use cloth boiled out
thoroughly
in
oil,
calculating
the thickness
according
to the difference of
potential
222 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
between the turns. There seems not to be a
very great
differ-
ence whatever kind of oil is used
;
I use
paraffine
or linseed oil.
To exclude more
perfectly
the
air,
an excellent
way
to
pro-
ceed,
and
easily practicable
with small
coils,
is the
following
:
Construct a box of hardwood of
very
thick boards which have
been for a
long
time boiled in oil. The boards should be so
joined
as to
safely
withstand the external air
pressure.
The coil
being placed
and fastened in
position
within the
box,
the latter
is closed with a
strong lid,
and covered with
closely fitting
metal
sheets,
the
joints
of which are soldered
very carefully.
On the
top
two small holes are
drilled, passing through
the metal sheet
and the
wood,
and in these holes two small
glass
tubes are insert-
ed and the
joints
made
air-tight.
One of the tubes is connected
to a vacuum
pump,
and the other with a vessel
containing
a
sufficient
quantity
of boiled-out oil. The latter tube has a
very
small hole at the
bottom,
and is
provided
with a
stopcock.
When a
fairly good
vacuum has been
obtained,
the
stopcock
is
opened
and the oil
slowly
fed in.
Proceeding
in this
manner,
it is
impossible
that
any big
bubbles,
which are the
principal
danger,
should remain between the turns. The air is most com-
pletely
excluded, probably
better than
by boiling out, which,
however,
when
gutta-percha
coated wires are
used,
is not
prac-
ticable.
For the
primaries
I use
ordinary
line wire with a thick cotton
coating.
Strands of
very
thin insulated wires
properly
inter-
laced
would,
of
course,
be the best to
employ
for the
primaries,
but
they
are not to be had.
In an
experimental
coil the size of the wires is not of
great
importance.
In the coil here used the
primary
is No. 12 and the
secondary
No. 24 Brown &
Sharpe gauge
wire
;
but the sections
may
be varied
considerably.
It would
only imply
different ad-
justments ;
the results aimed at would not be
materially
affected.
I have dwelt at some
length upon
the various forms of brush
discharge because,
in
studying them,
we not
only
observe
pheno-
mena which
please
our
eye,
but also afford us food for
thought,
and lead us to conclusions of
practical importance.
In the use
of
alternating
currents of
very high
tension,
too much
precaution
cannot be taken to
prevent
the brush
discharge.
In a main con-
veying
such
currents,
in an induction coil or
transformer,
or in a
condenser,
the brush
discharge
is a source of
great danger
to the
insulation. In a
condenser, especially,
the
gaseous
matter must
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 223
be most
carefully expelled,
for in it the
charged
surfaces are near
each
other,
and if the
potentials
are
high, just
assure as a
weight
will fall if let
go,
so the insulation will
give way
if a
single
gaseous
bubble of some size be
present, whereas,
if all
gaseous
matter were
carefully excluded,
the condenser would
safely
withstand a much
higher
difference of
potential.
A main con-
veying alternating
currents of
very high
tension
may
be
injured
merely by
a blow hole or small crack in the
insulation,
the more
so as a blowhole is
apt
to contain
gas
at low
pressure ;
and as it
appears
almost
impossible
to
completely
obviate such little im-
perfections,
I am led to believe that in our future distribution of
electrical
energy by
currents of
very high tension, liquid
insula-
tion will be used. The cost is a
great drawback,
but if we em-
ploy
an oil as an insulator the distribution of electrical
energy
with
something
like
100,000 volts,
and even
more, becomes,
at
least with
higher frequencies,
so
easy
that it could be
hardly
called an
engineering
feat. With oil insulation and alternate cur-
rent
motors,
transmissions of
power
can be affected with
safety
and
upon
an industrial basis at distances of as much as a thousand
miles.
A
peculiar property
of
oils,
and
liquid
insulation in
general,
when
subjected
to
rapidly changing
electric
stresses,
is to
disperse
any gaseous
bubbles which
may
be
present,
and diffuse them
through
its
mass, generally long
before
any injurious
break can
occur. This feature
may
be
easily
observed with an
ordinary
in-
duction coil
by taking
the
primary out, plugging up
the end of
the tube
upon
which the
secondary
is
wound,
and
filling
it with
some
fairly transparent insulator,
such as
paraffme
oil. A
prim-
ary
of a diameter
something
like six millimetres smaller than the
inside of the tube
may
be inserted in the oil. When the coil is
set to work one
may see, looking
from the
top through
the
oil,
many
luminous
points
air bubbles which are
caught by
insert-
ing
the
primary,
and which are rendered luminous in
consequence
of the violent bombardment. The occluded
air, by
its
impact
against
the
oil,
heats it
;
the oil
begins
to
circulate, carrying
some
of the air
along
with
it,
until the bubbles are
dispersed
and the
luminous
points disappear.
In this
manner,
unless
large
bubbles
are occluded in such
way
that circulation is rendered
impossible,
a
damaging
break is
averted,
the
only
effect
being
a moderate
warming up
of the oil.
If,
instead of the
liquid,
a solid insula-
tion,
no matter how
thick,
were
used,
a
breaking through
and in-
jury
of the
apparatus
would be inevitable.
234 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
The exclusion of
gaseous
matter from
any apparatus
in which
the dielectric is
subjected
to more or less
rapidly changing
elec-
tric forces
is, however,
not
only
desirable in order to avoid a
possible injury
of the
apparatus,
but also on account of
economy.
In a
condenser,
for
instance,
as
long
as
only
a solid or
only
a
liquid
dielectric is
used,
the loss is small
;
but if a
gas
under or-
dinary
or small
pressure
be
present
the loss
may
be
very great.
Whatever the nature of the force
acting
in the dielectric
may be,
it seems that in a solid or
liquid
the molecular
displacement pro-
duced
by
the force is small : hence the
product
of force and
displacement
is
insignificant,
unless the force be
very great
;
but
in a
gas
the
displacement,
and therefore this
product,
is consider-
able
;
the molecules are free to
move, they
reach
high speeds,
and
the
energy
of their
impact
is lost in heat or otherwise. If the
gas
be
strongly compressed,
the
displacement
due to the force is
made
smaller,
and the losses are reduced.
In most of the
succeeding experiments
I
prefer, chiefly
on
account of the
regular
and
positive action,
to
employ
the alter-
nator before referred to. This is one of the several machines
constructed
by
me for the
purpose
of these
investigations.
It has
384
pole projections,
and is
capable
of
giving
currents of a fre-
quency
of about
10,000 per
second. This machine has been illus-
trated and
briefly
described in
my
first
paper
before the American
Institute of Electrical
Engineers, May 20th, 1891,
to which I have
already
referred. A more detailed
description,
sufficient to en-
able
any engineer
to build a similar
machine,
will be found in
several electrical
journals
of that
period.
The induction coils
operated
from the machine are rather
small,
containing
from
5,000
to
15,000
turns in the
secondary. They
are immersed in boiled-out linseed
oil,
contained in wooden boxes
covered with zinc sheet.
I have found it
advantageous
to reverse the usual
position
of
the
wires,
and to
wind,
in these
coils,
the
primaries
on the
top
;
thus
allowing
the use of a much
larger primary, which,
of
course,
reduces the
danger
of
overheating
and increases the
output
of
the coil. I make the
primary
on each side at least one centimetre
shorter than the
secondary,
to
prevent
the
breaking through
on the
ends,
which would
surely
occur unless the insulation on the
top
of the
secondary
be
very thick,
and
this,
of
course,
would be dis-
advantageous.
When the
primary
is made
movable,
which is
necessary
in
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 225
some
experiments,
and
many
times convenient for the
purposes
of
adjustment,
I cover the
secondary
with
wax,
and turn it off
in a lathe to a diameter
slightly
smaller than the inside of the
primary
coil. The latter I
provide
with a handle
reaching
out
of the
oil,
which serves to shift it in
any position along
the
secondary.
I will now venture to
make,
in
regard
to the
general
mani-
pulation
of induction
coils,
a few observations
bearing upon points
which have not been
fully appreciated
in earlier
experiments
with such
coils,
and are even now often overlooked.
The
secondary
of the coil
possesses usually
such a
high
self-
induction that the current
through
the wire is
inappreciable,
and
may
be so even when the terminals are
joined by
a conductor of
small resistance. If
capacity
is added to the
terminals,
the self-
induction is
counteracted,
and a
stronger
current is made to flow
through
the
secondary, though
its terminals are insulated from
each other. To one
entirely unacquainted
with the
properties
of
alternating
currents
nothing
will look more
puzzling.
This fea-
ture was illustrated in the
experiment performed
at the
beginning
with the
top plates
of wire
gauze
attached to the terminals and
the rubber
plate.
When the
plates
of wire
gauze
were close to-
gether,
and a small arc
passed
between
them,
the arc
prevented
a
strong
current from
passing through
the
secondary,
because it
did
away
with the
capacity
on the terminals
;
when the rubber
plate
was inserted
between,
the
capacity
of the condenser formed
counteracted the self-induction of the
secondary,
a
stronger
cur-
rent
passed now,
the coil
performed
more
work,
and the
discharge
was
by
far more
powerful.
The first
thing, then,
in
operating
the induction coil is to com-
bine
capacity
with the
secondary
to overcome the self-induction.
If the
frequencies
and
potentials
are
very high, gaseous
matter
should be
carefully kept away
from the
charged
surfaces. If
Leyden jars
are
used, they
should be immersed in
oil,
as other-
wise considerable
dissipation may
occur if the
jars
are
greatly
strained. When
high frequencies
are
used,
it is of
equal
im-
portance
to combine a condenser with the
primary.
One
may
use a condenser connected to the ends of the
primary
or to the
terminals of the
alternator,
but the latter is not to be recom-
mended,
as the machine
might
be
injured.
The best
way
is
undoubtedly
to use the condenser in series with the
primary
and
with the
alternator,
and to
adjust
its
capacity
so as to annul the
326 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
self-induction of both the latter. The condenser should be ad-
justable by very
small
steps,
and for a finer
adjustment
a small
oil condenser with movable
plates may
be used
conveniently.
I think it best at this
juncture
to
bring
before
you
a
phe-
nomenon,
observed
by
me some time
ago,
which to the
purely
scientific
investigator may perhaps appear
more
interesting
than
any
of the results which I have the
privilege
to
present
to
you
this
evening.
It
may
be
quite properly
ranked
among
the brush
phenom-
ena in
fact,
it is a
brush,
formed
at,
or
near,
a
single
terminal
in
high
vacuum.
In bulbs
provided
with a
conducting
terminal,
though
it be of
FIG. 141. FIG. 142.
aluminum,
the brush -has but an
ephemeral
existence,
and can-
not, unfortunately,
be
indefinitely preserved
in its most sensi-
tive
state,
even in a bulb devoid of
any conducting
electrode.
In
studying
the
phenomenon, by
all means a bulb
having
no
leading-in
wire should be used. I have found it best to use
bulbs constructed as indicated in
Figs.
141 and 142.
In
Fig.
141 the bulb
comprises
an incandescent
lamp globe Z,
in the neck of which is sealed a barometer tube
&,
the end of which
is blown out to form a small
sphere
s. This
sphere
should be
sealed as
closely
as
possible
in the centre of the
large globe.
Before
sealing,
a thin tube
t,
of aluminum
sheet, may
be
slipped
in the barometer
tube,
but it is not
important
to
employ
it.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 227
The small hollow
sphere
s is filled with some
conducting
powder,
and a wire w is cemented in the neck for the
purpose
of
connecting
the
conducting powder
with the
generator.
The construction shown in
Fig.
142 was chosen in order to
remove from the brush
any conducting body
which
might possi-
bly
affect it. The bulb consists in this case of a
lamp globe Z,
which has a neck
n, provided
with a tube b and small
sphere s,
sealed to
it,
so that two
entirely independent compartments
are
formed,
as indicated in the
drawing.
When the bulb is in use
the neck n is
provided
with a tinfoil
coating,
which is connected
to the
generator
and acts
inductively upon
the
moderately
rare-
fied and
highly
conducted
gas
inclosed in the neck. From there
the current
passes through
the tube b into the small
sphere *,
to
act
by
induction
upon
the
gas
contained in the
globe
L.
It is of
advantage
to make the tube
-very thick,
the hole
FIG. 143.
through
it
very small,
and to blow the
sphere
*
very
thin. It is
of the
greatest importance
that the
sphere
* be
placed
in the
centre of the
globe
L.
Figs.
143,
144 and 145 indicate different
forms,
or
stages,
of
the brush.
Fig.
143 shows the brush as it first
appears
in a bulb
provided
with a
conducting
terminal
; but,
as in such a bulb it
very
soon
disappears
often after a few minutes I will confine
myself
to the
description
of the
phenomenon
as seen in a bulb
without
conducting
electrode. It is observed under the follow-
ing
conditions :
When the
globe
L
(Figs.
141 and
142)
is exhausted to a
very
high degree, generally
the bulb is not excited
upon connecting
the wire w
(Fig. 141)
or the tinfoil
coating
of the bulb
(Fig.
INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
142)
to the terminal of the induction coil. To excite
it,
it is
usually
sufficient to
grasp
the
globe
L with the hand. An in-
tense
phosphorescence
then
spreads
at tirst over the
globe,
but
soon
gives place
to a
white, misty light. Shortly
afterward one
may
notice that the
luminosity
is
unevenly
distributed in the
globe,
and after
passing
the current for some time the bulb
ap-
pears
as in
Fig.
144. From this
stage
the
phenomenon
will
gradually pass
to that indicated in
Fig. 145,
after some
minutes,
hours, days
or
weeks,
according
as the bulb is worked. Warm-
ing
the bulb or
increasing
the
potential
hastens the transit.
When the brush assumes the form indicated in
Fig. 145,
it
may
be
brought
to a state of extreme sensitiveness to electrostatic
FIG. 144. FIG. 145.
and
magnetic
influence. The bulb
hanging straight
down from
a
wire,
and all
objects being
remote from
it,
the
approach
of the
observer at a few
paces
from the bulb will cause the brush to
fly
to the
opposite side,
and if he walks around the bulb it will
always keep
on the
opposite
side. It
may begin
to
spin
around
the terminal
long
before it reaches that sensitive
stage.
When
it
begins
to turn
around,
principally,
but also
before,
it is affected
by
a
magnet,
and at a certain
stage
it is
susceptible
to
magnetic
influence to an
astonishing degree.
A small
permanent magnet,
with its
poles
at a distance of no more than two
centimetres,
will
aft'ect it
visibly
at a distance of two
metres, slowing
down or ac-
elerating
the rotation
according
to how it is held
relatively
to
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 229
the brush. I think I have observed that at the
stage
when it is
most sensitive to
magnetic,
it is not most sensitive to
electrostatic,
influence.
My explanation is,
that the electrostatic attraction
between the brush and the
glass
of the
bulb,
which retards the
rotation, grows
much
quicker
than the
magnetic
influence when
the
intensity
of the stream is increased.
When the bulb
hangs
with the
globe
L
down,
the rotation is
always
clockwise. In the southern
hemisphere
it would occur
in the
opposite
direction and on the
equator
the brush should
not turn at all. The rotation
may
be reversed
by
a
magnet kept
at some distance. The brush rotates
best, seemingly,
when it is
at
right angles
to the lines of force of the earth. It
very likely
rotates,
when at its maximum
speed,
in
synchronism
with the
alternations, say, 10,000
times a
second,
The rotation can be
slowed down or accelerated
by
the
approach
or
receding
of the
observer,
or
any conducting body,
but it cannot be reversed
by
putting
the bulb in
any position.
When it is in the state of the
highest
sensitiveness and the
potential
or
frequency
be
varied,
the sensitiveness is
rapidly
diminished.
Changing
either of
these but little will
generally stop
the rotation. The sensitive-
ness is likewise affected
by
the variations of
temperature.
To
attain
great
sensitiveness it is
necessary
to have the small
sphere
s in the centre of the
globe Z,
as otherwise the electrostatic
action of the
glass
of the
globe
will tend to
stop
the rotation.
The
sphere
s should be small and of uniform thickness
; any
dis-
symmetry
of course has the effect to diminish the sensitiveness.
The fact that the brush rotates in a delinite direction in a
per-
manent
magnetic
tield seems to show that in
alternating
currents
of
very high frequency
the
positive
and
negative impulses
are
not
equal,
but that one
always preponderates
over the other.
Of
course,
this rotation in one direction
may
be due to the
action of the two elements of the same current
upon
each
other,
or to the action of the field
produced by
one of the elements
upon
the
other,
as in a series
motor,
without
necessarily
one im-
pulse being stronger
than the other. The fact that the brush
turns,
as far as I could
observe,
in
any position,
would
speak
for
this view. In such case it would turn at
any point
of the earth's
surface.
But,
on the other
hand,
it is then hard to
explain why
a
permanent magnet
should reverse the
rotation,
and one must
assume the
preponderance
of
impulses
of one kind.
As to the causes of the formation of the brush or
stream,
i
230 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
think it is due to the electrostatic action of the
globe
and the
dissymmetry
of the
parts.
If the small bulb
* and the
globe
Z
were
perfect
concentric
spheres,
and the
glass
throughout
of the
same thickness and
quality,
I think the brush would not
form,
as the
tendency
to
pass
would be
equal
on all sides. That the
formation of the stream is due to an
irregularity
is
apparent
from
the fact that it has the
tendency
to remain in one
position,
and
rotation occurs most
generally only
when it is
brought
out of
this
position by
electrostatic or
magnetic
influence. When in an
extremely
sensitive state it rests in one
position,
most curious ex-
periments may
be
performed
with it. For
instance,
the
experi-
menter
may, by selecting
a
proper position, approach
the hand
at a certain considerable distance to the
bulb,
and he
may
cause
the brush to
pass
oif
by merely stiffening
the muscles of the arm.
When it
begins
to rotate
slowly,
and the hands are held at a
proper distance,
it is
impossible
to make even the
slightest
motion
without
producing
a visible effect
upon
the brush. A metal
plate
connected to the other terminal of the coil affects it at a
great
distance, slowing
down the rotation often to one turn a
second.
I am
firmly
convinced that such a
brush,
when we learn how
to
produce
it
properly,
will
prove
a valuable aid in the investi-
gation
of the nature of the forces
acting
in an electrostatic or
magnetic
field. If there is
any
motion which is measurable
going
on in the
space,
such a brush
ought
to reveal it. It
is,
so to
speak,
a beam of
light, frictionless,
devoid of inertia.
I think that it
may
find
practical applications
in
telegraphy.
With such a brush it would be
possible
to send
dispatches
across
the
Atlantic,
for
instance,
with
any speed,
since its sensitiveness
may
be so
great
that the
slightest changes
will affect it. If it
were
possible
to make the stream more intense and
very narrow,
its deflections could be
easily photographed.
I have been interested to find whether there is a rotation of
the stream
itself,
or whether there is
simply
a stress
traveling
around the bulb. For this
purpose
I mounted a
light
mica fan
so that its vanes were in the
path
of the brush. If the stream
itself was
rotating
the fan would be
spun
around. I could
pro-
duce no distinct rotation of the
fan, although
I tried the
experi-
ment
repeatedly ;
but as the fan exerted a noticeable influence
on the
stream,
and the
apparent
rotation of the latter
was,
in this
case,
never
quite satisfactory,
the
experiment
did not
appear
to
be conclusive.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 231
I have been unable to
produce
the
phenomenon
with the dis-
ruptive discharge coil,
although every
other of these
phenomena
can be well
produced by
it
many,
in
fact,
much better than
with coils
operated
from an alternator.
It
may
be
possible
to
produce
the brush
by impulses
of one
direction,
or even
by
a
steady potential,
in which case it would
be still more sensitive to
magnetic
influence.
In
operating
an induction coil with
rapidly alternating currents,
we realize with
astonishment,
for the first
time,
the
great import-
ance of the relation of
capacity,
self-induction and
frequency
as
regards
the
general
results. The effects of
capacity
are the most
striking,
for in these
experiments,
since the self-induction and
frequency
both are
high,
the critical
capacity
is
very small,
and
need be but
slightly
varied to
produce
a
very
considerable
change-
The
experimenter may bring
his
body
in contact with the ter-
minals of the
secondary
of the
coil,
or attach to one or both ter-
minals insulated bodies of
very
small
bulk,
such as
bulbs,
and lie
may produce
a considerable rise or fall of
potential,
and
greatly
affect the now of the current
through
the
primary.
In the ex-
periment
before
shown,
in which a brush
appears
at a wire
attached to one
terminal,
and the wire is vibrated when the ex-
perimenter brings
his insulated
body
in contact with the other
terminal of the
coil,
the sudden rise of
potential
was made evi-
dent,
I
may
show
you
the behavior of the coil in another manner
which
possesses
a feature of some interest. I have here a little
light
fan of aluminum
sheet,
fastened to a needle and
arranged
to
rotate
freely
in a metal
piece
screwed to one of the terminals of
the coil. When the coil is set to
work,
the molecules of the air
are
rhythmically
attracted and
repelled.
As the force with
which
they
are
repelled
is
greater
than that with which
they
are
attracted,
it results that there is a
repulsion
exerted on the sur-
faces of the fan. If the fan were made
simply
of a metal
sheet,
the
repulsion
would be
equal
on the
opposite
sides,
and would
produce
no effect. But if one of the
opposing
surfaces is screen-
ed,
or
if, generally speaking,
the bombardment on this side is
weakened in some
way
or
other,
there remains the
repulsion
ex-
erted
upon
the
other,
and the fan is set in rotation. The screen-
ing
is best effected
by fastening upon
one of the
opposing
sides
of the fan insulated
conducting coatings, or,
if the fan is made
in the
shape
of an
ordinary propeller screw, by fastening
on one
232 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
side,
and close to
it,
an insulated metal
plate.
The static screen
may, however,
be
omitted,
and
simply
a thickness of
insulating
material fastened to one of the sides of the fan.
To show the behavior of the
coil,
the fan
may
be
placed upon
the terminal and it will
readily
rotate when the coil is
operated
by
currents of
very high frequency.
With a
steady potential,
of
course,
and even with
alternating
currents of
very
low fre-
quency,
it would not
turn,
because of the
very
slow
exchange
of
air
and, consequently,
smaller
bombardment;
but in the latter
case it
might
turn if the
potential
were excessive. With a
pin
wheel, quite
the
opposite
rule holds
good;
it rotates best with
a
steady potential,
and the eifort is the smaller the
higher
the
frequency. Now,
it is
very easy
to
adjust
the conditions so that
the
potential
is
normally
not sufficient to turn the
fan,
but that
by connecting
the other terminal of the coil with an insulated
body
it rises to a much
greater value,
so as to rotate the
fan,
and
it is likewise
possible
to
stop
the rotation
by connecting
to the
terminal a
body
of different
size, thereby diminishing
the
potent-
ial.
Instead of
using
the fan in this
experiment,
we
may
use the
"
electric
"
radiometer with similar effect. But in this case it will
be found that the vanes will rotate
only
at
high
exhaustion or at
ordinary pressures; they
will not rotate at moderate
pressures,
when the air is
highly conducting.
This curious observation was
made
conjointly by
Professor Crcokes and
myself.
I attribute
the result to the
high conductivity
of the
air,
the molecules of
which then do not act as
independent
carriers of electric
charges,
but act all
together
as a
single conducting body.
In such
case,
of
course,
if there is
any repulsion
at all of the molecules from
the
vanes,
it must be
very
small. It is
possible, however,
that
the result is in
part
due to the fact that the
greater part
of the
discharge passes
from the
leading-in
wire
through
the
highly
con-
ducting gas,
instead of
passing
off from the
conducting
vanes.
In
trying
the
preceding experiment
with the electric radiometer
the
potential
should not exceed a certain
limit,
as then the elec-
trostatic attraction between the vanes and the
glass
of the bulb
may
be so
great
as to
stop
the rotation.
A most curious feature of alternate currents of
high frequen-
cies and
potentials
is that
they
enable us to
perform many experi-
ments
by
the use of one wire
only.
In
many respects
this feat,
ure is of
great
interest.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 233
In a
type
of alternate current motor invented
by
me some
years
ago
I
produced
rotation
by inducing, by
means of a
single
alter-
nating
current
passed through
a motor
circuit,
in the mass or other
circuits of the
motor, secondary currents, which, jointly
with the
primary
or
inducing current,
created a
moving
field of force. A
simple
but crude form of such a motor is obtained
by winding
upon
an iron core a
primary,
and close to it a
secondary coil, join-
ing
the ends of the latter and
placing
a
freely
movable metal disc
within the influence of the field
produced by
both. The iron core
is
employed
for obvious
reasons,
but it is not essential to the
operation.
To
improve
the
motor,
the iron core is made to en-
circle the armature.
Again
to
improve,
the
secondary
coil is
made to
partly overlap
the
primary,
so that it cannot free itself
from a
strong
inductive action of the
latter, repel
its lines as it
may.
Once more to
improve,
the
proper
difference of
phase
is
obtained between the
primary
and
secondary
currents
by
a con-
denser, self-induction,
resistance or
equivalent windings.
I had
discovered, however,
that rotation is
produced by
means
of a
single
coil and
core; my explanation
of the
phenomenon,
and
leading thought
in
trying
the
experiment, being
that there must
be a true time
lag
in the
magnetization
of the core. I remember
the
pleasure
I had
when,
in the
writings
of Professor
Ayrton,
which came later to
my hand,
I found the idea of the time
lag
advocated. Whether there is a true time
lag,
or whether the re-
tardation is due to
eddy
currents
circulating
in minute
paths,
must
remain an
open question,
but the fact is that a coil wound
upon
an iron core and traversed
by
an
alternating
current creates a
moving
field of
force, capable
of
setting
an armature in rotation.
It is of some
interest,
in
conjunction
with the historical
Arago
experiment,
to mention that in
lag
or
phase
motors I have
pro-
duced rotation in the
opposite
direction to the
moving field,
which
means that in that
experiment
the
magnet may
not
rotate,
or
may
even rotate in the
opposite
direction to the
moving
disc.
Here,
then,
is a motor
(diagrammatically
illustrated in
Fig. 146),
com-
prising
a coil and iron
core,
and a
freely
movable
copper
disc in
proximity
to the latter.
To demonstrate a novel and
interesting feature,
I
have,
for a
reason which I will
explain,
selected this
type
of motor. When
the ends of the coil are connected to the terminals of an alter-
nator the disc is set in rotation. But it is not this
experiment,
now well
known,
which I desire to
perform.
What I wish to
234 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
show
you
is that this motor rotates with one
single
connection be-
tween it and the
generator;
that is to
say,
one terminal of the
motor is connected to one terminal of the
generator
in this case
the
secondary
of a
high-tension
induction coil the other term-
inals of motor and
generator being
insulated in
space.
To
pro-
duce rotation it is
generally (
but not
absolutely ) necessary
to
connect the free end of the motor coil to an insulated
body
of
some size. The
experimenter's body
is more than sufficient. If
he touches the free terminal with an
object
held in the
hand,
a
current
passes through
the coil and the
copper
disc is set in rota-
tion. If an exhausted tube is
put
in series with the
coil,
the tube
lights brilliantly, showing
the
passage
of a
strong
current. In-
PIG. 146.
stead of the
experimenter's body,
a small metal sheet
suspended
on a cord
may
be used with the same result. In this case the
plate
acts as a condenser in series with the coil. It counteracts
the self-induction of the latter and allows a
strong
current to
pass.
In such a
combination,
the
greater
the self-induction of
the coil the smaller need be the
plate,
and this means that a lower
frequency,
or
eventually
a lower
potential,
is
required
to
operate
the motor. A
single
coil wound
upon
a core has a
high
self-
induction
;
for this
reason, principally,
this
type
of motor was
chosen to
perform
the
experiment.
Were a
secondary
closed
coil wound
upon
the
core,
it would tend to diminish the self-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 285
induction,
and then it would be
necessary
to
employ
a much
higher frequency
and
potential.
Neither would be
advisable,
for
a
higher potential
would
endanger
the insulation of the small
primary coil,
and a
higher frequency
would result in a
materially
diminished
torque.
It should be remarked that when such a motor with a
closed
secondary
is
used,
it is not at all
easy
to obtain rota-
tion with excessive
frequencies,
as the
secondary
cuts off
almost
completely
the lines of the
primary
and
this,
of
course,
the
more,
the
higher
the
frequency
and allows the
pass-
age
of but a minute current. In such a
case,
unless the second-
ary
is closed
through
a condenser, it is almost
essential,
in order
to
produce rotation,
to make the
primary
and
secondary
coils
overlap
each other more or less.
But there is an additional feature of interest about this
motor,
namely,
it is not
necessary
to have even a
single
connection be-
tween the motor and
generator, except, perhaps, through
the
ground;
for not
only
is an insulated
plate capable
of
giving
off
energy
into
space,
but it is likewise
capable
of
deriving
it from
an
alternating
electrostatic
field, though
in the latter case the
available
energy
is much smaller. In this instance one of the
motor terminals is connected to the insulated
plate
or
body
located within the
alternating
electrostatic
field,
and the other
terminal
preferably
to the
ground.
It is
quite possible, however,
that such
"
no wire
"
motors,
as
they might
be
called,
could be
operated by
conduction
through
the rarefied air at considerable distances. Alternate
currents,
especially
of
high frequencies, pass
with
astonishing
freedom
through
even
slightly
rarefied
gases.
The
upper
strata of the air
are rarefied. To reach a number of miles out into
space requires
the
overcoming
of difficulties of a
merely
mechanical nature.
There is no doubt that with the enormous
potentials
obtainable
by
the use of
high frequencies
and oil
insulation,
luminous
discharges
might
be
passed through many
miles of rarefied
air,
and
that, by
thus
directing
the
energy
of
many
hundreds or thousands of horse-
power,
motors or
lamps might
be
operated
at considerable
distances from
stationary
sources. But such schemes are men-
tioned
merely
as
possibilities.
We shall have no need to transmit
power
in this
way.
We shall have no need to transmit
power
at all. Ere
many generations pass,
our
machinery
will be driven
by
a
power
obtainable at
any point
of the universe. This idea is
236 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
not novel. Men have been led to it
long ago by
instinct or reason.
It has been
expressed
in
many ways,
and in
many places,
in the
history
of old and new. We find it in the
delightful myth
of
Antheus,
who derives
power
from the earth
;
we find it
among
the subtle
speculations
of one of
your splendid mathematicians,
and in
many
hints and statements of thinkers of the
present
time.
Throughout space
there is
energy.
Is this
energy
static or kinetic ?
If static our
hopes
are in
vain;
if kinetic and this we know it
is,
for certain then it is a mere
question
of time when men will
succeed in
attaching
their
machinery
to the
very
wheelwork of
nature. Of
all, living
or
dead,
Crookes came nearest to
doing
it.
His radiometer will turn in the
light
of
day
and in the darkness
of the
night;
it will turn
everywhere
where there is
heat,
and
heat is
everywhere. But, unfortunately,
this beautiful little
machine,
while it
goes
down to
posterity
as the most
interesting,
must likewise be
put
on record as the most inefficient machine
ever invented !
The
preceding experiment
is
only
one of
many equally
inter-
esting experiments
which
may
be
performed by
the use of
only
one wire with alternations of
high potential
and
frequency.
We
may
connect an insulated line to a source of such
currents,
we
may pass
an
inappreciable
current over the
line,
and on
any
point
of the same we are able to obtain a
heavy current, capable
of
fusing
a thick
copper
wire. Or we
may, by
the
help
of some
artifice, decompose
a solution in
any electrolytic
cell
by
con-
necting only
one
pole
of the cell to the line or source of
energy.
Or we
may, by attaching
to the
line,
or
only bringing
into its
vicinity, light up
an incandescent
lamp,
an exhausted
tube,
or a
phosphorescent
bulb.
However
impracticable
this
plan
of
working may appear
in
many cases,
it
certainly
seems
practicable,
and even recommend-
able,
in the
production
of
light.
A
perfected lamp
would
require
but little
energy,
and if wires were used at all we
ought
to be able
to
supply
that
energy
without a return wire.
It is now a fact that a
body may
be rendered incandescent or
phosphorescent by bringing
it either in
single
contact or
merely
in the
vicinity
of a source of electric
impulses
of the
proper
character,
and that in this manner a
quantity
of
light
sufficient
to afford a
practical
illuminant
may
be
produced.
It
is,
there-
fore,
to
say
the
least,
worth while to
attempt
to determine the
best conditions and to invent the best
appliances
for
attaining
this
object.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 237
Some
experiences
have
already
been
gained
in this
direction,
and I will dwell on them
briefly,
in the
hope
that
they might
prove
useful.
The
heating
of a
conducting body
inclosed in a
bulb,
and con-
nected to a source of
rapidly alternating
electric
impulses,
is
dependent
on so
many things
of a different
nature,
that it would
be difficult to
give
a
generally applicable
rule under which the
maximum
heating
occurs. As
regards
the size of the
vessel,
I
have
lately
found that at
ordinary
or
only slightly differing
atmospheric pressures,
when air is a
good insulator,
and hence
practically
the same amount of
energy by
a certain
potential
and
frequency
is
given
off from the
body,
whether the bulb be small
or
large,
the
body
is
brought
to a
higher temperature
if enclosed
in a small
bulb,
because of the better confinement of heat in this
case.
At lower
pressures,
when air becomes more or less
conducting,
or if the air be
sufficiently
warmed to become
conducting,
the
body
is rendered more
intensely
incandescent in a
large bulb,
obviously because,
under otherwise
equal
conditions of
test,
more
energy may
be
given
off from the
body
when the bulb is
large.
At
very high degrees
of
exhaustion,
when the matter in the
bulb becomes
"
radiant,"
a
large
bulb has still an
advantage,
but
a
comparatively slight one,
over the small bulb.
Finally,
at
excessively high degrees
of
exhaustion,
which can-
not be reached
except by
the
employment
of
special means,
there
seems to
be,
beyond
a certain and rather small size of
vessel,
no
perceptible
difference in the
heating-.
These observations were the result of a number of
experiments,
of which
one,
showing
the effect of the size of the bulb at a
high
degree
of
exhaustion, may
be described and shown
here,
as it
presents
a feature of interest. Three
spherical
bulbs of 2
inches,
3 inches and 4 inches diameter were
taken,
and in the centre of
each was mounted an
equal length
of an
ordinary
incandescent
lamp
filament of uniform thickness. In each bulb the
piece
of
filament was fastened to the
leading-in
wire of
platinum,
con-
tained in a
glass
stem sealed in the bulb
;
care
being taken,
of
course,
to make
everything
as
nearly
alike as
possible.
On each
glass
stem in the inside of the bulb was
slipped
a
highly polished
tube made of aluminum
sheet,
which fitted the'stem and was held
on it
by spring pressure.
The function of this aluminum tube will
bo
explained subsequently.
In each bulb an
equal length
of fila-
238 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
ment
protruded
above the metal tube. It is sufficient to
say
now
that under these conditions
equal lengths
of filament of the same
thickness in other
words,
bodies of
equal
bulk were
brought
to incandescence. The three bulbs were sealed to a
glass tube,
which was connected to a
Sprengel pump.
When a
high
vacuum
had been
reached,
the
glass
tube
carrying
the bulbs was sealed
off. A current was then turned on
successively
on each
bulb,
and it was found that the filaments came to about the same
brightness, and,
if
anything,
the smallest
bulb,
which was
placed
midway
between the two
larger ones, may
have been
slightly
brighter.
This result was
expected,
for when either of the bulbs
was connected to the coil the
luminosity spread through
the
other
two,
hence the three bulbs constituted
really
one vessel.
When all the three bulbs were connected in
multiple
arc to the
coil,
in the
largest
of them the filament
glowed brightest,
in the
next smaller it was a little less
bright,
and in the smallest it
only
came to redness. The bulbs were then sealed off and
separately
tried. The
brightness
of the filaments was now such as would
have been
expected
on the
supposition
that the
energy given
off
was
proportionate
to the surface of the
bulb,
this surface in each
case
representing
one of the
cpatings
of a condenser. Accord-
ingly,
there was less difference between the
largest
and the
middle sized than between the latter and the smallest bulb.
An
interesting
observation was made in this
experiment.
The
three bulbs were
suspended
from a
straight
bare wire connected
to a terminal of a
coil,
the
largest
bulb
being placed
at the end
of the
wire,
at some distance from it the smallest
bulb,
and at an
equal
distance from the latter the middle-sized one. The carbons
glowed
then in both the
larger
bulbs about as
expected,
but the
smallest did not
get
its share
by
far. This observation led me to
exchange
the
position
of the
bulbs,
and I then observed that
whichever of the bulbs was in the middle was
by
far less
bright
than it was in
any
other
position.
This
mystifying
result
was,
of
course,
found to be due to the electrostatic action between the
bulbs. When
they
were
placed
at a considerable
distance,
or
when
they
were attached to the corners of an
equilateral triangle
of
copper wire, they glowed
in about the order determined
by
their surfaces.
As to the
shape
of the
vessel,
it is also of some
importance, especi-
ally
at
high degrees
of exhaustion. Of all the
possible
construc-
tions,
it seems that a
spherical globe
with the
refractory body
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 239
mounted in its centre is the best to
employ. By experience
it
lias been demonstrated that in such a
globe
a
refractory body
of
a
given
bulk is more
easily brought
to incandescence than when
differently shaped
bulbs are used. There is also an
advantage
in
giving
to the incandescent
body
the
shape
of a
sphere,
for self-
evident reasons. In
any
case the
body
should be mounted in the
centre,
where the atoms
rebounding
from the
glass
collide. This
object
is best attained in the
spherical
bulb
;
but it is also at-
tained in a
cylindrical
vessel with one or two
straight
filaments
coinciding
with its
axis,
and
possibly
also in
parabolical
or
spheri-
cal bulbs with
refractory body
or bodies
placed
in the focus or
foci of the
same;
though
the latter is not
probable,
as the elec-
trified atoms should in all cases rebound
normally
from the
surface
they strike,
unless the
speed
were
excessive,
in which
case
they
would
probably
follow the
general
law of reflection.
]S
r
o matter what
shape
the vessel
may have,
if the exhaustion be
low,
a filament mounted in the
globe
is
brought
to the same
degree
of incandescence in all
parts ;
but if the exhaustion be
high
and the bulb be
spherical
or
pear-shaped,
as
usual,
focal
points
form and the filament is heated to a
higher degree
at or
near such
points.
To illustrate the
effect,
I have here two small bulbs which are
alike, only
one is exhausted to a low and the other to a
very high
degree.
When connected to the
coil,
the filament in the former
glows uniformly throughout
all its
length
;
whereas in the
latter,
that
portion
of the filament which is in the centre of the bulb
glows
far more
intensely
than the rest. A curious
point
is that
the
phenomenon
occurs even if two filaments are mounted in a
bulb,
each
being
connected to one terminal of the
coil, and,
what
is still more
curious,
if
they
be
very
near
together, provided
the
vacuum be
very high.
I noted in
experiments
with such bulbs
that the filaments would
give way usually
at a certain
point,
and
in the first trials I attributed it to a defect in the carbon. But
when the
phenomenon
occurred
many
times in succession I
recognized
its real cause.
In order to
bring
a
refractory body
inclosed in a bulb to in-
candescence,
it is
desirable,
on account of
economy,
that all the
energy supplied
to the bulb from the source should reach without
loss the
body
to be heated
;
from
there,
and from nowhere
else,
it should be radiated. It
is,
of
course,
out of the
question
to
reach this theoretical
result,
but it is
possible by
a
proper
construc-
tion of the
illuminating
device to
approximate
it more or less.
240 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
For
many reasons,
the
refractory body
is
placed
in the centre
of the
bulb,
and it is
usually supported
on a
glass
stem
containing
the
leading-in
wire. As the
potential
of this wire is
alternated,
the rarefied
gas surrounding
the stem is acted
upon inductively,
and the
glass
stem is
violently
bombarded and heated. In this
manner
by
far the
greater portion
of the
energy supplied
to the
bulb
especially
when
exceedingly high frequencies
are used
may
be lost for the
purpose contemplated.
To obviate this
loss,
or at least to reduce it to a
minimum,
I
usually
screen the rarefied
gas surrounding
the stem from the inductive action of the
leading-in
wire
by providing
the stem with a tube or
coating
of
conducting
material. It seems
beyond
doubt that the best
among
metals to
employ
for this
purpose
is
aluminum,
on account of its
many
re-
markable
properties.
Its
only
fault is that it is
easily fusible,
and, therefore,
its distance from the
incandescing body
should be
properly
estimated.
Usually,
a thin
tube,
of a diameter some-
what smaller than that of the
glass stem,
is made of the finest
aluminum
sheet,
and
slipped
on the stem. The tube is conveni-
ently prepared by wrapping
around a rod fastened in a lathe a
piece
of aluminum sheet of
proper size, grasping
the sheet
firmly
with clean chamois leather or
blotting paper,
and
spinning
the
rod
very
fast. The sheet is wound
tightly
around the
rod,
and a
highly polished
tube of one or three
layers
of the sheet is obtained.
When
slipped
on the
stem,
the
pressure
is
generally
sufficient to
prevent
it from
slipping off, but,
for
safety,
the lower
edge
of
the sheet
may
be turned inside. The
upper
inside corner of the
sheet that
is,
the one which is nearest to the
refractory
incan-
descent
body
should be cut out
diagonally,
as it often
happens
that,
in
consequence
of the intense
heat,
this corner turns toward
the inside and comes
very
near
to,
or in contact
with,
the
wire,
or
filament, supporting
the
refractory body.
The
greater part
of
the
energy supplied
to the bulb is then used
up
in
heating
the
metal
tube,
and the bulb is rendered useless for the
purpose.
The aluminum sheet should
project
above the
glass
stem more or
less one inch or so or
else,
if the
glass
be too close to the in-
candescing body,
it
may
be
strongly
heated and become more or
less
conducting, whereupon
it
may
be
ruptured,
or
may, by
its
conductivity,
establish a
good
electrical connection between the
metal tube and the
leading-in
wire,
in which
case,
again,
most of
the
energy
will be lost in
heating
the former.
Perhaps
the best
way
is to make the
top
of the
glass
tube,
for about an
inch,
of a
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 241
much smaller diameter. To still further reduce the
danger
arising
from the
heating
of the
glass
stem,
and also with the view
of
preventing
an electrical connection between the metal tube
and the
electrode,
I
preferably wrap
the stem with several
layers
of thin
mica,
which extends at least as far as the metal tube. In
some bulbs I have also used an outside
insulating
cover.
The
preceding
remarks are
only
made to aid the
experimenter
in the first
trials,
for the difficulties which he encounters he
may
soon find means to overcome in his own
way.
To illustrate the effect of the
screen,
and the
advantage
of
using it,
I have here two bulbs of the same
size,
with their
stems,
leading-in
wires and incandescent
lamp
filaments tied to the
latter,
as
nearly
alike as
possible.
The stem of one bulb is
provided
with an aluminum
tube,
the stem of the other has none.
Origi-
nally
the two bulbs were
joined by
a tube which was connected
to a
Sprengel pump.
When a
high
vacuum had been
reached,
first the
connecting tube,
and then the
bulbs,
were sealed off
;
they
are therefore of the same
degree
of exhaustion. When
they
are
separately
connected to the coil
giving
a certain
potential,
the
carbon filament in the bulb
provided
with the aluminum screen
is rendered
highly incandescent,
while the filament in the other
bulb
may,
with the same
potential,
not even come to
redness,
although
in
reality
the latter bulb takes
generally
more
energy
than the former. When
they
are both connected
together
to the
terminal,
the difference is even more
apparent, showing
the
impor-
tance of the
screening.
The metal tube
placed
on the stem contain-
ing
the
leading-in
wire
performs really
two distinct functions:
First,
it acts more or less as an electrostatic
screen,
thus
economizing
the
energy supplied
to the bulb
; and, second,
to whatever extent
it
may
fail to act
electrostatically,
it acts
mechanically, prevent-
ing
the
bombardment,
and
consequently
intense
heating
and
possible
deterioration of the slender
support
of the
refractory
in-
candescent
body,
or of the
glass
stem
containing
the
leading-in
wire. I
say
slender
support,
for it is evident that in order to
confine the heat more
completely
to the
incandescing body
its
sup-
port
should be
very
thin,
so as to
carry away
the smallest
possible
amount of heat
by
conduction. Of all the
supports
used I have
found an
ordinary
incandescent
lamp
filament to be the
best,
principally
because
among
conductors it can withstand the
high-
est
degree
of heat.
The effectiveness of the metal tube as an electrostatic screen
depend? largely
on the
degree
of exhaustion.
242, INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
At
excessively high degrees
of exhaustion which are reached
by using great
care and
special
means in connection with the
Sprengel pump
when the matter in the
globe
is in the ultra-
radiant
state,
it acts most
perfectly.
The shadow of the
upper
edge
of the tube is then
sharply
defined
upon
the bulb.
At a somewhat lower
degree
of
exhaustion,
which is about the
ordinary "non-striking"
vacuum,
and
generally
as
long
as the
matter moves
predominantly
in
straight
Hues,
the screen still
does well. In elucidation of the
preceding
remark it is
necessary
to state that what is a
"non-striking"
vacuum for a coil
operated
as
ordinarily, by impulses,
or
currents,
of low
frequency,
is not
so, by far,
when the coil is
operated by
currents of
very high
fre-
quency.
In such case the
discharge may pass
with
great
freedom
through
the rarefied
gas through
which a low
frequency
dis-
charge may
not
pass,
even
though
the
potential
be much
higher.
At
ordinary atmospheric pressures just
the reverse rule holds
good
: the
higher
the
frequency,
the less the
spark discharge
is
able to
jump
between the
terminals, especially
if
they
are knobs
or
spheres
of some size.
Finally,
at
very
low
degrees
of
exhaustion,
when the
gas
is well
conducting,
the metal tube not
only
does not act as an electro-
static
screen,
but even is a
drawback,
aiding
to a considerable
extent the
dissipation
of the
energy laterally
from the
leading-in
wire.
This,
of
course,
is to be
expected.
In this
case,
namely,
the metal tube is in
good
electrical connection with the
leading-
in
wire,
and most of the bombardment is directed
upon
the tube.
As
long
as the electrical connection is not
good,
the
conducting
tube is
always
of some
advantage,
for
although
it
may
not
greatly
economize
energy,
still it
protects
the
support
of the
refractory
button,
and is the means of
concentrating
more
energy upon
the
same.
To whatever extent the aluminum tube
performs
the function
of a
screen,
its usefulness is therefore limited to
very high
de-
grees
of exhaustion when it is insulated from the electrode that
is,
when the
gas
as a whole is
non-conducting,
and the molecu-
les,
or
atoms,
act as
independent
carriers of electric
charges.
In addition to
acting
as a more or less effective
screen,
in the
true
meaning
of the
word,
the
conducting
tube or
coating may
also
act,
by
reason of its
conductivity,
as a sort of
equalizer
or
dampener
of the bombardment
against
the stem. To be
explicit,
I assume the action to be as follows:
Suppose
a
rhythmical
bom-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 243
bardment to occur
against
the
conducting
tube
by
reason of its
imperfect
action as a
screen,
it
certainly
must
happen
that some
molecules,
or
atoms,
strike the tube sooner than others. Those
which come first in contact with it
give up
their
superfluous
charge,
and the tube is
electrified,
the electrification
instantly
spreading
over its surface. But this must diminish the
energy
lost in the
bombardment,
for two reasons :
first,
the
charge given
up by
the atoms
spreads
over a
great area,
and hence the electric
density
at
any point
is
small,
and the atoms are
repelled
with less
energy
than
they
would be if
they
struck
against
a
good
insu-
lator
;
secondly,
as the tube is electrified
by
the atoms which first
come in contact with
it,
the
progress
of the
following
atoms
against
the tube is more or less checked
by
the
repulsion
which
FIG. 147.
FIG. 148.
the electrified tube must exert
upon
the
similarly
electrified
atoms. This
repulsion may perhaps
be sufficient to
prevent
a
large portion
of the atoms from
striking
the
tube,
but at
any
rate
it must diminish the
energy
of their
impact.
It is clear that
when the exhaustion is
very low,
and the rarefied
gas
well con-
ducting,
neither of the above effects can
occur,
and,
on the other
hand,
the fewer the
atoms,
with the
greater
freedom
they
move
;
in other
words,
the
higher
the
degree
of
exhaustion, up
to a
limit,
the more
telling
will be both the effects.
What I have
just
said
may
afford an
explanation
of the
phe-
nomenon observed
by
Prof.
Crookes, namely,
that a
discharge
through
a bulb is established \vith much
greater facility
when an
344 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
insulator than when a conductor is
present
in the same. In
my
opinion,
the conductor acts as a
dampener
of the motion of the
atoms in the two
ways pointed
out
; hence,
to cause a
visible dis-
charge
to
pass through
the
bulb,
a much
higher potential
is
needed if a
conductor, especially
of much
surface,
be
present.
For the sake of
elucidating
of some of the remarks before
made,
I must now refer to
Figs. 147,
148 and
149,
which illustrate
various
arrangements
with a
type
of bulb most
generally
used.
Fig.
147 is a section
through
a
spherical
bulb
L,
with the
glass
stem
*,
contains the
leading-in
wire
?r,
which has a
lamp
filament
I fastened to
it, serving
to
support
the
refractory
button m in the
centre. M is a sheet of thin mica wound in several
layer*
around
the stem
s,
and a is the aluminum tube.
Fig.
148 illustrates such a bulb in a somewhat more advanced
stage
of
perfection.
A metallic tube s is fastened
by
means of
some cement to the neck of the tube. In the tube is screwed a
plug P,
of
insulating material,
in the centre of which is fastened
a metallic terminal
t,
for the connection to the
leading-in
wire w.
This terminal must be well insulated from the metal tube s
;
therefore,
if the cement used is
conducting
and most
generally
it is
sufficiently
so the
space
between the
plug
P and the neck
of the bulb should be filled with some
good insulating material,
such as mica
powder.
Fig.
149 shows a bulb made for
experimental purposes.
In this
bulb the aluminum tube is
provided
with an external
connection,
which serves to
investigate
the eifect of the tube under various
conditions. It is referred to
chiefly
to
suggest
a line of
e.xprri-
ment followed.
Since the bombardment
against
the stem
containing
the lead-
ing-in
wire is due to the inductive action of the latter
upon
the
rarefied
gas,
it is of
advantage
to reduce this action as far as
practicable by employing
a
very
thin
wire,
surrounded
by
a verv
thick insulation of
glass
or other
material,
and
by making
the
wire
passing through
the rarefied
gas
as short as
practicable.
To
combine these features I
employ
a
large
tube T
(Fig. 150),
which
protrudes
into the bulb to some
distance,
and carries on the
top
a
very
short
glass
stem
,
into which is sealed the
leading-in
wire
w,
and I
protect
the
top
of the
glass
stem
against
the heat
by
a
small aluminum tube a and a
layer
of mica underneath the
same,
as usual. The wire
u\ passing through
the
large
tube to the
outside of the
bulb,
should be well insulated with a
s;lass
tube,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 245
for instance and the
space
between
ought
to be filled out with
some excellent insulator.
Among many insulating powders
I
have found that mica
powder
is the best to
employ.
If this
pre-
caution is not
taken,
the tube
T, protruding
into the
bulb,
will
surely
be cracked in
consequence
of the
heating by
the brushes
which are
apt
to form in the
upper part
of the
tube,
near the ex-
hausted
globe, especially
if the vacuum be
excellent,
and therefore
the
potential necessary
to
operate
the
lamp
be
very high.
Fig.
151 illustrates a similar
arrangement,
with a
large
tube T
protruding
into the
part
of the bulb
containing
the
refractory
button -ni. In this case the wire
leading
from the outside into
the bulb is
omitted,
the
energy required being supplied through
FIG. 149. FIG. 150.
condenser
coatings
c o. The
insulating packing
p should in
this construction be
tightly litting
to the
glass,
and rather
wide,
or otherwise the
discharge might
avoid
passing through
the wire
ie,
which connects the inside condenser
coating
to the incandes-
cent button ///.
The molecular bombardment
against
the
glass
stem in the bulb
is a source of
great
trouble. As an illustration I will cite a
phe-
nomenon
only
too
frequently
and
unwillingly
observed. A
bulb,
preferably
a
large
one, may
be
taken,
and a
good conducting
body,
such as a
piece
of
carbon, may
be mounted in it
upon
a
plati-
num wire sealed in the
glass
stem. The bulb
may
be exhausted
to a
fairly high degree, nearly
to the
point
when
phosphorescence
046 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
begins
to
appear.
When the bulb is connected with the
coil,
the
piece
of
carbon,
if
small, may
become
highly
incandescent at
first,
but its
brightness immediately diminishes,
and then the dis-
charge may
break
through
the
glass
somewhere in the middle of
the
stem,
in the form of
bright sparks,
in
spite
of the fact that
the
platinum
wire is in
good
electrical connection with the rare-
fied
gas through
the
piece
of carbon or metal at the
top.
The
first
sparks
are
singularly bright, recalling
those drawn from a
clear surface of
mercury. But,
as
they
heat the
glass rapidly,
they,
of
course,
lose their
brightness,
and cease when the
glass
at
the
ruptured place
becomes
incandescent,
or
generally sufficiently
hot to conduct. When observed for the first time the
phenome-
non must
appear very curious,
and shows in a
striking
manner
how
radically
different alternate
currents,
or
impulses,
of
high
frequency behave,
as
compared
with
steady currents,
or currents
of low
frequency.
With such currents
namely,
the latter the
phenomenon
would of course not occur. When
frequencies
such
as are obtained
by
mechanical means are
used,
I think that the
rup-
ture of the
glass
is more or less the
consequence
of the bombard,
ment,
which warms it
up
and
impairs
its
insulating power ;
but
with
frequencies
obtainable with condensers I have no doubt
that the
glass may give way
without
previous heating. Although
this
appears
most
singular
at
first,
it is in
reality
what we
might
expect
to occur. The
energy supplied
to the wire
leading
into
the bulb is
given
off
partly by
direct action
through
the carbon
button,
and
partly by
inductive action
through
the
glass
surround-
ing
the wire. The case is thus
analogous
to that in which a con-
denser shunted
by
a conductor of low resistance is connected to
a source of
alternating
current. As
long
as the
frequencies
are
low,
the conductor
gets
the most and the condenser is
perfectly
safe
;
but when the
frequency
becomes
excessive,
the role of the
conductor
may
become
quite insignificant.
In the latter case the
difference of
potential
at the terminals of the condenser
may
be-
come so
great
as to
rupture
the
dielectric, notwithstanding
the
fact that the terminals are
joined by
a conductor of low resis
tance.
It
is,
of
course,
not
necessary,
when it is desired to
produce
the incandescence of a
body
inclosed in a bulb
by
means of these
currents,
that the
body
should be a
conductor,
for even a
perfect
non-conductor
may
be
quite
as
readily
heated. For this
purpose
it is sufficient to surround a
conducting
electrode with a non-con-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 247
material, as,
for
instance,
in the bulb described before in
Fig.
150,
in which a thin
incandescent
lamp
filament is coated
with a
non-conductor,
and
supports
a button of the same material
on the
top.
At the start the bombardment
goes
on
by
inductive
action
through
the
non-conductor,
until the same is
sufficiently
heated to become
conducting,
when the bombardment continues
in the
ordinary way.
A different
arrangement
used in some of the bulbs constructed
is illustrated in
Fig.
152. In this instance a non-conductor ra is
mounted in a
piece
of common arc
light
carbon so as to
project
some small distance above the latter. The carbon
piece
is con-
nected to the
leading-ill
wire
passing through
a
glass stem,
which
FIG. 151. FIG. 152.
is
wrapped
with several
layers
of mica. An aluminum tube a is
employed
as usual for
screening.
It is so
arranged
that it reaches
very nearly
as
high
as the carbon and
only
the non-conductor m
projects
a little above it. The bombardment
goes
at first
against
the
upper
surface of
carbon,
the lower
parts being protected by
the aluminum tube. As
soon, however,
as the non-conductor m
is heated it is rendered
good conducting,
and then it becomes the
centre of the
bombardment,
being
most
exposed
to the same.
I have also constructed
during
these
experiments many
such
single-wire
bulbs with or without internal
electrode,
in which the
radiant matter was
projected against,
or focused
upon,
the
body
248 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
to be rendered incandescent.
Fig.
153
(page 263)
illustrates one
of the bulbs used. It consists of a
spherical globe L, provided
with a
long
neck
n,
on
top,
for
increasing
the action in some cases
by
the
application
of an external
conducting coating.
The
globe
L
is blown out on the bottom into a
very
small bulb
Z>,
which serves
to hold it
firmly
in a socket s of
insulating
material into which it
is cemented. A fine
lamp
filament
f, supported
on a wire
w,
passes through
the centre of the
globe
L. The filament is ren-
dered incandescent in the middle
portion,
where the bombard-
ment
proceeding
from the lower inside surface of the
globe
is
most intense. The lower
portion
of the
globe,
as far as the
socket s
reaches,
is rendered
conducting,
either
by
a tinfoil coat-
ing
or
otherwise,
and the external electrode is connected to a
terminal of the coil.
The
arrangement diagrammatically
indicated in
Fig.
153 was
found to be an inferior one when it was desired to render incan-
descent a filament or button
supported
in the centre of the
globe,
but it was convenient when the
object
was to excite
phosphor-
escence.
In
many experiments
in which bodies of different kind were
mounted in the bulb
as,
for
instance,
indicated in
Fig.
152,
some
observations of interest were made.
It was
found, among
other
things,
that in such
cases,
no mat-
ter where the bombardment
began, just
as soon as a
high
tem-
perature
was reached there was
generally
one of the bodies
which seemed to take most of the bombardment
upon itself,
the
other,
or
others, being thereby
relieved. The
quality appeared
to
depend principally
on the
point
of
fusion,
and on the
facility
with which the
body
was
"
evaporated," or, generally speaking,
disintegrated meaning by
the latter term not
only
the
throwing
off of
atoms,
but likewise of
large lumps.
The observation made
was in accordance with
generally accepted
notions. In a
highly
exhausted
bulb, electricity
is carried off from the electrode
by
independent carriers,
which are
partly
the
atoms,
or
molecules,
of the residual
atmosphere,
and
partly
the
atoms, molecules,
or
lumps
thrown off from the electrode. If the electrode is com-
posed
of bodies of different
character,
and if one of these is more
easily disentegrated
than the
other,
most of the
electricity sup-
plied
is carried off from that
body,
which is then
brought
to a
higher temperature
than the
others,
and this the
more,
as
upon
an increase of the
temperature
the
body
is still more
easily
dis-
intregrated.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 249
It seems to me
quite probable
that a similar
process
takes
place
in the bulb even with a
homogeneous electrode,
and I think it
to be the
principal
cause of the
disintegration.
There is bound
to be some
irregularity,
even if the surface is
highly polished,
which,
of
course,
is
impossible
with most of the
refractory
bodies
employed
as electrodes. Assume that a
point
of the electrode
gets
hotter
; instantly
most of the
discharge passes through
that
point,
and a minute
patch
it
probably
fused and
evaporated.
It
is now
possible
that in
consequence
of the violent
disintegration
the
spot
attacked sinks in
temperature,
or that a counter force is
created,
as in an arc
;
at
any rate,
the local
tearing
off meets with
the limitations incident to the
experiment, whereupon
the same
process
occurs on another
place.
To the
eye
the electrode
ap-
pears uniformly brilliant,
but there are
upon
it
points constantly
shifting
and
wandering around,
of a
temperature
far above the
mean,
and this
materially
hastens the
process
of deterioration.
That some such
thing occurs,
at least when the electrode is at a lower
temperature,
sufficient
experimental
evidence can be obtained in
the
following
manner : Exhaust a bulb to a
very high degree,
so
that with a
fairly high potential
the
discharge
cannot
pass
that
is,
not a luminous
one,
for a weak invisible
discharge
occurs
always,
in all
probability.
Now raise
slowly
and
carefully
the
potential, leaving
the
primary
current on no more than for an
instant. At a certain
point, two, three,
or half a dozen
phos-
phorescent spots
will
appear
on the
globe.
These
places
of the
glass
are
evidently
more
violently
bombarded than
others,
this
being
due to the
unevenly
distributed electric
density,
necessi-
tated,
of
course, by sharp projections, or, generally speaking,
ir-
regularities
of the electrode. But the luminous
patches
are
constantly changing
in
position,
which is
especially
well observ-
able if one
manages
to
produce very few,
and this indicates that
the
configuration
of the electrode is
rapidly changing.
From
experiences
of this kind I am led to infer
that,
in order
to be most
durable,
the
refractory
button in the bulb should be
in the form of a
sphere
with a
highly polished
surface. Such a
small
sphere
could be manufactured from a diamond or some
other
crystal,
but a better
way
would be to
fuse, by
the
employ-
ment of extreme
degrees
of
temperature,
some oxide
as,
fo
instance,
zirconia into a small
drop,
and then
keep
it in the
bulb at a
temperature
somewhat below its
point
of fusion.
Interesting
and useful results
can,
no
doubt,
be reached in the
250 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
direction of extreme
degrees
of heat. How can such
high
tem-
peratures
he arrived at ? How are the
highest degrees
of heat
readied in nature ?
By
the
impact
of
stars, by high speeds
and
collisions. In a collision
any
rate of heat
generation may
be
attained. In a chemical
process
we are limited. When
oxygen
and
hydrogen combine, they
fall, metaphorically speaking,
from
a definite
height.
We cannot
go very
far with a
blast,
nor
by
confining
heat in a
furnace,
but in an exhausted bulb we can
concentrate
any
amount of
energy upon
a minute button. Leav-
ing practicability
out of
consideration, this, then,
would be the
means
which,
in
my opinion,
would enable us to reach the
highest
temperature.
But a
great difficulty
when
proceeding
in this
way
is
encountered, namely,
in most cases the
body
is carried off be-
fore it can fuse and form a
drop.
This
difficulty
exists
princip-
ally
with an
oxide,
such as
zirconia,
because it cannot be com-
pressed
in so hard a cake that it would not be carried off
quickly.
I have endeavored
repeatedly
to fuse
zirconia,
placing
it in a
cup
of
arc
light carbon,
as indicated in
Fig.
152. It
glowed
with a most
intense
light,
and the stream of the
particles projected
out of the
carbon
cup
was of a vivid white
;
but whether it was
compressed
in a cake or made into a
paste
with
carbon,
it was carried off
before it could be fused. The carbon
cup, containing
zirconia,
had to be mounted
very
low in the neck of a
large bulb,
as the
heating
of the
glass by
the
projected particles
of the oxide was
so
rapid
that in the first trial the bulb was cracked almost in an
instant,
when the current was turned on. The
heating
of the
glass by
the
projected particles
was found to be
always greater
when the carbon
cup
contained a
body
which was
rapidly
carried
off I
presume,
because in such
cases,
with the same
potential,
higher speeds
were
reached,
and also
because, per
unit of
time,
more matter was
projected
that
is,
more
particles
would strike
the
glass.
The before-mentioned
difficulty
did not
exist, however,
when
the
body
mounted in the carbon
cup
offered
great
resistance to
deterioration. For
instance,
when an oxide was first fused in
an
oxygen blast,
and then mounted in the
bulb,
it melted
very
readily
into a
drop.
Generally, during
the
process
of
fusion, magnificent light
effects were
noted,
of which it would be difficult to
give
an ade-
quate
idea.
Fig.
152 is intended to illustrate the effect observed
with a
ruby drop.
At first one
may
see a narrow funnel of
man
FREQUENCY
AND HTGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS 251
white
light projected against
the
top
of the
globe,
where it
produces
an
irregularly
outlined
phosphorescent patch.
When the
point
of the
ruby fuses,
the
phosphorescence
becomes
very power-
ful
;
but as the atoms are
projected
with much
greater speed
from the surface of the
drop,
soon the
glass gets
hot and
"tired,"
and now
only
the outer
edge
of the
patch glows.
In this manner
an
intensely phosphorescent, sharply
defined
line, , correspond-
ing
to the outline of the
drop,
is
produced,
which
spreads slowly
over the
globe
as the
drop gets larger.
When the mass
begins
to
boil,
small bubbles and cavities are
formed,
which cause dark
colored
spots
to
sweep
across the
globe.
The bulb
may
be
turned downward without fear of the
drop falling
off,
as the
mass
possesses
considerable
viscosity.
I
may
mention here another feature of some
interest,
which
I believe to have noted in the course of these
experiments,
though
the observations do not amount to a certitude. It
ap-
peared
that under the molecular
impact
caused
by
the
rapidly
alternating potential,
the
body
was fused and maintained in that
state at a lower
temperature
in a
highly
exhausted bulb than
was the case at normal
pressure
and
application
of heat in the
ordinary way
that
is,
at
least, judging
from the
quantity
of the
light
emitted. One of the
experiments performed may
be men-
tioned here
by way
of illustration. A small
piece
of
pumice
stone was stuck on a
platinum wire,
and first melted to it in a
gas
burner. The wire was next
placed
between two
pieces
of
charcoal,
and a burner
applied,
so as to
produce
an intense
heat,
sufficient to melt down the
pumice
stone into a small
glass-like
button. The
platinum
wire had to be taken of sufficient thick-
ness,
to
prevent
its
melting
in the fire. While in the charcoal
fire,
or when held in a burner to
get
a better idea of the
degree
of
heat,
the button
glowed
with
great brilliancy.
The wire with
the button was then mounted in a
bulb,
and
upon exhausting
the
same to a
high degree,
the current was turned on
slowly,
so as to
prevent
the
cracking
of the button. The button was heated to
the
point
of
fusion,
and when it
melted,
it did
not, apparently,
glow
with the same
brilliancy
as
before,
and this would indicate
a lower
temperature. Leaving
out of consideration the observ-
er's
possible,
and even
probable,
error,
the
question is,
can a
body
under these conditions be
brought
from a solid to a
liquid
state
with the evolution of less
light
?
When the
potential
of a
body
is
rapidly
alternated,
it is certain
252 . INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
that the structure is
jarred.
When the
potential
is
very high,
although
the vibrations
may
be few
say 20,000 per
second the
effect
upon
the structure
may
be considerable.
Suppose,
for ex-
ample,
that a
ruby
is melted into a
drop by
a
steady application"
of
energy.
When it forms a
drop,
it will emit visible and in-
visible
waves,
which will be in a definite
ratio,
and to the
eye
the
drop
will
appear
to be of a certain
brilliancy. Next, suppose
we
diminish to
any degree
we choose the
energy steadily supplied,
and, instead, supply energy
which rises and falls
according
to a
certain law.
Now,
when the
drop
is
formed,
there will be emit-
ted from it three different kinds of vibrations the
ordinary
visible,
and two kinds of invisible waves : that
is,
the
ordinary
dark waves of all
lengths, and,
in
addition,
waves of a well de-
fined character. The latter would not exist
by
a
steady supply
of the
energy ;
still
they help
to
jar
and loosen the structure. If
this
really
be the
case,
then the
ruby drop
will emit
relatively
less visible and more invisible waves than before. Thus it would
seem that when a
platinum wire,
for
instance,
is fused
by
currents
alternating
with extreme
rapidity,
it emits at the
point
of fusion
less
light
and more
..visible
radiation than it does when melted
by
a
steady current,
though
the total
energy
used
up
in the
process
of fusion is the same in both cases.
Or,
to cite another
example,
a
lamp
filament is not
capable
of
withstanding
as
long
with cur-
rents of extreme
frequency
as it does with
steady
currents,
assuming
that it be worked at the same luminous
intensity.
This
means that for
rapidly alternating
currents the filament should
be shorter and thicker. The
higher
the
frequency
that
is,
the
greater
the
departure
from the
steady
flow the worse it would
be for the filament. But if the truth of this remark were de-
monstrated,
it would be erroneous to conclude that such a refrac-
tory
button as used in these bulbs would be deteriorated
quicker
by
currents of
extremely high frequency
than
by steady
or low
frequency
currents. From
experience
I
may say
that
just
the
opposite
holds
good
: the button withstands the bombardment
better with currents of
very high frequency.
But this is due to
the fact that a
high frequency discharge passes through
a rarefied
gas
with much
greater
freedom than a
steady
or low
frequency
discharge,
and this will mean that with the former we can work
with a lower
potential
or with a less violent
impact.
As
long,
then,
as the
gas
is of no
consequence,
a
steady
or low
frequency
current is better
;
but as soon as the action of the
gas
is desired
and
important, high frequencies
are
preferable.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 253
In the course of these
experiments
a
great many
trials were
made with all kinds of carbon buttons. Electrodes made of or-
dinary
carbon buttons were
decidedly
more durable when the
buttons were obtained
by
the
application
of enormous
pressure.
Electrodes
prepared by depositing
carbon in well known
ways
did not show
up
well
;
they
blackened the
globe very quickly.
From
many experiences
I conclude that
lamp
filaments obtained
in this manner can be
advantageously
used
only
with low
poten-
tials and low
frequency
currents. Some kinds of carbon withstand
so well
that,
in order to
bring
them to the
point
of
fusion,
it is
necessary
to
employ very
small buttons. In this case the obser-
vation is rendered
very
difficult on account of the intense heat
produced.
Nevertheless there can be no doubt that all kinds of
carbon are fused under the molecular
bombardment,
but the
liquid
state must be one of
great instability.
Of all the bodies
tried there were two which withstood best diamond and car-
borundum. These two showed
up
about
equally,
but the latter
was
preferable
for
many
reasons. As it is more than
likely
that
this
body
is not
yet generally known,
I Avill venture to call
your
attention to it.
It has been
recently produced by
Mr. E. G.
Acheson,
of
Monongahela City, Pa.,
II. S. A. It is intended to
replace
ordi-
nary
diamond
powder
for
polishing precious stones, etc.,
and I
have been informed that it
accomplishes
this
object quite
suc-
cessfully.
I do not know
why
the name
"
carborundum
"
has
been
given
to
it,
unless there is
something
in the
process
of its
manufacture which
justifies
this selection.
Through
the kindness
of the
inventor,
I obtained a short while
ago
some
samples
which
I desired to test in
regard
to their
qualities
of
phosphorescence
and
capability
of
withstanding high degrees
of heat.
Carborundum can be obtained in two forms in the form of
"crystals"
and of
powder.
The former
appear
to the naked
eye
dark
colored,
but are
very
brilliant
;
the latter is of
nearly
the
same color as
ordinary
diamond
powder,
but
very
much finer.
When viewed under a
microscope
the
samples
of
crystals given
to me did not
appear
to have
any
definite
form,
but rather re-
sembled
pieces
of broken
up egg
coal of fine
quality.
The
majority
were
opaque,
but there were some which were trans-
parent
and colored. The
crystals
are a kind of carbon
containing
some
impurities
;
they
are
extremely
hard,
and withstand for a
long
time even an
oxygen
blast. When the blast is directed
254 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
against
them
they
at first form a cake of some
compactness, prob-
ably
in
consequence
of the fusion of
impurities they
contain. The
mass withstands for a
very long
time the blast without further
fusion
;
but a slow
carrying
off,
or
burning, occurs, and, finally,
a small
quantity
of a
glass-like
residue is
left,
w
r
hich,
I
suppose,
is melted alumina. When
compressed strongly they
conduct
very
well,
but not as well as
ordinary
carbon. The
powder,
which is
obtained from the
crystals
in some
way,
is
practically
non-con-
ducting.
It affords a
magnificent polishing
material for stones.
The time has been too short to make a
satisfactory study
of
the
properties
of this
product,
but
enough experience
has been
gained
in a few weeks I have
experimented upon
it to
say
that
it does
possess
some remarkable
properties
in
many respects.
It
withstands
excessively high degrees
of
heat,
it is little deteriorated
by
molecular
bombardment,
and it does not blacken the
globe
as
ordinary
carbon does. The
only difficulty
which I have
experienced
in its use in connection with these
experiments
was to find some
binding
material which would resist the heat and the effect of the
bombardment as
successfully
as carborundum itself does.
I have here a number of bulbs which I have
provided
with
buttons of carborundum. To make such a button of carborun-
dum
crystals
I
proceed
in the
following
manner: I take an or-
dinary lamp
filament and
dip
its
point
in
tar,
or some other
thick substance or
paint
which
may
be
readily
carbonized. I
next
pass
the
point
of the filament
through
the
crystals,
and then
hold it
vertically
over a hot
plate.
The tar softens and forms a
drop
on the
point
of the
filament,
the
crystals adhering
to the
surface of the
drop. By regulating
the distance from the
plate
the tar is
slowly
dried out and the button becomes solid. I then
once more
dip
the button in tar and hold it
again
over a
plate
until the tar is
evaporated, leaving only
a hard mass which
firmly
binds the
crystals.
When a
larger
button is
required
I
repeat
the
process
several
times,
and I
generally
also cover the filament
a certain distance below the button with
crystals.
The button
being
mounted in a
bulb,
when a
good
vacuum has been
reached,
first a weak and then a
strong discharge
is
passed through
the
bulb to carbonize the tar and
expel
all
gases,
and later it is
brought
to a
very
intense incandescence.
When the
powder
is used I have found it best to
proceed
as
follows : I make a thick
paint
of carborundum and
tar,
and
pass
a
lamp
filament
through
the
paint. Taking
then most of the
UIGU
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 255
paint
off
by rubbing
the filament
against
a
piece
of chamois
leather,
I hold it over a hot
plate
until the tar
evaporates
and the
coating
becomes firm. I
repeat
this
process
as
many
times as it
is
necessary
to obtain a certain thickness of
coating.
On the
point
of the coated filament I form a button in the same
manner.
There is no doubt that such a button
properly prepared
under
great pressure
of
carborundum, especially
of
powder
of the best
quality,
will withstand the effect of the bombardment
fully
as
well as
anything
we know. The
difficulty
is that the
binding
material
gives way,
and the carborundum is
slowly
thrown off
after some time. As it does not seem to blacken the
globe
in the
least,
it
might
be found useful for
coating
the filaments of
ordinary
incandescent
lamps,
and I think that it is even
possible
to
produce
thin threads or sticks of carborundum which will
replace
the or-
dinary
filaments in an incandescent
lamp.
A carborundum coat-
ing
seems to be more durable than other
coatings,
not
only
because the carborundum can withstand
high degrees
of
heat,
but
also because it seems to unite with the carbon better than
any
other material I have tried. A
coating
of zirconia or
any
other
oxide,
for
instance,
is far more
quickly destroyed.
I
prepared
buttons of diamond dust in the same manner as of
carborundum,
and these came in
durability
nearest to those
prepared
of car-
borundum,
but the
binding paste gave way
much more
quickly
in the diamond buttons
; this, however,
I attributed to the size
and
irregularity
of the
grains
of the diamond.
It was of interest to find whether carborundum
possesses
the
quality
of
phosphorescence.
One
is,
of
course, prepared
to en-
counter two difficulties :
first,
as
regards
the
rough product,
the
"crystals," they
are
good conducting,
and it is a fact that con-
ductors do not
phosphoresce; second,
the
powder, being
exceed-
ingly fine,
would not be
apt
to exhibit
very prominently
this
quality,
since we know that when
crystals,
even such as diamond
or
ruby,
are
finely powdered, they
lose the
property
of
phos-
phorescence
to a considerable
degree.
The
question presents
itself
here,
can a conductor
phosphor-
esce ? What is there in such a
body
as a
metal,
for
instance,
that
would
deprive
it of the
quality
of
phosphoresence,
unless it is
that
property
which characterizes it as a conductor ? For it is a
fact that most of the
phosphorescent
bodies lose that
quality
when
they
are
sufficiently
heated to become more or less
conducting.
256 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Then,
if a metal be in a
large measure,
or
perhaps entirely,
de-
prived
of that
property,
it should be
capable
of
phosphoresence.
Therefore it is
quite possible
that at some
extremely high
fre-
quency,
when
behaving practically
as a
non-conductor,
a metal
or
any
other conductor
might
exhibit the
quality
of
phosphores-
ence,
even
though
it be
entirely incapable
of
phosphorescing
under the
impact
of a
low-frequency discharge.
There
is,
how-
ever,
another
possible way
how a conductor
might
at least
appear
to
phosphoresce.
Considerable doubt still exists as to what
really
is
phosphor-
escence,
and as to whether the various
phenomena comprised
under this head are due to the same causes.
Suppose
that in an
exhausted
bulb,
under the molecular
impact,
the surface of a
piece
of metal or other conductor is rendered
strongly luminous,
but at the same time it is found that it remains
comparatively
cool,
would not this
luminosity
be called
phosphorescence?
Now
such a
result, theoretically
at
least,
is
possible,
for it is a mere
question
of
potential
or
speed.
Assume the
potential
of the
electrode,
and
consequently
the
speed
of the
projected atoms,
to
be
sufficiently high,
the surface of the metal
piece, against
which
the atoms are
projected,
would be rendered
highly incandescent,
since the
process
of heat
generation
would be
incomparably
faster
than that of
radiating
or
conducting away
from the surface of
the collision. In the
eye
of the observer a
single impact
of the
atoms would cause an instantaneous
flash,
but if the
impacts
were
repeated
with sufficient
rapidity, they
would
produce
a continu-
ous
impression upon
his retina. To him then the surface of the
metal would
appear continuously
incandescent and of constant
luminous
intensity,
while in
reality
the
light
would be either
intermittent,
or at least
changing periodically
in
intensity.
The
metal
piece
would rise in
temperature
until
equilibrium
was
attained that
is,
until the
energy continuously
radiated would
equal
that
intermittently supplied.
But the
supplied energy
might
under such conditions not be sufficient to
bring
the
body
to
any
more than a
very
moderate mean
temperature, especially
if the
frequency
of the atomic
impacts
be
very
low
just enough
that the fluctuation of the
intensity
of the
light
emitted could
not be detected
by
the
eye.
The
body
would
now,
owing
to the
manner in which the
energy
is
supplied,
emit a
strong light,
and
yet
be at a
comparatively very
low mean
temperature.
How
should the observer name the
luminosity
thus
produced
? Even if
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 257
the
analysis
of the
light
would teach him
something definite,
still
he would
probably
rank it under the
phenomena
of
phosphor-
escence. It is conceivable that in such a
way
both
conducting
and
non-conducting
bodies
may
be maintained at a certain lumin-
ous
intensity,
but the
energy required
would
very greatly
vary
with the nature and
properties
of the bodies.
These and some
foregoing
remarks of a
speculative
nature
were made
merely
to
bring
out curious features of alternate
currents or electric
impulses. By
their
help
we
may
cause a
body
to emit more
light,
while at a certain mean
temperature,
than it
would emit if
brought
to that
temperature by
a
steady supply ;
and,
again,
we
may bring
a
body
to the
point
of
fusion,
and cause
it to emit less
light
than when fused
by
the
application
of
energy
in
ordinary ways.
It all
depends
on how we
supply
the
energy,
and what kind of vibrations we set
up ;
in one case the vibrations
are
more,
in the other
less, adapted
to affect our sense of vision.
Some
effects,
which I had not observed
before,
obtained with
carborundum in the first
trials,
I attributed to
phosphorescence,
but in
subsequent experiments
it
appeared
that it was devoid of
that
quality.
The
crystals possess
a
noteworthy
feature. In a
bulb
provided
with a
single
electrode in the
shape
of a small
circular metal
disc,
for
instance,
at a certain
degree
of exhaustion
the electrode is covered with a
milky, film,
which is
separated by
a dark
space
from the
glow filling
the bulb. When the metal
disc is covered with carborundum
crystals,
the film is far more
intense,
and snow-white. This I found later to be
merely
an
effect of the
bright
surface of the
crystals,
for when an aluminum
electrode was
highly polished,
it exhibited more or less the same
phenomenon.
I made a number of
experiments
with the
samples
of
crystals obtained, principally
because it would have been of
special
interest to find that
they
are
capable
of
phosphorescence,
on account of their
being conducting.
I could not
produce phos-
phorescence distinctly,
but I must remark that a decisive
opinion
cannot be formed until other
experimenters
have
gone
over the
same
ground.
The
powder
behaved in some
experiments
as
though
it con-
tained
alumina,
but it did not exhibit with sufficient distinctness
the red of the latter. Its dead color
brightens considerably
un-
der the molecular
impact,
but I am now convinced it does not
phosphoresce. Still,
the tests with the
powder
are not
conclusive,
because
powdered
carborundum
probably
does not behave like a
258 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
phosphorescent sulphide,
for
example,
which could be
finely
powdered
without
impairing
the
phosphorescence,
but rather like
powdered ruby
or
diamond,
and therefore it would be
necessary,
in order to make a decisive
test,
to obtain it in a
large lump
and
polish up
the surface.
If the carborundum
proves
useful in connection with these
and similar
experiments,
its chief value will be found in the
production
of
coatings,
thin
conductors, buttons,
or other elec-
trodes
capable
of
withstanding extremely high degrees
of heat.
The
production
of a sniall
electrode,
capable
of withstan< lino-
enormous
temperatures,
I
regard
as of the
greatest importance
in the manufacture of
light.
It would enable us to
obtain, by
means of currents of
very high frequencies, certainly
20
times,
if
not
more,
the
quantity
of
light
which is obtained in the
present
incandescent
lamp by
the same
expenditure
of
energy.
This
estimate
may appear
to
many exaggerated,
but in
reality
I think
it is far from
being
so. As this statement
might
be misunder-
stood,
I think it is
necessary
to
expose clearly
the
problem
with
which,
in this line of
work,
we are
confronted,
and the manner
in
which,
in
my opinion,
a solution will be arrived at.
Any
one who
begins
a
study
of the
problem
will be
apt
to
think that what is wanted in a
lamp
with an electrode is a
very
high degree
of incandescence of the electrode. There he will be
mistaken. The
high
incandescence of the button is a
necessary
evil,
but what is
really
wanted is the
high
incandescence of the
gas surrounding
the button. In other
words,
the
problem
in
such a
lamp
is to
bring
a mass of
gas
to the
highest, possible
in-
candescence. The
higher
the
incandescence,
the
quicker
the
mean
vibration,
the
greater
is the
economy
of the
light production.
But to maintain a mass of
gas
at a
high degree
of incandescence
in a
glass vessel,
it will
always
be
necessary
to
keep
the incande-
scent mass
away
from the
glass
;
that
is,
to confine it as much as
possible
to the central
portion
of the
globe.
In one of the
experiments
this
evening
a brush was
produced
at the end of a wire. The brush was a
flame,
a source of heat
and
light.
It did not emit much
perceptible heat,
nor did it
glow
with an intense
light ;
but is it the less a flame because it
does not scorch
my
hand { Is it the less a flame because it does
not hurt
my eyes by
its
brilliancy
? The
problem
is
precisely
to
produce
in the bulb such a
flame,
much smaller in
size,
but in-
comparably
more
powerful.
Were there means at hand for
HIGH
FREQVENCF
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 259
producing
electric
impulses
of a
sufficiently high frequency,
and
for
transmitting them,
the bulb could be done
away with,
unless
it were used to
protect
the
electrode,
or to economize the
energy
by confining
the heat. But as such means are not at
disposal,
it
becomes
necessary
to
place
the terminal in the bulb and
rarefy
the air in the same. This is done
merely
to enable the
apparatus
to
perform
the work which it is not
capable
of
performing
at or-
dinary
air
pressure.
In the bulb we are able to
intensify
the
action to
any degree
so far that the brush emits a
powerful
light.
The
intensity
of the
light
emitted
depends principally
on the
frequency
and
potential
of the
impulses,
and on the electric den-
sity
on the surface of the electrode. It is of the
greatest impor-
tance to
employ
the smallest
possible button,
in order to
push
the
density very
far. Under the violent
impact
of the molecules
of the
gas surrounding it,
the small electrode is of course
brought
to an
extremely high temperature,
but around it is a mass of
highly
incandescent
gas,
a flame
photosphere, many
hundred
times the volume of the electrode. With a
diamond,
carborun-
dum or zirconia button the
photosphere
can be as much as one
thousand times the volume of the button. Without much re-
flection one would tl link that in
pushing
so far the incandescence
of the electrode it would be
instantly
volatilized. But after a
careful consideration one would find
that, theoretically,
it should
not
occur,
and in this fact
which, moreover,
is
experimentally
demonstrated lies
principally
the future value of such a
lamp.
At
first,
when the bombardment
begins,
most of the work is
performed
on the surface of the
button,
but when a
highly
con-
ducting photosphere
is formed the button is
comparatively
re-
lieved. The
higher
the incandescence of the
photosphere,
the
more it
approaches
in
conductivity
to that of the
electrode,
and
the
more, therefore,
the solid and the
gas
form one
conducting
body.
The
consequence
is that the further the incandescence is
forced the more
work, comparatively,
is
performed
on the
gas,
and the less on the electrode. The formation of a
powerful
photosphere
is
consequently
the
very
means for
protecting
the
electrode. This
protection,
of
course,
is a relative
one,
and it
should not be
thought
that
by pushing
the incandescence
higher
the electrode is
actually
less deteriorated.
Still,
theoretically,
with extreme
frequencies,
this result must be
reached,
but
prob-
ably
at a
temperature
too
high
for most of the
refractory
bodies
360 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TEFLA.
known.
Given, then,
an electrode which can withstand to a
very
high
limit the effect of the bombardment and outward
strain,
it
would be
safe,
no matter how much it was forced
beyond
that
limit. In an incandescent
lamp quite
different considerations
apply.
There the
gas
is not at all concerned
;
the whole of the
work is
performed
on the filament
;
and the the life of the
lamp
diminishes so
rapidly
with the increase of the
degree
of incan-
descence that economical reasons
compel
us to work it at a low
incandescence. But if an incandescent
lamp
is
operated
with
currents of
very high frequency,
the action of the
gas
cannot be
neglected,
and the rules for the most economical
working
must
be
considerably
modified.
In order to
bring
such a
lamp
with one or two electrodes to a
great perfection,
it is
necessary
to
employ impulses
of
very high
frequency.
The
high frequency secures, among others,
two chief
advantages,
which have a most
important bearing upon
the
economy
of the
light production.
First,
the deterioration of the
electrode is reduced
by
reason of the fact that we
employ
a
great
many
small
impacts,
instead of a few violent
ones,
which
quickly
shatter the structure
; secondly,
the formation of a
large photo-
shere is facilitated.
In order to reduce the deterioration of the electrode to the
minimum,
it is desirable that the vibration be
harmonic,
for
any
suddenness hastens the
process
of destruction. An electrode lasts
much
longer
when
kept
at incandescence
by currents,
or
impulses,
obtained from a
high frequency alternator,
which rise and fall
more or less
harmonically,
than
by impulses
obtained from a dis-
ruptive discharge
coil. In the latter case there is no doubt that
most of the
damage
is done
by
the fundamental sudden dis-
charges.
One of the elements of loss in such a
lamp
is the bombard-
ment of the
globe.
As the
potential
is
very high,
the molecules
are
projected
with
great speed ;
they
strike the
glass,
and
usually
ex-
cite a
strong phosphorescence.
The effect
produced
is
very pretty
,
but for economical reasons it would be
perhaps preferable
to
pre-
vent,
or at least reduce to a
minimum,
the bombardment
against
the
globe,
as in such case it
is,
as a
rule,
not the
object
to excite
phosphorescence,
and as some loss of
energy
results from the
bombardment. This loss in the bulb is
principally dependent
on the
potential
of the
impulses
and on the electric
density
on
the surface of the electrode. In
employing
\
cry high frecjuen-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 261
cies the loss of
energy by
the bombardment is
greatly reduced,
for, first,
the
potential
needed to
perform
a
given
amount of work
is much smaller
; and,
secondly, by producing
a
highly
conduct-
ting photosphere
around the
electrode,
the same result is obtained
as
though
the electrode were much
larger,
which is
equivalent
to
a smaller electric
density.
But be it
by
the diminution of the
maximum
potential
or of the
density,
the
gain
is effected in the
same
manner,
namely, by
avoiding
violent
shocks,
which strain
the
glass
much
beyond
its limit of
elasticity.
If the
frequency
could be
brought high enough,
the loss due to the
imperfect
elasticity
of the
glass
would be
entirely negligible.
The loss due
to bombardment of the
globe may, however,
be reduced
by using
two electrodes instead of one. In such case each of the elec-
trodes
may
be connected to one of the terminals
;
or
else,
if it is
preferable
to use
only
one
wire,
one electrode
may
be connected
to one terminal and the other to the
ground
or to an insulated
body
of some
surface, as,
for
instance,
a shade on the
lamp.
In
the latter
case,
unless some
judgment
is
used,
one of the elec-
trodes
might glow
more
intensely
than the other.
But on the whole I find it
preferable,
when
using
such
high
frequencies,
to
employ only
one electrode and one
connecting
wire. I am convinced that the
illuminating
device of the near
future will not
require
for its
operation
more than one
lead, and,
at
any rate,
it will have no
leading-in wire,
since the
energy
re-
quired
can be as well transmitted
through
the
glass.
In
experi-
mental bulbs the
leading-in
wire is not
generally
used on account
of
convenience,
as in
employing
condenser
coatings
in the manner
indicated in
Fig. 151,
for
example,
there is some
difficulty
in
titting
the
parts,
but these difficulties would not exist if a
great
many
bulbs were manufactured
;
otherwise the
energy
can be
conveyed through
the
glass
as well as
through
a
wire,
and with
these
high frequencies
the losses are
very
small. Such illustrat-
ing
devices will
necessarilly
involve the use of
very high
potentials,
and
this,
in the
eyes
of
practical
men, might
be an ob-
jectionable
feature.
Yet,
in
reality, high potentials
are not
objectionable certainly
not in the least so far as the
safety
of
the devices is concerned.
There are two
ways
of
rendering
an electric
appliance
safe.
One is to use low
potentials,
the other is to determine the dimen-
sions of the
apparatus
so that it is
safe,
no matter how
high
a
potential
is used. Of the
two,
the latter seems to me the better
362 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
way,
for then the
safety
is
absolute,
unaffected
by any possible
combination of circumstances which
might
render even
alow-poten-
tial
appliance dangerous
to life and
property.
But the
practical
conditions
require
not
only
the
judicious
determination of the
dimensions of the
apparatus
;
they
likewise necessitate the em-
ployment
of
energy
of the
proper
kind. It is
easy,
for
instance,
to construct a transformer
capable
of
giving,
when
operated
from
an
ordinary
alternate current machine of low
tension, say 50,000
volts,
which
might
be
required
to
light
a
highly
exhausted
phos-
phorescent tube,
so
that,
in
spite
of the
high potential,
it is
perfectly safe,
the shock from it
producing
no inconvenience.
Still such a transformer would be
expensive,
and in itself ineffi-
cient; and, besides,
what
energy
was obtained from it would not
be
economically
used for the
production
of
light.
The
economy
demands the
employment
of
energy
in the form of
extremely rapid
vibrations. The
problem
of
producing light
has been likened to
that of
maintaining
a certain
high-pitcli
note
by
means of a bell.
It should be said a
barely
audible note
;
and even these words
xvould not
express it,
so wonderful is the sensitiveness of the
eye.
We
may
deliver
powerful
blows at
long intervals,
waste a
good
deal of
energy,
and still not
get
what we want
;
or we
may keep
up
the note
by delivering frequent taps,
and
get
nearer to the
object sought by
the
expenditure
of much less
energy.
In the
production
of
light,
as far as the
illuminating
device is
concerned,
there can be
only
one rule that
is,
to use as
high frequencies
as
can be obtained
;
but the means for the
production
and
convey-
ance of
impulses
of such character
impose,
at
present
at
least,
great
limitations. Once it is decided to use
very high frequen-
cies,
the return wire becomes
unnecessary,
and all the
appliances
are
simplified. By
the use of obvious means the same result is
obtained as
though
the return wire were used. It is sufficient for
this
purpose
to
bring
in contact with the
bulb,
or
merely
in the
vicinity
of the
same,
an insulated
body
of some surface. The
surface
need,
of
course,
be the
smaller,
the
higher
the
frequency
and
potential
used,
and
necessarily,
also,
the
higher
the
economy
of the
lamp
or other device.
This
plan
of
working
has been resorted to on several occasions
this
evening. So,
for
instance,
when the incandescence of a
button was
produced by grasping
the bulb with the
hand,
the
body
of the
experimenter merely
served to
intensify
the action.
The bulb used was similar to that illustrated in
Fig. 148,
and
HIGH
FREQ
UENCY AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 263
tlie coil was excited to a small
potential,
not sufficient to
bring
the button to incandescence when the bull) was
hanging
from
the Avire
;
and
incidentally,
in order to
perform
the
experiment
in a more suitable
manner,
the button was taken so
large
that a
perceptible
time had to
elapse before, upon grasping
the
bulb,
it
could be rendered incandescent. The contact with the bulb
was,
of
course, quite
unnecessary. It is
easy, by using
a rather
large
bulb with an
exceedingly
small
electrode,
to
adjust
the conditions
so that the latter is
brought
to
bright
incandescence
by
the mere
approach
of the
experimenter
within a few feet of the
bulb,
and
that the incandescence subsides
upon
his
receding.
FIG. 153. FIG. 154.
In another
experiment,
when
phosphorescence
was
excited,
a
similar bulb was used. Here
again, originally,
the
potential
was
not sufficient to excite
phosphorescence
until the action was in-
tensified in this
case, however,
to
present
a different
feature, by
touching
the socket with a metallic
object
held in the hand. The
electrode in the bulb was a carbon button so
large
that it could
not be
brought
to
incandescence,
and
thereby spoil
the effect
produced by phosphorescence.
Again,
in another of the
early experiments,
a bulb was
used,
264 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
as illustrated in
Fig.
141. In this
instance, by
touching
the bulb
with one or two
fingers,
one or two shadows of the stem inside
were
projected against
the
glass,
the touch of the
finger producing
the same results as the
application
of an external
negative
elec-
trode under
ordinary
circumstances.
In all these
experiments
the action was intensified
by
augment-
ing
the
capacity
at the end of the lead connected to the terminal.
As a
rule,
it is not necessary to resort to such
means,
and would
be
quite unnecessary
with still
higher frequencies ;
but when it
Is
desired,
the
bulb,
or
tube,
can be easily
adapted
to the
pur-
pose.
In
Fig. 153,
for
example,
an
experimental bull), i,,
is
shown,
which is
provided
with a
neck, n,
on the
top,
for the
application
of an external tinfoil
coating,
which
may
be connected to a
body
of
larger
surface. Such a
lamp
as illustrated in
Fig.
154
may
also be
lighted by connecting
the tinfoil
coating
on the neck n,
to the
terminal,
and the
leading-in wire, w,
to an insulated
plate.
If the bulb stands in a socket
upright,
as shown in the
cut,
a
shade of
conducting
material may be
slipped
in the
neck, n,
and
the action thus
magnified.
A more
perfected arrangement
used in some of these bulbs is
illustrated in
Fig.
155. In this case the construction of the bulb
is as shown and described
before,
when reference was made to
Fig.
148. A zinc
sheet, z,
with a tubular
extension, T,
is
applied
over the metallic
socket,
s. The bulb
hangs
downward from the
terminal, t,
the zinc
sheet, z, performing
the double office of in-
tensifier and reflector. The reflector is
separated
from the ter-
minal, t, by
an extension of the
insulating plug,
P.
A similar
disposition
with a
phosphorescent
tube is illustrated
in
Fig.
156. The
tube, T,
is
prepared
from two short tubes of
different
diameter,
which are sealed on the ends. Oil the lower
end is
placed
an inside
conducting coating, c,
which connects to
the wire w. The wire has a hook on the
upper
end for
suspen-
sion,
and
passes through
the centre of the inside
tube,
which is
filled witli some
good
and
tightly packed
insulator. On the out-
side of the
upper
end of the
tube, T,
is another
conducting
coat-
ing,
o
l} upon
which is
slipped
a metallic reflector
z,
which should
be
separated by
a thick insulation from the end of wire u\
The economical use of such a reflector or intensifier would re-
quire
that all
energy supplied
to an air condenser should be re-
coverable, or,
in other
words,
that there should not be
any losses,
HIGH
FREq
UENGY AND HIGIt POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 265
neither in the
gaseous
medium nor
through
its action elsewhere.
This is far from
being so, but, fortunately,
the losses
may
be re-
duced to
anything
desired. A few remarks are
necessary
on
this
subject,
in order to make the
experiences gathered
in the
course of these
investigations perfectly
clear.
Suppose
a small helix with
many
well insulated
turns,
as in
experiment Fig.
146,
has one of its ends connected to one of the
terminals of the induction
coil,
and the other to a metal
plate,
or,
for the sake of
simplicity,
a
sphere,
insulated in
space.
When
the coil is set to
work,
the
potential
of the
sphere
is
alternated,
and a small helix now behaves as
though
its free end were con-
nected to the other terminal of the induction coil. If an iron
rod be held within a small
helix,
it is
quickly brought
to a
high
FIG. 155.
temperature, indicating
the
passage
of a
strong
current
through
the helix. How does the insulated
sphere
act in this case ? It
can be a
condenser, storing
and
returning
the
energy supplied
to
it,
or it can be a mere sink of
energy,
and the conditions of the
experiment
determine whether it is rather one than the other.
The
sphere being charged
to a
high potential,
it acts
inductively
upon
the
surrounding
air,
or whatever
gaseous
medium there
might
be. The
molecules,
or
atoms,
which are near the
sphere,
are of
course more
attracted,
and move
through
a
greater
distance than
the farther ones. When the nearest molecules strike the
sphere,
they
are
repelled,
and collisions occur at all distances within the
inductive action of the
sphere.
It is now clear
that,
if the
poten-
266 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
tial be
steady,
but little loss of
energy
can be caused in this
way,
for the molecules which are nearest to the
sphere, having
had an
additional
charge imparted
to them
by contact,
are not attracted
until
they
have
parted,
if not with
all,
at least with most of the
additional
charge,
which can be
accomplished only
after a
great
many
collisions. From the
fact,
that with a
steady potential
there is but little loss in
dry air,
one must come to such a con-
clusion. When the
potential
of a
sphere,
instead of
being steady,
is
alternating,
the conditions are
entirely
different. In this case
a
rhythmical
bombardment
occurs,
no matter whether the mole-
cules,
after
coming
in contact with the
sphere,
lose the
imparted
FIG. 156.
charge
or not
;
what is
more,
if the
charge
is not
lost,
the
impacts
are
only
the more violent.
Still,
if the
frequency
of the im-
pulses
be
very small,
the loss caused
by
the
impacts
and collisions
would not be
serious,
unless the
potential
\vere excessive. But
when
extremely high frequencies
and more or less
high potentials
are
used,
the loss
may very great.
The total
energy
lost
per
unit
of time is
proportionate
to the
product
of the number of
impacts
per second,
or the
frequency
and the
energy
lost in each
impact.
But the
energy
of an
impact
must be
proportionate
to the
square
of the electric
density
of the
sphere,
since the
charge imparted
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 267
to the molecule is
proportionate
to that
density.
I conclude from
this that the total
energy
lost must be
proportionate
to the
pro-
duct of the
frequency
and the
square
of the electric
density ;
but
this law needs
experimental
confirmation.
Assuming
the
pre-
ceding-
considerations to be
true, then, by rapidly alternating
the
potential
of a
body
immersed in an
insulating gaseous medium,
any
amount of
energy may
be
dissipated
into
space.
Most of
that
energy
then,
I
believe,
is not
dissipated
in the form of
long
ether
waves,
propagated
to considerable
distance,
as is
thought
most
generally,
but is consumed in the case of an insulated
sphere,
for
example
in
impact
and collisional losses that
is,
heat vibrations on the surface and in the
vicinity
of the
sphere.
To reduce the
dissipation,
it is
necessary
to work with a small
electric
density
the
smaller,
the
higher
the
frequency.
But
since,
on the
assumption
before
made,
the loss is dimin-
ished with the
square
of the
density,
and since currents of
very
high frequencies
involve considerable waste when transmitted
through conductors,
it follows
that,
on the
whole,
it is better to
employ
one wire than two.
Therefore,
if
motors, lamps,
or de-
vices of
any
kind are
perfected, capable
of
being advantageously
operated by
currents of
extremely high frequency,
economical
reasons will make it advisable to use
only
one
wire, especially
if
the distances are
great.
When
energy
is absorbed in a
condenser,
the same behaves as
though
its
capacity
were increased.
Absorption always
exists
more or
less,
but
generally
it is small and of no
consequence
us
long
as the
frequencies
are not
very great,
In
using extremely
high frequencies, and, necessarily
in such
case,
also
high poten-
tials,
the
absorption or,
what is here meant more
particularly
by
this
term,
the loss of
energy
due to the
presence
of "a
gaseous
medium is an
important
factor to be
considered,
as the
energy
absorbed in the air condenser
may
be
any
fraction of the
supplied
energy.
This would seem to make it
very
difficult to tell from
the measured or
computed capacity
of an air condenser its actual
capacity
or vibration
period, especially
if the condenser is of
very
small surface and is
charged
to a
very high potential.
As
many
important
results are
dependent upon
the correctness of the
estimation of the vibration
period,
this
subject
demands the most
careful
scrutiny
of other
investigators.
To reduce the
probable
error as much as
possible
in
experiments
of the kind alluded
to,
it is advisable to use
spheres
or
plates
of
large surface,
so as to
268 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TEFLA.
make the
density exceedingly
small.
Otherwise,
when it is
practicable,
an oil condenser should be used in
preference.
In
oil or other
liquid
dielectrics there are
seemingly
no such losses
as in
gaseous
media. It
being impossible
to exclude
entirely
the
gas
in condensers with solid
dielectrics,
such condensers should
be immersed in
oil,
for economical
reasons,
if
nothing
else
; they
can then be strained to the
utmost,
and will remain cool. In
Leyden jars
the loss due to air is
comparatively small,
as the tin-
foil
coatings
are
large,
close
together,
and the
charged
surfaces
not
directly exposed ;
but when the
potentials
are
very high,
the
loss
may
be more or less considerable
at,
or
near,
the
upper edge
of the
foil,
where the air is
principally
acted
upon.
If the
jar
be immersed in boiled-out
oil,
it will be
capable
of
performing
four times the amount of work which it can for
any length
of
time when used in the
ordinary way,
and the loss will be
inappre-
ciable.
It should not be
thought
that the loss in heat in an air con-
denser is
necessarily
associated with the formation of /-/VJ/r
streams or brushes. If a small
electrode,
inclosed in an un-
exhausted
bulb,
is connected to one of the terminals of the
coil,
streams can be seen to issue from the
electrode,
and the air in the
bulb is heated
;
if instead of a small electrode a
large sphere
is
inclosed in the
bulb,
no streams are
observed,
still the air is
heated.
j^or should it be
thought
that the
temperature
of an air con-
denser would
give
even an
approximate
idea of the loss in heat
incurred,
as in such case heat must be
given
off much more
quickly,
since there
is,
in addition to the
ordinary
radiation,
a
very
active
carrying away
of heat
by independent
carriers
going
on,
and since not
only
the
apparatus,
but the air at some distance
from it is heated in
consequence
of the collisions which must
occur.
Owing
to
this,
in
experiments
with such a
coil,
a rise of tem-
perature
can be
distinctly
observed
only
when the
body
connected
to the coil is
very
small. But with
apparatus
on a
larger
scale,
even a
body
of considerable bulk would be
heated, as,
for
instance,
the
body
of a
person ;
and I think that skilled
physicians might
make observations of
utility
in such
experiments, which,
if the
apparatus
were
judiciously designed,
would not
present
the
slight-
est
danger.
A
question
of some
interest, principally
to
meteorologists,
HIGH
FEEQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 269
presents
itself here. How does the earth behave ? The earth is
an air
condenser,
but is it a
perfect
or a
very imperfect
one a
mere sink of
energy
? There can be little doubt that to such
small disturbance as
might
be caused in an
experiment,
the earth
behaves as an almost
perfect
condenser. But it
might
be differ-
ent when its
charge
is set in
yibration
by
some sudden disturb-
ance
occurring
in the heavens. In such
case,
as before
stated,
probably only
little of the
energy
of the vibrations set
up
would
be lost into
space
in the form of
long
ether
radiations,
but most
of the
energy,
I
think,
would
spend
itself in molecular
impacts
and
collisions,
and
pass
off into
space
in the form of short
heat,
and
possibly light,
waves. As both the
frequency
of the vibra-
tions of the
charge
and the
potential
are in all
probability
exces-
sive,
the
energy
converted into heat
may
be considerable. Since
the
density
must be
unevenly distributed,
either in
consequence
of the
irregularity
of the earth's
surface,
or on account of the
condition of the
atmosphere
in various
places,
the effect
produced
would
accordingly vary
from
place
to
place.
Considerable varia-
tions in the
temperature
and
pressure
of the
atmosphere may
in
this manner be caused at
any point
of the surface of the earth.
The variations
may
be
gradual
or
very sudden,
according
to the
nature of the
general
disturbance,
and
may produce
rain and
storms,
or
locally modify
the weather in
any way.
From the remarks before
made,
one
may
see what an
import-
ant factor of loss the air in the
neighborhood
of a
charged
surface
becomes when the electric
density
is
great
and the
frequency
of
the
impulses
excessive. But the
action,
as
explained, implies
that the air is
insulating
that
is,
that it is
composed
of
independ-
ent carriers immersed in an
insulating
medium. This is the case
only
when the air is at
something
like
ordinary
or
greater,
or at
extremely small, pressure.
When the air is
slightly
rareiied and
conducting,
then true conduction losses occur also. In such
case,
of
course,
considerable
energy may
be
dissipated
into
space
even
with a
steady potential,
or with
impulses
of low
frequency,
if the
density
is
very great.
When the
gas
is -at
very
low
pressure,
an electrode is heated
more because
higher speeds
can be reached. If the
gas
around
the electrode is
strongly compressed,
the
displacements,
and
consequently
the
speeds,
are
very
small,
and the
heating
is in-
signincant.
But if in such case the
frequency
could be suffici-
ently
increased,
the electrode would be
brought
to a
high
tern-
270 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
perature
as well as if the
gas
were at
very
low
pressure ;
in
fact,
exhausting
the bulb is
only necessary
because we cannot
produce,
(and
possibly
not
convey)
currents of the
required frequency.
Returning
to the
subject
of electrode
lamps,
it is
obviously
of
advantage
in such a
lamp
to confine as much as
possible
the heat
to the electrode
by preventing
the circulation of the
gas
in the
bulb. If a
very
small bulb be
taken,
it would confine the heat
better than a
large
one,
but it
might
not be of sufficient
capacity
to be
operated
from the
coil, or,
if
so,
the
glass might get
too
hot. A
simple way
to
improve
in this direction is to
employ
a
globe
of the
required
size,
but to
place
a small
bulb,
the diameter
of which is
properly
estimated,
over the
refractory
button con-
FIG. 157.
tained in the
globe.
This
arrangement
is illustrated in
Fig.
157.
The
globe
L has in this case a
large
neck
n,
allowing
the small
bulb b to
slip through.
Otherwise the construction is the same
as shown in
Fig. 147,
for
example.
The small bulb is conveni-
ently supported upon
the stem
s, carrying
the
refractory
button
in. It is
separated
from the aluminum tube a
by
several
layers
of mica
M,
in order to
prevent
the
cracking
of the neck
by
the
rapid heating
of the aluminum tube
upon
a sudden
turning
on
of the current. The inside bulb should be as small as
possible
when it is desired to obtain
light only by
incandescence of the
electrode. If it is desired to
produce phosphorescence,
the bulb
man
FEEQUENCT
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CUERENTS. 271
should be
larger,
else it would be
apt
to
get
too
hot,
and the
phosphorescence
would cease. In this
arrangement
usually
only
the small bulb shows
phosphorescence,
as there is
practically
no
bombardment
against
the outer
globe.
In some of these bulbs
constructed as illustrated in
Fig. 157,
the small tube was coated
with
phosphorescent paint,
and beautiful effects were obtained.
Instead of
making
the inside bulb
large,
in order to avoid undue
heating,
it answers the
purpose
to make the electrode m
larger.
In this case the bombardment is weakened
by
reason of the
smaller electric
density.
Many
bulbs were constructed on the
plan
illustrated in
Fig.
158. Here a small bulb
Z>,
containing
the
refractory
button
>//,
upon being
exhausted to a
very high degree
Avas sealed in a
large
globe
L,
which w
T
as then
moderately
exhausted and sealed off.
The
principal advantage
of this construction was that it allowed
of
reaching extremely high
vacua, and,
at the same time of
using
a
large
bulb. It was
found,
in the course of
experiments
with
bulbs such as illustrated in
Fig. 158,
that it was well to make
the stem
*,
near the seal at
<*, very thick,
and the
leading-in
wire
//
thin,
as it occurred sometimes that the stem at e was heated
and the bulb was cracked. Often the outer
globe
L was exhausted
only just enough
to allow the
discharge
to
pass through,
and the
space
between the bulbs
appeared crimson, producing
a curious
effect. In some
cases,
when the exhaustion in
globe
L was
very
low,
and the air
good conducting,
it was found
necessary,
in order
to
bring
the button in to
high incandescence,
to
place, preferably
on the
upper part
of the neck of the
globe,
a tinfoil
coating
which
was connected to an insulated
body,
to the
ground,
or to the
other terminal of the
coil,
as the
highly conducting
air weakened
the effect
somewhat, probably by being
acted
upon inductively
from the wire
w,
where it entered the bulb at e. Another diffi-
culty which, however,
is
always present
when the
refractory
button is mounted in a
very
small bulb existed in the construc-
tion illustrated in
Fig.
158, namely,
the vacuum in, the bulb 1>
would be
impaired
in a
comparatively
short time.
The chief idea in the two last described constructions was to
confine the heat to the central
portion
of the
globe by preventing
the
exchange
of air. An
advantage
is
secured,
but
owing
to the
heating
of the inside bulb and slow
evaporation
of the
glass,
the
vacuum is hard to
maintain,
even if the construction illustrated
in
Fig.
157 be
chosen,
in which both bulbs communicate.
272 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA
TE8LA,
But
by
far the better
way
the ideal
way
would be to reach
sufficiently high frequencies.
The
higher
the
frequency,
the
slower would be the
exchange
of the
air,
and I think that a fre-
quency may
be
reached,
at which there would be no
exchange
whatever of the air molecules around the terminal. We would
then
produce
a flame in which there would be no
carrying away
of
material,
and a
queer
flame it would
be,
for it would be
rigid
!
With such
high frequencies
the inertia of the
particles
would come
into
play.
As the
brush,
or
flame,
would
gain rigidity
in virtue
of the inertia of the
particles,
the
exchange
of the latter would
be
prevented.
This would
necessarily occur, for,
the number of
impulses being augmented,
the
potential energy
of each would
diminish,
so that
finally only
atomic vibrations could be set
up,
and the motion of translation
through
measurable
space
would
cease. Thus an
ordinary gas
burner connected to a source of
rapidly alternating potential might
have its
efficiency augmented
to a certain
limit,
and this for two reasons because of the addi-
tional vibration
imparted,
and because of a
slowing
down of the
process
of
carrying
off. But the renewal
being
rendered
difficult,
a renewal
being
necessary
to maintain the
burner,
a continued
increase of the
frequency
of the
impulses, assuming they
could
be transmitted to and
impressed upon
the
flame,
would result in
the
"
extinction
"
of the
latter,
meaning by
this term
only
the
cessation of the chemical
process.
I
think, however,
that in the case of an electrode immersed in
a fluid
insulating medium,
and surrounded
by independent
car-
riers of electric
charges,
which can be acted
upon inductively,
a
sufficient
high frequency
of the
impulses
would
probably
result
in a
gravitation
of the
gas
all around toward the electrode. For
this it would be
only necessary
to assume that the
independent
bodies are
irregularly shaped ; they
would then turn toward the
electrode their side of the
greatest
electric
density,
and this
would be a
position
in which the fluid resistance to
approach
.would be smaller than that offered to the
receding.
The
general opinion,
I do not
doubt,
is that it is out of the
question
to reach
any
such
frequencies
as
might assuming
some
of the views before
expressed
to be true
produce any
of the re.
suits which I have
pointed
out as mere
possibilities.
This
may
be
so,
but in the course of these
investigations,
from the observation
of
many phenomena,
I have
gained
the conviction that these fre-
quencies
would be much lower than one is
apt
to estimate at
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 273
first. In a flame we set
up light
vibrations
by causing molecules,
or
atoms,
to collide. But what is the ratio of the
frequency
of
the collisions and that of the vibrations set
up? Certainly
it
must be
incomparably
smaller than that of the strokes of the bell
and the sound
vibrations,
or that of the
discharges
and the oscil-
lations of the condenser. We
may
cause the molecules of the
gas
to collide
by
the use of alternate electric
impulses
of
high
frequency,
and so we
may
imitate the
process
in a flame
;
and
from
experiments
with
frequencies
which we are now able to
obtain,
I think that the result is
producible
with
impulses
which
are transmissible
through
a conductor.
In connection with
thoughts
of a similar
nature,
it
appeared
to
me of
great
interest to demonstrate the
rigidity
of a
vibrating gas-
eous column.
Although
with such low
frequencies as, say 10,000
per second,
which I was able to obtain without
difficulty
from a
specially
constructed
alternator,
the task looked
discouraging
at
first,
I made a series of
experiments.
The trials with air at ordi-
nary pressure
led to no
result,
but with air
moderately
rarefied I
obtain what I think to be an unmistakable
experimental
evidence
of the
property sought
for. As a result of this kind
might
lead
able
investigators
to conclusions of
importance,
I will describe
one of the
experiments performed.
It is well known that when a tube is
slightly exhausted,
the
discharge may
be
passed through
it in the form of a thin lumin-
ous thread. When
produced
with currents of low
frequency,
obtained from a coil
operated
as
usual,
this thread is inert. If a
magnet
be
approached
to
it,
the
part
near the same is attracted
or
repelled, according
to the direction of the lines of force of the
magnet.
It occurred to me that if such a thread would be
pro-
duced with currents of
very high frequency,
it should be more
or less
rigid,
and as it was visible it could be
easily
studied.
Accordingly
I
prepared
a tube about one inch in diameter and
one metre
long,
with outside
coating
at each end. The tube was
exhausted to a
point
at
which, by
a little
working,
the thread dis-
charge
could be obtained. It must be remarked here that the
general aspect
of the
tube,
and the
degree
of
exhaustion,
are
quite
other than when
ordinary
low
frequency
currents are
used. As it was found
preferable
to work with one
terminal,
the tube
prepared
was
suspended
from the end of a wire con-
nected to the
terminal,
the tinfoil
coating being
connected to the
wire,
and to the lower
coating
sometimes a small insulated
plate
274 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
was attached. When the thread was
formed,
it extended
through
the
upper part
of the tube and lost itself in the lower end. If it
possessed rigidity
it
resembled,
not
exactly
an elastic cord
stretched
tight
between two
supports,
but a cord
suspended
from
a
height
with a small
weight
attached at the end. When the
finger
or a small
magnet
was
approached
to the
upper
end of the
luminous
thread,
it could be
brought
locally
out of
position by
electrostatic or
magnetic
action
;
and when the
disturbing object
was
very quickly removed,
an
analogous
result was
produced,
as
though
a
suspended
cord would be
displaced
and
quickly
released
near the
point
of
suspension.
In
doing
this the luminous thread
was set in
vibration,
and two
very sharply
marked
nodes,
and a
third indistinct
one,
were formed. The
vibration,
once set
up,
continued for
fully eight minutes,
dying gradually
out. The
speed
of the vibration often varied
perceptibly,
and it could be
observed that the electrostatic attraction of the
glass
affected the
vibrating
thread
;
but it was clear that the electrostatic action
was not the cause of the
vibration,
for the thread was most
gen-
erally stationary,
and could
always
be set in vibration
by passing
the
finger quickly
near the
upper part
of the tube. With a
magnet
the thread could be
split
in two and both
parts
vibrated.
By approaching
the hand to the lower
coating
of the
tube,
or
insulation
plate
if
attached,
the vibration was
quickened ; also,
as
far as I could
see, by raising
the
potential
or
frequency. Thus,
either
increasing
the
frequency
or
passing
a
stronger discharge
of the same
frequency corresponded
to a
tightening
of the cord.
I did not obtain
any experimental
evidence with condenser dis-
charges.
A luminous band excited in the bulb
by repeated
dis-
charges
of a
Leyden jar
must
possess rigidity,
and if deformed
and
suddenly released,
should vibrate. But
probably
the amount
of
vibrating
matter is so small that in
spite
of the extreme
speed,
the inertia cannot
prominently
assert itself.
Besides,
the obser-
vation in such a case is rendered
extremely
difficult on account
of the fundamental vibration.
The demonstration of the fact which still needs better ex-
perimental
confirmation that a
vibrating gaseous
column
pos-
sesses
rigidity, might greatly modify
the views of thinkers.
When with low
frequencies
and
insignificant potentials
indications
of that
property may
be
noted,
how must a
gaseous
medium be-
liave under the influence of enormous electrostatic stresses which
may
be active in the interstellar
space,
and which
may
alternate
HTGH
FREQUKNCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 275
with inconceivable
rapidity
? The existence of such an electro-
static, rhythmically throbbing
force of a
vibrating
electrostatic
field would show a
possible way
how solids
might
have formed
from the
ultra-gaseous uterus,
and how transverse and all kinds
of vibrations
may
be transmitted
through
a
gaseous
medium fill-
ing
all
space. Then,
ether
might
be a true
fluid,
devoid of
rigidity,
and at
rest,
it
being merely necessary
as a
connecting
link to enable interaction. What determines the
rigidity
of a
body
? It must be the
speed
and the amount of motive matter.
In a
gas
the
speed may
be
considerable,
but the
density
is exceed-
ingly
small
;
in a
liquid
the
speed
would be
likely
to be
small,
though
the
density may
be considerable
;
and in both cases the
inertia resistance offered to
displacement
is
practically
nil. But
place
a
gaseous (or liquid)
column in an
intense,rapidly alternating
electrostatic
field,
set the
particles vibrating
with enormous
speeds,
then the inertia resistance asserts itself. A
body might
move with more or less freedom
through
the
vibrating mass,
but
as a whole it would be
rigid.
There is a
subject
which I must mention in connection with
these
experiments
: it is that of
high
vacua. This is a
subject,
the
study
of which is not
only interesting,
but
useful,
for it
may
lead to results of
great practical importance.
In commercial
ap-'
paratus,
such as incandescent
lamps, operated
from
ordinary
systems
of
distribution,
a much
higher
vacuum than is obtained at
present
would not secure a
very great advantage.
In such a case
the work is
performed
on the
filament,
and the
gas
is little con-
cerned
;
the
improvement,
therefore,
would be but
trifling.
But
when we
begin
to use
very high frequencies
and
potentials,
the
action of the
gas
becomes all
important,
and the
degree
of ex-
haustion
materially
modifies the results. As
long
as
ordinary
coils,
even
very large
ones,
were
used,
the
study
of the
subject
was
limited,
because
just
at a
point
when it became most inter-
esting
it had to be
interrupted
on account of the
"
non-striking
"
vacuum
being
reached. But at
present
we are able to obtain
from a small
disruptive discharge
coil
potentials
much
higher
than even the
largest
coil was
capable
of
giving, and,
what is
more,
we can make the
potential
alternate with
great rapidity.
Both of these results enable us now to
pass
a luminous
discharge
through
almost
any
vacua
obtainable,
and the field of our inves-
tigations
is
greatly
extended. Think we as we
may,
of all the
possible
directions to
develop
a
practical
illnminant,
the line of
276 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
high
vacua seems to be the most
promising
at
present.
But to
reach extreme vacua the
appliances
must be much more
improved,
and ultimate
perfection
will not be attained until we shall have
discharged
the mechanical and
perfected
an electrical vacuum
pump.
Molecules and atoms can be thrown out of a bulb under
the action of an enormous
potential
: this will be the
principle
of the vacuum
pump
of the future. For the
present,
we must
secure the best results we can with mechanical
appliances.
In
this
respect,
it
might
not be out of the
way
to
say
a few words
about the method
of,
and
apparatus for, producing excessively
FIG. 159.
high degrees
of exhaustion of which I have availed
myself
in the
course of these
investigations.
It is
very probable
that other ex-
perimenters
have used similar
arrangements ;
but as it is
possible
that there
may
be an item of interest in their
description,
a few
remarks,
which will render this
investigation
more
complete,
might
be
permitted.
The
apparatus
is illustrated in a
drawing
shown in
Fig.
159.
s
represents
a
Sprengel pump,
which has been
specially
con-
structed to better suit the work
required.
The
stop-cock
which
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 277
is
usually employed
has been
omitted,
and instead of it a hollow
stopper
s has been fitted in the neck of the reservoir K. This
stopper
has a small hole
A,
through
which the
mercury
descends
;
the size of the outlet o
being properly
determined with
respect
to the section of the fall tube
,
which is sealed to the reservoir
instead of
being
connected to it in the usual manner. This
arrangement
overcomes the
imperfections
and troubles which
often arise from the use of the
stopcock
on the reservoir and the
connections of the latter with the fall tube.
The
pump
is connected
through
a
(J-
sna
ped
tube t to a
very
large
reservoir &
lm
Especial
care was taken in
fitting
the
grind-
ing
surfaces of the
stoppers p
and
plt
and both of these and the
mercury caps
above them were made
exceptionally long.
After
the
U-shaped
tube was fitted and
put
in
place,
it was
heated,
so
as to soften and take off the strain
resulting
from
imperfect
fitting.
The
(J
-shaped
tube was
provided
with a
stopcock
c.
and two
ground
connections
y
and
y
l
one for a small bulb
b,
usually containing
caustic
potash,
and the other for the receiver
/,
to be exhausted.
The reservoir E
b
was connected
by
means of a rubber tube to
a
slightly larger
reservoir
R^,
each of the two reservoirs
being
provided
with a
stopcock
c
t
and c
2, respectively.
The reservoir
RJ
could be raised and lowered
by
a wheel and
rack,
and the
range
of its motion was so determined that when it was filled
with
mercury
and the
stopcock
c
2 closed,
so as to form a Torri-
cellian vacuum in it when
raised,
it could be lifted so
high
that
the reservoir
EJ
would stand a little above
stopcock
c^ ;
and when
this
stopcock
was closed and the reservoir
Eg descended,
so as to
form a Torricellian vacuum in reservoir
R,,
it could be lowered
so far as to
completely empty
the
latter,
the
mercury filling
the
reservoir
RJ
up
to a little above
stopcock
c
2
.
The
capacity
of the
pump
and of the connections was taken
as small as
possible relatively
to the volume of
reservoir,
E
l5
since,
of
course,
the
degree
of exhaustion
depended upon
the
ratio of these
quantities.
With this
apparatus
I combined the usual means indicated
by
former
experiments
for the
production
of
very high
vacua. In
most of the
experiments
it was most convenient to use caustic
potash.
I
may
venture to
say,
in
regard
to its
use,
that much
time is saved and a more
perfect
action of the
pump
insured
by
fusing
and
boiling
the
potash
as soon
as,
or even
before,
the
278 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
pump
settles down. If this course is not
followed,
the
sticks,
as
ordinarily employed, may give
off moisture at a certain
very
slow
rate,
and the
pump may
work for
many
hours without
reaching
a
very high
vacuum. The
potash
was heated either
hy
a
spirit lamp
or
by passing
a
discharge through it,
or
by passing
a current
through
a wire contained in it. The
advantage
in the
latter case was that the
heating couldjbe
more
rapidly repeated.
Generally
the
process
of exhaustion was the
following
: At
the
start,
the
stop-cocks
c and c
t
being open,
and all other con-
nections
closed,
the reservoir n> was raised so far that the mer-
cury
filled the reservoir R
t
and a
part
of the narrow
connecting
U-shaped
tube. When the
pump^was
set to
work,
the
mercury
would,
of
course, quickly
rise in the
tube,
and reservoir
RJ
was
lowered,
the
experimenter keeping ^the mercury
at about the
same level. The reservoir
RJ
wasj
balanced
by
a
long spring
which facilitated the
operation,
and the friction of the
parts
was
generally
sufficient to
keep
it in almost
any position.
When the
Sprengel pump
had done its
work,
the'reservoir
R%
was further low-
ered and the
mercury
descended in R
t
and tilled
R>, whereupon stop-
cock
02
was closed. The air
adhering
to the walls of R
t
and that
absorbed
by
the
mercury
was carried
off,
and to free the
mercury
of all air the reservoir E
2
was for a
long
time worked
up
and
down.
During
this
process
some
air,
which would
gather
below
stopcock
c
2,
was
expelled
from R
2
by lowering
it far
enough
and
opening
the
stopcock, closing
the latter
again
before
raising
the
reservoir. When all the air had been
expelled
from the
mercury,
and no air would
gather
in
Rg
when it was
lowered,
the caustic
potash
was resorted to. The reservoir
RJ
was now
again
raised
until the
mercury
in
RJ
stood above
stopcock
Ci.
The caustic
potash
was fused and
boiled,
and moisture
'partly
carried off
by
the
pump
and
partly
re-absorbed
;
and this
process
of
heating
and
cooling
was
repeated many times,
and each
time, upon
the
moisture
being
absorbed or carried
off,
the reservoir
B^
was for
a
long
time raised and lowered. In this manner all the moisture
was carried off from the
mercury,
and both the reservoirs were
in
proper
condition to be used. The reservoir R
2
was then
again
raised to the
top,
and the
pump
was
kept working
for a
long
time. When the
highest
vacuum obtainable with the
pump
had
been
reached,
the
potash
bulb was
usually wrapped
with cotton
which was
sprinkled
with ether so as to
keep
the
potash
at a
very
low
temperature,
then the reservoir R
2
was
lowered,
and
upon
reservoir R
t
being emptied
the receiver
was]quickly
sealed
up.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 279
When a new bulb was
put on,
the
mercury
was
always
raised
above
stopcock c,,
which was
closed,
so as to
always keep
the
mercury
and both the reservoirs in fine
condition,
and the mer-
cury
was never withdrawn from R
t
except
when the
pump
had
reached the
highest degree
of exhaustion. It is
necessary
to ob-
serve this rule if it is desired to use the
apparatus
to
advantage.
By
means of this
arrangement
I was able to
proceed very
quickly,
and when the
apparatus
was in
perfect
order it was
pos-
sible to reach the
phosphorescent stage
in a small bulb in less
than fifteen
minutes,
which is
certainly very quick
work for a
small
laboratory arrangement requiring
all in all about 100
pounds
of
mercury.
With
ordinary
small bulbs the ratio of the
capacity
of the
pump, receiver,
and
connections,
and that of reservoir R
was about 1 to
20,
and the
degrees
of exhaustion reached were
necessarily very high, though
I am unable to make a
precise
and
reliable statement how far the exhaustion was carried.
What
impresses
the
investigator
most in the course of these
experiences
is the behavior of
gases
when
subjected
to
great^rap-
idly alternating^
electrostatic stresses. But he must remain in
doubt as to whether the effects observed are due
wholly
to the
molecules,
or
atoms,
of the
gas
which chemical
analysis
discloses
to
us,
or whether there enters into
play
another medium of a
gaseous nature,
comprising
atoms,
or
molecules,
immersed in a
fluid
pervading
the
space.
Such a medium
surely
must
exist,
and I am convinced
that,
for
instance,
even if air were
absent,
the surface and
neighborhood
of a
body
in
space
would be heated
by rapidly alternating
the
potential
of the
body;
but no such
heating
of the surface or
neighborhood
could occur if all free
atoms were removed and
only
a
homogeneous, incompressible,
and
elastic fluid such as ether is
supposed
to be would
remain,
for
then there would be no
impacts,
no collisions. In such a
case,
as far as the
body
itself is
concerned, only
frictional losses in the
inside could occur.
It is a
striking
fact that the
discharge through
a
gas
is es-
tablished with
ever-increasing
freedom as the
frequency
of the
impulses
is
augmented.
It behaves in this
respect quite contrarily
to a metallic conductor. In the latter the
impedance
enters
prominently
into
play
as the
frequency
is
increased,
but the
gas
acts much as a series of condensers would
;
the
facility
with
which the
discharge passes through,
seems to
depend
on the rate
of
change
of
potential.
If it acts
so,
then in a vacuum tube even
280 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
of
great length,
and no matter how
strong
the
current,
self-in-
duction could not assert itself to
any appreciable degree.
We
have, then,
as far as we can now
see,
in the
gas
a conductor
which is
capable
of
transmitting
electric
impulses
of
any
fre-
quency
which we
may
be able to
produce.
Could the
frequency
be
brought high enough,
then a
queer system
of electric
distribution,
which would be
likely
to interest
gas companies, might
be real-
ized : metal
pipes
filled with
gas
the metal
being
the
insulator,
the
gas
the conductor
supplying phosphorescent bulbs,
or
per-
haps
devices as
yet
uninvented. It is
certainly possible
to take
a hollow core of
copper, rarefy
the
gas
in the
same,
and
by pas-
sing impulses
of
sufficiently high frequency through
a circuit
around
it, bring
the
gas
inside to a
high degree
of incandescence
;
but as to the nature of the forces there would be considerable
uncertainty,
for it would be doubtful whether with such
impulses
the
copper
core would act as a static screen. Such
paradoxes
and
apparent impossibilities
we encounter at
every step
in this line of
work,
and therein
lies,
to a
great extent,
the charm of the
study.
I have here a short and wide tube which is exhausted to a
high degree
and covered with a substantial
coating
of
bronze,
the
coating barely allowing
the
light
to shine
through.
A metallic
cap,
with a hook for
suspending
the
tube,
is fastened around the
middle
portion
of the
latter,
the
clasp being
in contact with the
bronze
coating.
I now want to
light
the
gas
inside
by suspend-
ing
the tube on a wire connected to the coil.
Any
one who
would
try
the
experiment
for the first
time,
not
having any pre-
vious
experience,
would
probably
take care to be
quite
alone
when
making
the
trial,
for fear that he
might
become the
joke
of
his assistants.
Still,
the bulb
lights
in
spite
of the metal
coating,
and the
light
can be
distinctly perceived through
the latter. A
long
tube covered with aluminum bronze
lights
when held in
one hand the other
touching
the terminal of the coil
quite
powerfully.
It
might
be
objected
that the
coatings
are not
sufficiently conducting ; still,
even if
they
were
highly resistant,
they ought
to screen the
gas. They certainly
screen it
perfectly
in a condition of
rest,
but far from
perfectly
when the
charge
is
surging
in the
coating.
But the loss of
energy
which occurs
within the
tube,
notwithstanding
the
screen,
is occasioned
prin-
cipally by
the
presence
of the
gas.
Were we to take a
large
hollow metallic
sphere
and fill it with a
perfect, incompressible,
fluid
dielectric,
there would be no loss inside of the
sphere,
and
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 281
consequently
the inside
might
be considered as
perfectly screened,
though
the
potential
be
very rapidly alternating.
Even were
the
sphere
filled with
oil,
the loss would be
incomparably
smaller
than when the fluid is
replaced by
a
gas,
for in the latter case the
force
produces displacements ;
that means
impact
and collisions
in the inside.
No matter what the
pressure
of the
gas may be,
it becomes an
important
factor in the
heating
of a conductor when the electric
density
is
great
and the
frequency very high.
That in the heat-
ing
of conductors
by lightning discharges,
air is an element of
great importance,
is almost as certain as an
experimental
fact. I
may
illustrate the action of the air
by
the
following experiment:
I take a short tube which is exhausted to a moderate
degree
and
has a
platinum
wire
running through
the middle from one end
to the other. I
pass
a
steady
or low
frequency
current
through
the
wire,
and it is heated
uniformly
in all
parts.
The
heating
here is due to
conduction,
or frictional
losses,
and the
gas
around
the wire has as far as we can see no function to
perform.
But now let me
pass
sudden
discharges,
or
high frequency
cur-
rents, through
the wire.
Again
the wire is
heated,
this time
principally
on the ends and least in the middle
portion ;
and if
the
frequency
of the
impulses,
or the rate of
change,
is
high
enough,
the wire
might
as well be cut in the middle as
not,
for
practically
all
heating
is due to the rarefied
gas.
Here the
gas
might only
act as a conductor of no
impedance diverting
the cur-
rent from the wire as the
impedance
of the latter is
enormously
increased,
and
merely heating
the ends of the wire
by
reason of
their resistance to the
passage
of the
discharge.
But it is not
at all
necessary
that the
gas
in the tube should be
conducting
;
it
might
be at an
extremely
low
pressure,
still the ends of the wire
would be heated
as, however,
is ascertained
by experience
only
the two ends would in such case not be
electrically
con-
nected
through
the
gaseous
medium. Now what with these fre-
quencies
and
potentials
occurs in an exhausted
tube,
occurs in the
lightning discharges
at
ordinary pressure.
We
only
need re-
member one of the facts arrived at in the course of these investi-
gations, namely,
that to
impulses
of
very high frequency
the
gas
at
ordinary pressure
behaves much in the same manner as
though
it were at
moderately
low
pressure.
I think that in
lightning
discharges frequently
wires or
conducting objects
are volatilized
merely
because air is
present,
and
that,
were the conductor im-
882 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
merged in an
insulating liquid,
it would be
safe,
for then the
energy
would have to
spend
itself somewhere else. From the
behavior of
gases
under sudden
impulses
of
high potential,
I am
led to conclude that there can be no surer
way
of
diverting
a
lightning discharge
than
by affording
it a
passage through
a
volume of
gas,
if such a
thing
can be done in a
practical
manner.
There are two more features
upon
which I think it
necessary
to dwell in connection with these
experiments
the
"
radiant
state
"
and the
"
non-striking
vacuum."
Any
one who has studied Crookes' work must have received
the
impression
that the
"
radiant state
"
is a
property
of the
gas
inseparably
connected with an
extremely high degree
of ex-
haustion. But it should be remembered that the
phenomena
observed in an exhausted vessel are limited to the character and
capacity
of the
apparatus
which is made use of. 1 think that in
a bulb a
molecule,
or
atom,
does not
precisely
move in a
straight
line because it meets no
obstacle,
but because the
velocity
im-
parted
to it is sufficient to
propel
it in a
sensibly straight
line.
The mean free
path
is one
thing,
but the
velocity
the
energy
associated with the
moving body
is
another,
and under
ordinary
circumstances I believe that it is a mere
question
of
potential
or
speed.
A
disruptive discharge coil,
when the
potential
is
pushed
very
far,
excites
phosphorescence
and
projects shadows,
at com-
paratively
low
degrees
of exhaustion. In a
lightning discharge,
matter moves in
straight
lines at
ordinary pressure
when the
mean free
path
is
exceedingly small,
and
frequently images
of
wires or other metallic
objects
have been
produced by
the
par-
ticles thrown off in
straight
lines.
I have
prepared
a bulb to illustrate
by
an
experiment
the
correctness of these assertions. In a
globe
L,
Fig.
160,
I have
mounted
upon
a
lamp
filament
f
a
piece
of lime /. The
lamp
filament is connected with a wire which leads into the
bulb,
and
the
general
construction of the latter is as indicated in
Fig. 148,
before described. The bulb
being suspended
from a wire
connected to the terminal of the
coil,
and the latter
being
set to
work,
the lime
piece
I and the
projecting parts
of the filament
f
are bombarded. The
degree
of exhaustion is
just
such that with
the
potential
the coil is
capable
of
giving, phosphorescence
of the
glass
is
produced,
but
disappears
as soon as the vacuum is im-
paired.
The lime
containing moisture,
and moisture
being given
off as soon as
heating
occurs,
the
phosphorescence
lasts
only
for
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 283
a few moments. When the lime has been
sufficiently
heated,
enough
moisture has been
given
oft' to
impair materially
the
vacuum of the bulb. As the bombardment
goes
on,
one
point
of the lime
piece
is more heated than other
points,
and the result
is that
finally practically
all the
discharge passes through
that
point
which is
intensely heated,
and a white stream of lime
par-
ticles
(Fig. 160)
then breaks forth from that
point.
This stream
is
composed
of
"
radiant
"
matter, yet
the
degree
of exhaustion
is low. But the
particles
move in
straight
lines because the
velocity imparted
to them is
great,
and this is due to three
causes to the
great
electric
density,
the
high
temperature
of the
small
point,
and the fact that the
particles
of the lime are
easily
FIG. 160.
torn and thrown off far more
easily
than those of carbon. With
frequencies
such as we are able to
obtain,
the
particles
are
bodily
thrown off and
projected
to a considerable distance
;
but with
sufficiently high frequencies
no such
thing
would occur
;
in such
case
only
a stress would
spread
or a vibration would be
propa-
gated through
the bulb. It would be out of the
question
to
reacli
any
such
frequency
on the
assumption
that the atoms move
with the
speed
of
light
;
but I believe that such a
thing
is
impos-
sible
;
for this an enormous
potential
would be
required.
With
potentials
which we are able to
obtain,
even with a
disrup-
tive
discharge
coil,
the
speed
must be
quite insignificant.
As to the
"
non-striking
vacuum,"
the
point
to be noted
is,
that it can occur
only
with low
frequency impulses,
and it is
284 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
necessitated
by
the
impossibility
of
carrying
off
enough energy
with such
impulses
in
high vacuum,
since the few atoms which
are around the terminal
upon coining
in contact with the
same,
are
repelled
and
kept
at a distance for a
comparatively long
period
of
time,
and not
enough
work can be
performed
to render
the effect
perceptible
to the
eye.
If the difference of
potential
between the terminals is
raised,
the dielectric breaks down. But
with
very high frequency impulses
there is no
necessity
for such
breaking down,
since
any
amount of work can be
performed by
continually agitating
the atoms in the exhausted
vessel, provided
the
frequency
is
higli enough.
It is
easy
to reach even with
FIG. 161. FIG. 162.
frequencies
obtained from an alternator as here used a
stage
at
which the
discharge
does not
pass
between two electrodes in a
narrow
tube,
each of these
being
connected to one of the termi-
nals of the
coil,
but it is difficult to reach a
point
at which a
luminous
discharge
would not occur around each electrode.
A
thought
which
naturally presents
itself in connection with
high frequency currents,
is to make use of their
powerful
electro-
dynamic
inductive action to
produce light
effects in a sealed
glass
globe.
The
leading-in
wire is one of the defects of the
present
incandescent
lamp,
and if no other
improvement
were
made,
that
imperfection
at least should be done
away
with.
Following
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND 1110U POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 285
this
thought,
I have carried on
experiments
in various
directions,
of which some were indicated in
my
former
paper.
I
may
here
mention one or two more lines of
experiment
which have been
followed
up.
Many
bulbs were constructed as shown in
Fig.
161 and
Fig.
162.
In
Fig. 161,
a wide
tube, T,
was sealed to a smaller W
shaped
tube
u,
of
phosphorescent glass.
In the tube
T,
was
placed
a coil
c,
of aluminum
wire,
the ends of which were
provided
with
small
spheres,
t and
^,
of
aluminum,
and reached into the u tube.
The tube T was
slipped
into a socket
containing
a
primary coil,
through
which
usually
the
discharges
of
Leyden jars
were di-
rected,
and the rarefied
gas
in the small u tube was excited to
strong luminosity by
the
high-tension
current induced in the coil c.
When
Leyden jar discharges
were used to induce currents in the
coil
c,
it was found
necessary
to
pack
the tube T
tightly
with in-
sulating powder,
as a
discharge
would occur
frequently
between
the turns of the
coil, especially
when the
primary
was thick and
the air
gap, through
which the
jars discharged, large,
and no
little trouble was
experienced
in this
way.
In
Fig.
162 is illustrated another form of the bulb constructed.
In this case a tube T is sealed to a
globe
L. The tube contains a
coil
c,
the ends of which
pass through
two small
glass
tubes t
and
ti,
which are sealed to the tube T. Two
refractory
buttons
m and m
t
are mounted on
lamp
filaments which are fastened to
the ends of the wires
passing through
the
glass
tubes t and
,.
Generally
in bulbs made on this
plan
the
globe
L communicated
with the tube T. For this
purpose
the ends of the small tubes t
and
ti
were heated
just
a trifle in the
burner,
merely
to hold the
wires,
but not to interfere with the communication. The tube
T,
with the small
tubes,
wires
through
the
same,
and the
refractory
buttons in and m
l9
were first
prepared,
and then sealed to
globe L,
whereupon
the coil c was
slipped
in and the connections made to
its ends. The tube was then
packed
with
insulating powder,
jamming
the latter as
tight
as
possible up
to
very nearly
the end
;
then it was closed and
only
a small hole left
through
which the
remainder of the
powder
was
introduced,
and
finally
the end of
the tube was closed.
Usually
in bulbs constructed as shown in
Fig.
162 an aluminum tube a was fastened to the
upper
end s
of each of the tubes t and
b
in order to
protect
that
end
against
the heat. The buttons m and
m^
could be
brought
to
any degree
286 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
of incandescence
by passing
the
discharges
of
Leyden jars
around the coil c. In such bulbs with two buttons a
very
curi-
ous effect is
produced by
the formation of the shadows of each
of the two buttons.
Another line of
experiment,
which has been
assiduously
fol-
lowed,
was to induce
by electro-dynamic
induction a current or
luminous
discharge
in an exhausted tube or bulb. This matter
has received such able treatment at the hands of Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
that I could add but little to what he has made
known,
even had I made it the
special subject
of this lecture.
Still,
since
experiments
in this line have
gradually
led me to the
pres-
ent views and
results,
a few words must be devoted here to this
subject.
It has
occured,
no
doubt,
to
many
that as a vacuum tube is
made
longer,
the electromotive force
per
unit
length
of the
tube,
necessary
to
pass
a luminous
discharge through
the
latter,
becomes
continually
smaller
; therefore,
if the exhausted tube be made
long enough,
even with low
frequencies
a luminous
discharge
could be induced in such a tube closed
upon
itself. Such a tube
might
be
placed
around a hall or on a
ceiling,
and at once a sim-
ple appliance capable
of
giving
considerable
light
would be ob-
tained. But this would be an
appliance
hard to manufacture
and
extremely unmanageable.
It would not do to make the
tube
up
of small
lengths,
because there would be with
ordinary
frequencies
considerable loss in the
coatings,
and
besides,
if coat-
ings
were
used,
it would be better to
supply
the current
directly
to the tube
by connecting
the
coatings
to a transformer. But
even if all
objections
of such nature were
removed,
with
low
frequencies
the
light
conversion itself would be
inefficient,
as I have before stated. In
using extremely high frequencies
the
length
of the
secondary
in other
words,
the size of the ves-
sel can be reduced as much as
desired,
and the
efficiency
of the
light
conversion is
increased, provided
that means are invented
for
efficiently obtaining
such
high frequencies.
Thus one is
led,
from theoretical and
practical considerations,
to the use of
high
frequencies,
and this means
high
electromotive forces and small
currents in the
primary.
When one works with condenser
charges
and
they
are the
only
means
up
to the
present
known
for
reaching
these extreme
frequencies
one
gets
to electromotive
forces of several thousands of volts
per
turn of the
primary.
"We
cannot
multiply
the
electro-dynamic
inductive effect
by taking
man
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 287
more turns in the
primary,
for we arrive at the conclusion that
the best
way
is to work with one
single
turn
though
we must
sometimes
depart
from this rule and we must
get along
with
whatever inductive effect we can obtain with one turn. But be-
fore one has
long experimented
with the extreme
frequencies
re-
quired
to set
up
in a small bulb an electromotive force of several
thousands of
volts,
one realizes the
great importance
of electrosta-
tic
effects,
and these effects
grow relatively
to the
electro-dyna-
mic in
significance
as the
frequency
is increased.
Kow,
if
anything
is desirable in this
case,
it is to increase the
frequency,
and this would make it still worse for the electro-
dynamic
effects. On the other
hand,
it is
easy
to exalt the elec-
trostatic action as far as one likes
by taking
more turns on the
secondary,
or
combining
self-induction and
capacity
to raise the
potential.
It should also be remembered
that,
in
reducing
the
the current to the smallest value and
increasing
the
potential,
the electric
impulses
of
high frequency
can be more
easily
trans-
mitted
through
a conductor.
These and similar
thoughts
determined me to devote more at
tention to the electrostatic
phenomena,
and to endeavor to
pro-
duce
potentials
as
high
as
possible,
and
alternating
as fast as
they
could be made to alternate. I then found that I could ex-
cite vacuum tubes at considerable distance from a conductor
connected to a
properly
constructed
coil,
and that I
could, by
converting
the
oscillatory
current of a conductor to a
higher po-
tential,
establish electrostatic
alternating
fields which acted
through
the whole extent of the
room, lighting up
a tube no
matter where it was held in
space.
I
thought
I
recognized
that
I had made a
step
in
advance,
and I have
persevered
in this line
;
but I wish to
say
that I share with all lovers of science and
pro-
gress
the one and
only
desire to reach a result of
utility
to men
in
any
direction to which
thought
or
experiment may
lead me.
I think that this
departure
is the
right one,
for I cannot
see,
from the observation of the
phenomena
which manifest them-
selves as the
frequency
is
increased,
what there would remain to
act between two circuits
conveying,
for
instance, impulses
of
several hundred millions
per second, except
electrostatic forces.
Even with such
trifling frequencies
the
energy
would be
practically
all
potential,
and
my
conviction has
grown strong that,
to whatever
kind of motion
light may
be
due,
it is
produced by
tremendous
electrostatic stresses
vibrating
with extreme
rapidity.
288 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Of all these
phenomena
observed with
currents,
or electric
impulses,
of
high frequency,
the most
fascinating
for an aud-
ience are
certainly
those which are noted in an electrostatic field
acting through
considerable
distance;
and the best an unskilled
lecturer can do is to
begin
and finish with the exhibition of these
singular
effects. I take a tube in
my
hand and move it
about,
and it is
lighted
wherever I
may
hold
it; throughout space
the
invisible forces act. But I
may
take another tube and it
might
not
light,
the vacuum
being very high.
I excite it
by
means of a
disruptive discharge
coil,
and now it will
light
in the electrostatic
FIG. 163. FIG. 164.
field. I
may put
it
away
for a few weeks or
months,
still it retains
the
faculty
of
being
excited. What
change
have I
produced
in the
tube in the act of
exciting
it? If a motion
imparted
to
atoms,
it
is difficult to
perceive
how it can
persist
so
long
without
being
arrested
by
frictional losses
;
and if a strain exerted in the dielec-
tric,
such as a
simple
electrification would
produce,
it is
easy
to
see how it
may persist indefinitely,
but
very
difficult to under-
stand
why
such a condition should aid the excitation when we
have to deal with
potentials
which are
rapidly alternating.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 289
Since I have exhibited these
phenomena
for the first
time,
I
have obtained some other
interesting
effects. For
instance,
I
have
produced
the incandescence of a
button, filament,
or wire
enclosed in a tube. To
get
to this result it was
necessary
to
economize the
energy
which is obtained from the
field,
and direct
most of it on the small
body
to be rendered incandescent. At
the
beginning
the task
appeared difficult,
but the
experiences
gathered permitted
me to reach the result
easily.
In
Fig.
163
and
Fig. 164,
two such tubes are
illustrated,
which are
prepared
for
the occasion. In
Fig.
163 a short tube
TJ,
sealed to another
long
tube
T,
is
provided
with a stem
.$,
with a
platinum
wire sealed in
the latter. A
very
thin
lamp
filament
I,
is fastened to this wire
and connection to the outside is made
through
a thin
copper
wire
w. The tube is
provided
with outside and inside
coatings,
c and
GJ, respectively,
and is filled as far as
the
coatings
reach with con-
ducting,
and the
space
above with
insulating, powder.
These
coatings
are
merely
used to enable me to
perform
two
experi-
ments with the tube
namely,
to
produce
the effect desired either
by
direct connection of the
body
of the
experimenter
or of an-
other
body
to the wire
w,
or
by acting inductively through
the
glass.
The stem s is
provided
with an aluminum tube
,
for
purposes
before
explained,
and
only
a small
part
of the filament
reaches out of this tube.
By holding
the tube T
:
anywhere
in
the electrostatic
field,
the filament is rendered incandescent.
A more
interesting piece
of
apparatus
is illustrated in
Fig.
164.
The construction is the same as
before, only
instead of the
lamp
filament a small
platinum
wire
^>,
sealed in a stem
s,
and bent
above it in a
circle,
is connected to the
copper
wire
w,
which is
joined
to an inside
coating
c. A small stem *
M
is
provided
with
a
needle,
on the
point
of which is
arranged,
to rotate
very freely,
a
very light
fan of mica v. To
prevent
the fan from
falling out,
a thin stem of
glass </,
is bent
properly
and fastened to the alu-
minum tube. When the
glass
tube is held
anywhere
in the elec-
trostatic field the
platinum
wire becomes
incandescent,
and the
mica vanes are rotated
very
fast.
Intense
phosphorescence may
be excited in a bulb
by merely
connecting
it to a
plate
within the
field,
and the
plate
need not
be
any larger
than an
ordinary lamp
shade. The
phosphores-
cence excited with these currents is
incomparably
more
powerful
than with
ordinary apparatus.
A small
phosphorescent bulb,
when attached to a wire connected to a
coil,
emits sufficient
light
290 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
to allow
reading ordinary print
at a distance of five to six
paces.
It was of interest to see how some of the
phosphorescent
bulbs
of Professor Crookes would behave with these
currents,
and he
has had the kindness to lend me a few for the occasion. The
effects
produced
are
magnificent, especially by
the
sulphide
of
calcium and
sulphide
of zinc. With the
disruptive discharge
coil
they glow intensely merely by holding
them in the hand and
connecting
the
body
to the terminal of the coil.
To whatever results
investigations
of this kind
may
lead,
the
chief interest
lies,
for the
present,
in the
possibilities they
offer
for the
production
of an efficient
illuminating
device. In no
branch of electric
industry
is an advance more desired than in
the manufacture of
light. Every thinker,
when
considering
the
barbarous methods
employed,
the
deplorable
losses incurred in
our best
systems
of
light production,
must have asked
himself,
What is
likely
to be the
light
of the future ? Is it to be an in-
candescent
solid,
as in the
present lamp,
or an incandescent
gas,
or a
phosphorescent body,
or
something
like a
burner,
but in-
comparably
more efficient ?
There is little chance to
perfect
a
gas
burner
; not, perhaps,
because human
ingenuity
has been bent
upon
that
problem
for
centuries without a radical
departure having
been made
though
the
argument
is not devoid of force but because in a
burner the
highest
vibrations can never be
reached, except by
passing through
all the low ones. For how is a flame to
proceed
unless
by
a fall of lifted
weights
? Such
process
cannot be main-
tained without
renewal,
and renewal is
repeated passing
from low
to
high
vibrations. One
way only
seems to be
open
to
improve
a
burner,
and that is
by trying
to reach
higher degrees
of incan-
descence.
Higher
incandescence is
equivalent
to a
quicker
vi-
bration : that means more
light
from the same
material,
and that
again,
means niore
economy.
In this direction some
improve-
ments have been
made,
but the
progress
is
hampered by many
limitations.
Discarding, then,
the
burner,
there remains the
three
ways
first
mentioned,
which are
essentially
electrical.
Suppose
the
light
of the immediate future to be a
solid,
ren-
dered incandescent
by electricity.
Would it not seem that it is
better to
employ
a small button than a frail filament ? From
many
considerations it
certainly
must be concluded that a button
is
capable
of a
higher economy, assuming,
of
course,
the diffi-
culties connected with the
operation
of such a
lamp
to be effec-
HIGH
FRKQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 291
lively
overcome. But to
light
such a
lamp
we
require
a
high
potential ;
and to
get
this
economically,
we must use
high
fre-
quencies.
Such considerations
apply
even more to the
production
of
light
by
the incandescence of a
gas,
or
by phosphorescence.
In all
cases we
require high frequencies
and
high potentials.
These
thoughts
occurred to me a
long
time
ago.
Incidentally
we
gain, by
the use of
high frequencies, many
ad-
vantages,
such as
higher economy
in the
light production,
the
possibility
of
working
with one
lead,
the
possibility
of
doing away
with the
leading-in wire,
etc.
The
question is,
how far can we
go
with
frequencies
? Ordi-
nary
conductors
rapidly
lose the
facility
of
transmitting
electric
impulses
when the
frequency
is
greatly
increased. Assume the
means for the
production
of
impulses
of
very great frequency
brought
to the utmost
perfection, every
one will
naturally
ask
how to transmit them when the
necessity
arises. In
transmitting
such
impulses through
conductors we must remember that we
have to deal with
pressure
and
flow,
in the
ordinary interpretation
of these terms. Let the
pressure
increase to an enormous
value,
and let the flow
correspondingly
diminish,
then such
impulses
variations
merely
of
pressure,
as it were can no doubt be
transmitted
through
a wire even if their
frequency
be
many
hundreds of millions
per
second. It
would,
of
course,
be out of
question
to transmit such
impulses through
a wire immersed in a
gaseous medium,
even if the wire were
provided
with a thick
and excellent
insulation,
for most of the
energy
would be lost in
molecular bombardment and
consequent heating.
The end of
the wire connected to the source would be
heated,
and the re-
mote end would receive but a
trifling part
of the
energy sup-
plied.
The
prime necessity,
then,
if such electric
impulses
are
to be
used,
is to find means to reduce as much as
possible
the
dissipation.
The first
thought
is,
to
employ
the thinnest
possible
wire sur-
rounded
by
the thickest
practicable
insulation. The next
thought
is to
employ
electrostatic screens. The insulation of the wire
may
be covered with a thin
conducting coating
and the latter
connected to the
ground.
But this would not
do,
as then all the
energy
would
pass through
the
conducting coating
to the
ground
and
nothing
would
get
to the end of the wire. If a
ground
con-
nection is made it can
only
be made
through
a conductor offer-
292 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
ing
an enormous
impedance,
or
through
a condenser of ex-
tremely
small
capacity. This, however,
does not do
away
with
other difficulties.
If the wave
length
of the
impulses
is much smaller than the
length
of the
wire,
then
corresponding
short waves will be set
up
in the
conducting coating,
and it will be more or less the
same as
though
the
coating
were
directly
connected to earth. It
is therefore
necessary
to cut
up
the
coating
in sections much
shorter than the wave
length.
Such an
arrangement
does not
still afford a
perfect
screen,
but it is ten thousand times better
than none. I think it
preferable
to cut
up
the
conducting
coat-
ing
in small
sections,
even if the current waves be much
longer
than the
coating.
If a wire were
provided
with a
perfect
electrostatic
screen,
it
would be the same as
though
all
objects
were removed from it at
infinite distance. The
capacity
would then be reduced to the
capacity
of the wire
itself,
which would be
very
small. It
would then be
possible
to send over the wire current vibrations
of
very high frequencies
at enormous
distances,
without
affecting
greatly
the character of the vibrations. A
perfect
screen is of
course out of the
question,
but I believe that with a screen such
as I have
just
described
telephony
could be rendered
practicable
across the Atlantic.
According
to
my ideas,
the
gutta-percha
covered wire should be
provided
with a third
conducting coating
subdivided
in sections. On the
top
of this should be
again
placed
a
layer
of
gutta-percha
and other
insulation,
and on the
top
of the whole the armor. But such cables will not be con-
structed,
for ere
long intelligence
transmitted without wires
will throb
through
the earth like a
pulse through
a
living organ-
ism. The wonder is
that,
with the
present
state of
knowledge
and the
experiences gained,
no
attempt
is
being
made to dis-
turb the electrostatic or
magnetic
condition of the
earth,
and
transmit,
if
nothing else, intelligence.
It has been,
my
chief aim in
presenting
these results to
point
out
phenomena
or features of
novelty,
and to advance ideas
which I am
hopeful
will serve as
starting points
of new
depart-
ures. It has been
my
chief desire this
evening
to entertain
you
with some novel
experiments.
Your
applause,
so
frequently
and
generously
accorded,
has told me that I have succeeded.
In
conclusion,
let me thank
you
most
heartily
for
your
kind-
ness and
attention,
and assure
you
that the honor I have had in
HJGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 293
addressing
such a
distinguished audience,
the
pleasure
I have had
in
presenting
these results to a
gathering
of so
many
able men
and
among
them also some of those in whose work for
many
years past
I have found
enlightenment
and constant
pleasure
I shall never
forget.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
ON LIGHT AND OTHER HIGH
FREQUENCY
PHENOMENA.
1
INTRODUCTORY. SOME THOUGHTS ON THE EYE.
WHEN we look at the world around
us,
on
Nature,
we are im-
pressed
with its
beauty
and
grandeur.
Each
thing
we
perceive,
though
it
may
be
vanishingly small,
is in itself a
world,
that
is,
like the whole of the
universe,
matter and force
governed by
law,
a
world,
the
contemplation
of which fills us with
feelings
of wonder and
irresistibly urges
us to ceaseless
thought
and in-
quiry.
But in all this vast
world,
of all
objects
our senses re-
veal to
us,
the most
marvellous,
the most
appealing
to our
imagination, appears
no doubt a
highly developed organism,
a
thinking being.
If there is
anything
fitted to make us admire
Nature's
handiwork,
it is
certainly
this inconceivable
structure,
which
performs
its innumerable motions of obedience to external
influence. To understand its
workings,
to
get
a
deeper insight
into this Nature's
masterpiece,
has ever been for thinkers a fascin-
ating
aim,
and after
many
centuries of arduous research men have
arrived at a fair
understanding
of the functions of its
organs
and
senses.
Again,
in all the
perfect harmony
of its
parts,
of the
parts
which constitute the material or
tangible
of our
being,
of all
its
organs
and
senses,
the
eye
is the most wonderful. It is the
most
precious,
the most
indispensable
of our
perceptive
or direct-
ive
organs,
it is the
great gateway through
which all
knowledge
enters the mind. Of all our
organs,
it is the
one,
which is in the
1.
A lecture delivered before the Franklin
Institute,
Philadelphia, February*
1893,
and before the National Electric
Light
Association,
St.
Louis, March,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 295
most intimate relation with that which we call intellect. So inti-
mate is this
relation,
that it is often
said,
the
very
soul shows
itself in the
eye.
It can he taken as a
fact,
which the
theory
of the action of the
eye implies,
that for each external
impression,
that
is,
for each
image produced upon
the
retina,
the ends of the visual
nerves,
concerned in the
conveyance
of the
impression
to the
mind,
must
be under a
peculiar
stress or in a
vibratory
state. It now does
not seem
improbable that,
when
by
the
power
of
thought
an im-
age
is
evoked,
a distinct reflex
action,
no matter how
weak,
is
exerted
upon
certain ends of the visual
nerves,
and therefore
upon
the retina. Will it ever be within human
power
to
analyze
the condition of the retina when disturbed
by thought
or reflex
action, by
the
help
of some
optical
or other means of such sensi-
tiveness,
that a clear idea of its state
might
be
gained
at
any
time 2 If this were
possible,
then the
problem
of
reading
cne's
thoughts
with
precision,
like the characters of an
open book,
might
be much easier to solve than
many problems belonging
to
the domain of
positive physical
science,
in the solution of which
many,
if not the
majority,
of scientific men
implicitly
believe.
Helmholtz,
has shown that the fundi of the
eye
are
themselves,
luminous,
and he was able to
see,
in total
darkness,
the move-
ment of his arm
by
the
light
of his own
eyes.
This is one of the
most remarkable
experiments
recorded in the
history
of
science,
and
probably only
a few men could
satisfactorily repeat it,
for it
is
very likely,
that the
luminosity
of the
eyes
is associated with
uncommon
activity
of the brain and
great imaginative power.
It
is fluorescence of brain
action,
as it were.
Another fact
having
a
bearing
on this
subject
which has
prob-
ably
been noted
by many,
since it is stated in
popular expressions,
but which I cannot recollect to have found chronicled as a
posi-
tive result of observation
is,
that at
times,
when a sudden idea or
image presents
itself to the
intellect,
there is a distinct and some-
times
painful
sensation of
luminosity produced
in the
eye,
ob-
servable even in broad
daylight.
The
saying then,
that the soul shows itself in the
eye,
is
deep-
ly founded,
and we feel that it
expresses
a
great
truth. It has a
profound meaning
even for one
who,
like a
poet
or
artist, only
following
his inborn instinct or love for
Nature,
finds
delight
in
aimless
thoughts
and in the mere
contemplation
of natural
phe-
nomena,
but a still more
profound meaning
for one
who,
in the
290 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
spirit
of
positive
scientific
investigation,
seeks to ascertain the
causes of the effects. It is
principally
the natural
philospher,
the
physicist,
for whom the
eye
is the
subject
of the most intense
admiration.
Two facts about the
eye
must
forcibly impress
the mind of the
physicist, notwithstanding
he
may
think or
say
that it is an
imperfect optical instrument,
forgetting,
that the
very conception
of that which is
perfect
or seems so to
him,
has been
gained
through
this same instrument.
First,
the
eye
is,
as far as our
positive knowledge goes,
the
only organ
which is
directly
affected
by
that subtile
medium,
which as science teaches
us,
must fill all
space ; secondly,
it is the most sensitive of our
organs, incompar-
ably
more sensitive to external
impressions
than
any
other.
The
organ
of
hearing implies
the
impact
of
ponderable bodies,
the
organ
of smell the transference of detached material
particles,
and the
organs
of
taste,
and of touch or
force,
the direct
contact,
or at least some interference of
ponderable matter,
and this is
true even in those instances of animal
organisms,
in which some
of these
organs
are
developed
to a
degree
of
truly
marvelous
perfection.
This
being so,
it seems wonderful that the
organ
of
,
^'c sight solely
should be
capable
of
being
stirred
by that,
which all
> our other
organs
are
powerless
to
detect, yet
which
plays
an es-
sential
part
in all natural
phenomena,
which transmits all
energy
and sustains all motion
and,
that most intricate of
all, life,
but
which has
properties
such that even a
scientifically
trained mind
cannot
help drawing
a distinction between it and all that is called
matter.
Considering merely this,
and the fact that the
eye, by
L
its marvelous
power,
widens our otherwise
very
narrow
range
of
'*'
'
perception
far
beyond
the limits of the small world which is our
own,
to embrace
myriads
of other
worlds,
suns and stars in the
v
*
infinite
depths
of the
universe,
would make it
justifiable
to
assert,
.
that it is an
organ
of a
higher
order. Its
performances
are
beyond
->.
comprehension.
Nature as far as we know never
produced any-
t *t
thing
more wonderful. We can
get barely
a faint idea of its
',
prodigious power by analyzing
what it does and
by comparing.
When ether waves
impinge upon
the human
body, they produce
the sensations of warmth or
cold, pleasure
or
pain,
or
perhaps
other
#v~a
sensations of which we are not
aware,
and
any degree
or
intensity
/^cWof these
sensations,
which
degrees
are infinite in
number,
hence an
infinite number of distinct sensations. But our sense of
touch,
or
our sense of
force,
cannot reveal to us these differences in
degree
'
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 297
or
intensity,
unless
they
are
very great.
Now we can
readily
con-
ceive how an
organism,
such as the
human,
in the eternal
process
of
evolution,
or more
philosophically speaking, adaptation
to
Nature, being
constrained to the use of
only
the sense of touch or
force,
for
instance, might develop
this sense to such a
degree
of
senstiveness or
perfection,
that it would be
capable
of
distinguish-
ing
the minutest differences in the
temperature
of a
body
even
at some
distance,
to a
hundredth,
or
thousandth,
or millionth
part
of a
degree. Yet,
even this
apparently impossible performance
would not
begin
to
compare
with that of the
eye,
which is
cap-
able of
distinguishing
and
conveying
to the mind in a
single
instant innumerable
peculiarities
of the
body,
be it in
form,
or
color,
or other
respects.
This
power
of the
eye
rests
upon
two
things, namely,
the rectilinear
propagation
of the disturb-
ance
by
which it is
effected,
and
upon
its sensitiveness.
To
say
that the
eye
is sensitive is not
saying anything. Compared
with
it,
all other
organs
are
monstrously
crude. The
organ
of
smell which
guides
a
dog
on the trail of a
deer,
the
organ
of touch
or force which
guides
an-insect in its
wanderings,
the
organ
of
hearing,
which is affected
by
the
slightest
disturbances of the
air,
are sensitive
organs,
to be
sure,
but what are
they compared
with
the human
eye
! No doubt it
responds
to the faintest echoes or
r3veliberations of the medium
;
no
doubt,
it
brings
us
tidings
from
other
worlds,
infinitely remote,
but in a
language
we cannot as
yet always
understand. And
why
not ? Because we live in a
medium filled with air and other
gases, vapors
and a dense mass
of solid
particles flying
about. These
play
an
important part
in
many phenomena ; they
fritter
away
the
energy
of the vibrations
before
they
can reach the
eye ; they too,
are the carriers of
germs
of
destruction, they get
into our
lungs
and other
organs, clog up
the channels and
imperceptibly, yet inevitably,
arrest the stream
of life. Could we but do
away
with all
ponderable
matter in the
line of
sight
of the
telescope,
it would reveal to us undreamt of
marvels. Even the unaided
eye,
I
think,
would be
capable
of dis-
tinguishing
in the
pure medium,
small
objects
at distances meas-
ured
probably by
hundreds or
perhaps
thousands of miles.
But there is
something
else about the
eye
which
impresses
us
still more than these wonderful features which we
observed,
view-
ing
it from the
standpoint
of a
physicist, merely
as an
optical
instrument, something
which
appeals
to us more than its marvel-
ous
faculty
of
being directly
affected
by
the vibrations of the
298 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
medium,
without interference of
gross matter,
and more than its
inconceivable sensitiveness and
discerning power.
It is its
sig-
nificance in the
processes
of life. No matter what one's views oh
nature and life
may be,
he must stand amazed
when,
for the first
time in his
thoughts,
he realizes the
importance
of the
eye
in the
physical processes
and mental
performances
of the human
organ-
ism. And how could it be
otherwise,
when he
realizes,
that the
eye
is the means
through
which the human race has
acquired
the entire
knowledge
it
possesses,
that it controls all our
motions,
more
still,
all our actions.
There is no
way
of
acquiring knowledge except through
the
eye.
What is the foundation of all
philosophical systems
of ancient
and modern
times,
in
fact,
of all the
philosophy
of man ? /
am,
Ithink I
think, therefore
Iain. But how could I think and how
would I know that I
exist,
if I had not the
eye
? For
knowledge
involves consciousness
;
consciousness involves
ideas, conceptions
;
conceptions
involve
pictures
or
images,
and
images
the sense of
vision,
and therefore the
organ
of
sight.
But how about blind
men,
will be asked ?
Yes,
a blind man
may depict
in
magnificent
poems,
forms and scenes from real
life,
from a world he
physically
does not see. A blind man
may
touch the
keys
of an instrument
with
unerring precision, may
model the fastest
boat, may
discover
and
invent,
calculate and
construct, may
do still
greater
wonders
but all the blind men who have done such
things
have descended
from those who had
seeing eyes.
Nature
may
reach the same re-
sult in
many ways.
Like a wave in the
physical world,
in the in-
finite ocean of the medium which
pervades all,
so in the world of
organisms,
in
life,
an
impulse
started
proceeds onward,
at
times,
may be,
with the
speed
of
light,
at
times, again,
so
slowly
that
for
ages
and
ages
it seems to
stay, passing through processes
of a
complexity
inconceivable to
men,
but in all its
forms,
in all its
stages,
its
energy
ever and ever
integrally present.
A
single ray
of
light
from a distant star
falling upon
the
eye
of a
tyrant
in
by-
gone times, may
have altered the course of his
life, may
have
changed
the
destiny
of
nations, may
have transformed the sur-
face of the
globe,
so
intricate,
so
inconceivably complex
are the
processes
in Nature. In no
way
can we
get
such an overwhelm-
ing
idea of the
grandeur
of
Nature,
as when we
consider,
that in
accordance with the law of the conservation of
energy, throughout
the
infinite,
the forces are in a
perfect
balance,-
and hence the
energy
of a
single thought may
determine the motion of a Uni-
*7"i
tVVH/t.
^^
^
\***^^svt*4&f -^/-'
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 299
verse. It is not
necessary
that
every individual,
not even that
every generation
or
many generations,
should have the
physical
instrument of
sight,
in order to be able to form
images
and to
think,
that
is,
form ideas or
conceptions ;
but sometime or
other,
during
the
process
of
evolution,
the
eye certainly
must have ex-
isted,
else
thought,
as we understand
it,
would be
impossible
;
else
conceptions,
like
spirit, intellect, mind,
call it as
you may,
could not exist. It is
conceivable,
that in some other
world,
in
some other
beings,
the
eye
is
replaced by
a different
organ, equally
or more
perfect,
but these
beings
cannot be men.
Now
r
what
prompts
us all to
voluntary
motions and actions of
any
kind ?
Again
the
eye.
If I am conscious of the
motion,
I
must have an idea or
conception,
that
is,
an
image,
therefore the
eye.
If I am not
precisely
conscious of the
motion,
it
is,
because
the
images
are
vague
or
indistinct, being
blurred
by
the
superim-
position
of
many.
But when I
perform
the
motion,
does the
impulse
which
prompts
me to the action come from within or from
without ? The
greatest physicists
have not disdained to en-
deavor to answer this and similar
questions
and have at times
abandoned themselves to the
delights
of
pure
and unrestrained
thought.
Such
questions
are
generally
considered not to
belong
to the realm of
positive physical science,
but will before
long
be
annexed to its domain. Helmholtz has
probably thought
more
on life than
any
modern scientist. Lord Kelvin
expressed
his
belief that life's
process
is electrical and that there is a force in-
herent to the
organism
and
determining
its motions. Just as
much as I am convinced of
any physical
truth I am convinced
that the motive
impulse
must come from the outside.
For,
con-
sider the lowest
organism
we know and there are
probably
many
lower ones an
aggregation
of a few cells
only.'
If it is
capable
of
voluntary
motion it can
perform
an infinite number
of
motions,
all definite and
precise.
But now a mechanism con-
sisting
of a finite number of
parts
and few at
that,
cannot
per-
form an infinite number of definite
motions,
hence the
impulses
which
govern
its movements must come from the environment.
So,
the
atom,
the ulterior element of the Universe's
structure,
is
tossed about in
space, eternally,
a
play
to external
influences,
like
a boat in a troubled sea. Were it to
stop
its motion it would die.
Matter at
rest,
if such a
thing
could
exist,
would be matter dead.
Death of matter ! Never has a sentence of
deeper philosophical
meaning
been uttered. This is the
way
in which Prof. Dewar
800 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
forcibly expresses
it in the
description
of his admirable
experi-
ments,
in which
liquid oxygen
is handled as one handles
water,
and air at
ordinary pressure
is made to condense and even to
solidify by
the intense cold.
Experiments,
which serve to illus-
trate,
in his
language,
the last feeble manifestations of
life,
the
last
quiverings
of matter about to die. But human
eyes
shall
not witness such death. There is no death of
matter,
for
throughout
the infinite
universe,
all has t3
move,
to
vibrate,
that
is,
to live.
I have made the
preceding
statements at the
peril
of
treading
upon metaphysical ground,
in
my
desire to introduce the
subject
of this lecture in a manner not
altogether uninteresting,
I
may
hope,
to an audience such as I have the honor to address. But
now, then,
returning
to the
subject,
this divine
organ
of
sight,
this
indispensable
instrument for
thought
and all intellectual en-
joyment,
which
lays open
to us the marvels of this
universe,
through
which we have
acquired
what
knowledge
we
possess,
and
which
prompts
us
to,
and
controls,
all our
physical
and mental
activity. By
what is it affected?
By light
! What is
light
?
We have witnessed the
great
strides which have been made in
all
departments
of science in recent
years.
So
great
have been
the advances that we cannot refrain from
asking
ourselves,
Is
this all
true,
or is it but a dream ? Centuries
ago
men have
lived,
have
thought, discovered, invented,
and have believed that
they
were
soaring,
while
they
were
merely proceeding
at a snail's
pace.
So we too
may
be mistaken. But
taking
the truth of the
observed events as one of the
implied
facts of
science,
we must
rejoice
in the immense
progress already
made and still more in the
anticipation
of what must
come, judging
from the
possibilities
opened up by
modern research. There
is, however,
an advance
which we have been
witnessing,
which must be
particularly
gratifying
to
every
lover of
progress.
It is not a
discovery,
or
an
invention,
or an achievement in
any particular
direction. It
is an advance in all directions of scientific
thought
and
experi-
ment. I mean the
generalization
of the natural forces and
phe-
nomena,
the
looming up
of a certain broad idea on the scientific
horizon. It is this idea which
has, however,
long ago
taken
pos-
session of the most advanced
minds,
to which I desire to call
your
attention,
and which I intend to illustrate in a
general way,
in
these
experiments,
as the first
step
in
answering
the
question
"What is
light?"
and to realize the modern
meaning
of this
word.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 301
It is
beyond
the
scope
of
my
lecture to dwell
upon
the
subject
of
light
in
general, my object being merely
to
bring presently
to
your
notice a certain class of
light
effects and a number of
phe-
nomena observed in
pursuing
the
study
of these effects. But to
be consistent in
my
remarks it is
necessary
to state
that,
according
to that
idea,
now
accepted by
the
majority
of scientific men as a
positive
result of theoretical and
experimental
investigation,
the
various forms or manifestations of
energy
which were
generally
designated
as "electric" or more
precisely "electromagnetic
"
are
energy
manifestations of the same nature as those of radiant
heat and
light.
Therefore the
phenomena
of
light
and heat and
others besides
these, may
be called electrical
phenomena.
Thus
electrical science has become the mother science of all and its
study
has become all
important.
The
day
when we shall know
exactly
what
"electricity" is,
will chronicle an event
probably
greater,
more
important
than
any
other recorded in the
history
of the human race. The time will come when the
comfort,
the
very existence, perhaps,
of man will
depend upon
that wonderful
agent.
For our existence and comfort we
require
heat,
light
and mechanical
power.
How do we now
get
all these? We
get
them from
fuel,
we
get
them
by consuming
material. What
will man do when the forests
disappear,
when the coal fields are
exhausted ?
Only
one
thing, according
to our
present knowledge
will remain
;
that
is,
to transmit
power
at
great
distances. Men
will
go
to the
waterfalls,
to the
tides,
which are the stores of an
infinitesimal
part
of Nature's immeasurable
energy.
There will
they
harness the
energy
and transmit the same to their settle-
ments,
to warm their homes
by,
to
give
them
light,
and to
keep
their ooedient
slaves,
the
machines, toiling.
But how will
they
transmit this
energy
if not
by electricity
?
Judge then,
if the
comfort, nay,
the
very existence,
of man will not
depend
on elec-
tricity.
I am aware that this view is not that of a
practical
engineer,
but neither is it that of an
illusionist,
for it is
certain,
that
power transmission,
which at
present
is
merely
a stimulus to
enterprise,
will some
day
be a dire
necessity.
It is more
important
for the
student,
who takes
up
the
study
of
light phenomena,
to make himself
thoroughly acquainted
with
certain modern
views,
than to
peruse
entire books on the
subject
of
light itself,
as disconnected from these views. Were I there-
fore to make these demonstrations before students
seeking
information and for the sake of the few of those who
may
be
802 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
present, give
me leave to so assume it would be
my principal
endeavor to
impress
these views
upon
their minds in this series of
experiments.
It
might
be sufficient for tins
purpose
to
perform
a
simple
and
well-known
experiment.
I
might
take a familiar
appliance,
a
L3yden jar, charge
it from a frictional
machine,
and then dis-
charge
it. In
explaining
to
you
its
permanent
state when
charged,
and its
transitory
condition when
discharging, calling your
atten-
tion to the forces which enter into
play
and to the various
phen-
omena
they produce,
and
pointing
out the relation of the forces
and
phenomena,
I
might fully
succeed in
illustrating
that modern
idea. Xo
doubt,
to the
thinker,
this
simple experiment
would
appeal
as much as the most
magnificent display.
But this is to
be an
experimental
demonstration,
and one which should
possess,
besides
instructive,
also
entertaining
features and as
such,
a
simple
experiment,
such as the one
cited,
would not
go very
far towards
the attainment of the lecturer's aim. I must therefore choose
another
way
of
illustrating,
more
spectacular certainly,
but
per-
haps
also more instructive. Instead of the frictional machine and
Leyden jar,
I shall avail
myself
in these
experiments,
of an induc-
tion coil of
peculiar properties,
which was described in detail
by
me
in a lecture before the London Institution of Electrical
Engineers,
in
Feb.,
1892. This induction coil is
capable
of
yielding
currents of
enormous
potential differences, alternating
with extreme
rapidity.
"With this
apparatus
I shall endeavor to show
you
three distinct
classes of
effects,
or
phenomena,
and it is
my
desire that each
experiment,
while
serving
for the
purposes
of
illustration,
should
at the same time teach us some novel
truth,
or show us some
novel
aspect
of this
fascinating
science. But before
doing this,
it
seems
proper
and useful to dwell
upon
the
apparatus employed,
and method of
obtaining
the
high potentials
and
high-frequency
currents which are made use of in these
experiments.
ON THE APPARATUS AND METHOD OF CONVERSION.
These
high-frequency
currents are obtained in a
peculiar
man-
ner. The method
employed
was advanced
by
me about two
years ago
in an
experimental
lecture before the American Insti-
tute of Electrical
Engineers.
A number of
ways,
as
practiced
in
the
laboratory,
of
obtaining
these currents either from continuous
or low
frequency alternating currents,
is
diagramatically
indicated
in
Fig.
165,
which will be later described in detail. The
general
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS.
304 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
plan
is to
charge
condensers,
from a direct or alternate-current
source, preferably
of
high-tension,
and to
discharge
them
disruptively
while
observing
well-known conditions neces-
sary
to maintain the oscillations of the current. In view of the
general
interest taken in
high-frequency
currents and effects
pro-
ducible
by
them,
it seems to me advisable to dwell at some
length
upon
this method of conversion. In order to
give you
a clear
idea of the
action,
I will
suppose
that a continuous-current
gen-
erator is
employed,
which is often
very
convenient. It is desirable
that the
generator
should
possess
such
high
tension as to be able
to break
through
a small air
space.
If this is not the
case,
then
auxiliary
means have to be resorted
to,
some of which will be in-
dicated
subsequently.
When the condensers are
charged
to a
certain
potential,
the
air,
or
insulating space, gives way
and a dis-
ruptive discharge
occurs. There is then a sudden rush of current
and
generally
a
large portion
of accumulated electrical
energy
spends
itself. The condensers are
thereupon quickly charged
and
the same
process
is
repeated
in
more or less
rapid
succession.
To
produce
such sadden rushes of current it is
necessary
to ob-
serve certain conditions. If the rate at which the condensers are
disci
mrged
is the same as that at which
they
are
charged, then,
clearly,
in the assumed case the condensers do not come into
play.
If the rate of
discharge
be smaller than the rate of
charg-
ing, then, again,
the condensers cannot
play
an
important part.
But
if,
on the
contrary,
the rate of
discharging
is
greater
than
that of
charging,
then a succession of rushes of current is ob-
tained. It is evident
that,
if the rate at which the
energy
is
dissipated by
the
discharge
is
very
much
greater
than the rate of
supply
to the
condensers,
the sudden rushes will be
compara-
tively few,
with
long-time
intervals between. This alwavs occurs
when a condenser of considerable
capacity
is
charged by
means
of a
comparatively
small machine. If the rates of
supply
and
dissipation
are not
widely different,
then the rushes of current
will be in
quicker
succession,
and this the
more,
the more
nearly
equal
both the rates
are,
until limitations incident to eacli case
and
depending upon
a number of causes are reached. Thus we
are able to obtain from a continuous-current
generator
as
rapid
a
succession of
discharges
as we like. Of
course,
the
higher
the
tension of the
generator,
the smaller need be the
capacity
of the
condensers,
and for this
reason, principally,
it is of
advantage
to
employ
a
generator
of
very high
tension.
Besides,
such a
gener-
ator
permits
the
attaining
of
greater
rates of vibration.
1UG11
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 305
The rushes of current
may
be of the same direction under the
conditions before
assumed,
but most
generally
there is an oscilla-
tion
superimposed upon
the fundamental vibration of the current.
When the conditions are so determined that there are no oscilla-
tions,
the current
impulses
are unidirectional and thus a means is
provided
of
transforming
a continuous current of
high tension,
into a direct current of lower
tension,
which I think
may
find
employment
in the arts.
This method of conversion is
exceedingly interesting
and I
was much
impressed by
its
beauty
when I first conceived it. It is
ideal in certain
respects.
It involves the
employment
of no me-
chanical devices of
any kind,
and it allows of
obtaining
currents
of
any
desired
frequency
from an
ordinary circuit,
direct or al-
ternating.
The
frequency
of the fundamental
discharges depend-
ing
on the relative rates of
supply
and
dissipation
can be
readily
varied within wide
limits, by simple adjustments
of these
quanti-
ties,
and the
frequency
of the
superimposed
vibration
by
the
determination of the
capacity,
self-induction and resistance of the
circuit. The
potential
of the
currents, again, may
be raised as
high
as
any
insulation is
capable
of
withstanding safely by
com-
bining capacity
and self-induction or
by
induction in a
secondary,
which need have but
comparatively
few turns.
As the conditions are often such that the intermittence or os-
cillation does not
readily
establish
itself,
especially
when a direct
current source is
employed,
it is of
advantage
to associate an in-
terrupter
with the
arc,
as I
have,
some time
ago,
indicated the
use of an air-blast or
magnet,
or other such device
readily
at
hand. The
magnet
is
employed
with
special advantage
in the
conversion of direct
currents,
as it is then
very
effective. If the
primary
source is an alternate current
generator,
it is
desirable,
as I have stated on another
occasion,
that the
frequency
should
be
low,
and that the current
forming
the arc be
large,
in order
to render the
magnet
more effective.
A form of such
discharger
with a
magnet
which has been
found
convenient,
and
adopted
after some
trials,
in the conversion
of direct currents
particularly,
is illustrated in
Fig.
166. N s are
the
pole pieces
of a
very strong magnet
which is excited
by
a coil
c. The
pole pieces
are slotted for
adjustment
and can be fastened
in
any position by
screws s
s^
The
discharge
rods d d
t1
thinned
down on the ends in order to allow a closer
approach
of the
mag-
netic
pole pieces, pass through
the columns of brass b
^
and are
fastened in
position by
screws #
2 $2-
Springs
r r
t
and collars c c
306 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
are
slipped
on the
rods,
the latter
serving
to set the
points
of the
rods at
[a
certain suitable distance
by
means of screws #
3
s
s,
and
the former to draw the
points apart.
When it is desired to start
the
arc,
one of the
large
rubber handles h Ji is
tapped quickly
with the
[hand, whereby
the
points
of the rods are
brought
in
contact but are
instantly separated by
the
springs
r
r^
Such an
arrangements-has
been found to be often
necessary, namely
in
cases when the E. M. r. was not
large enough
to cause the
discharge
to break
through
the
gap,
and also when it was desirable to avoid
short
circuiting
of the
generator by
the metallic contact of the
rods. The
rapidity
of the
interruptions
of the current with a
magnet depends
on the
intensity
of the
magnetic
field and on the
FIG. ICG.
potential
difference at the end of the arc. The
interruptions
are
generally
in such
quick
succession as to
produce
a musical sound.
Years
ago
it was observed that when a
powerful
induction coil
is
discharged
between the
poles
of a
strong magnet,
the
discharge
produces
a loud
noise,
not unlike a small
pistol
shot, It was
vaguely
stated that the
spark
was intensified
by
the
presence
of
the
magnetic
field. It is now clear that the
discharge
current,
flowing
for some
time,
was
interrupted
a
great
number of times
by
the
magnet,
thus
producing
the sound. The
phenomenon
is
especially
marked when the field circuit of a
large magnet
or
dynamo
is broken in a
powerful magnetic
field.
HIGH
FREQUENCE:
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 307
When the current
through
the
gap
is
comparatively
large,
it is
of
advantage
to
slip
on the
points
of the
discharge
rods
pieces
of
very
hard carbon and let the arc
play
between the carbon
pieces.
This
preserves
the
rods,
and besides has the
advantage
of
keep-
ing
the air
space hotter,
as the heat is not conducted
away
as
quickly through
the
carbons,
and the result is that a smaller
E. M. F. in the arc
gap
is
required
to maintain a succession of
discharges.
Another form of
discharger,
which
may
be
employed
with ad-
vantage
in some
cases,
is illustrated in
Fig.
167. In this form
the
discharge
rods d
d^
pass
through perforations
in a wooden
FIG. 107.
box
B,
which is
thickly
coated with mica on the
inside,
as indi-
cated
by
the
heavy
lines. The
perforations
are
provided
with
mica tubes m
m^
of some
thickness,
which are
preferably
not in
contact with the rods d d
{
. The box has a cover c which is a
little
larger
and descends on the outside of the box. The
spark
gap
is warmed
by
a small
lamp
I contained in the box. A
plate
p
above the
lamp
allows the
draught
to
pass only through
the
chimney
<? of the
lamp,
the air
entering through
holes o o in or
near the bottom of the box and
following
the
path
indicated
by
the arrows. When the
discharger
is in
operation,
the door of the
box is closed so that the
light
of the arc is not visible outside.
308 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
It is desirable to exclude the
light
as
perfectly
as
possible,
as it
interferes with some
experiments.
This form of
discharger
is sim-
ple
and
very
effective when
properly manipulated.
The air
being
warmed to a certain
temperature,
has its
insulating power
impaired ;
it becomes
dielectrically weak,
as it
were,
and the con-
sequence
is that the arc can be established at much
greater
dis-
tance. The arc
should,
of
course,
be
sufficiently insulating
to
allow the
discharge
to
pass through
the
gap disruptively.
The
arc formed under such
conditions,
when
long, may
be made ex-
tremely sensitive,
and the weak
draught through
the
lamp
chimney
c is
quite
sufficient to
produce rapid interruptions.
The
adjustment
is made
by regulating
the
temperature
and
velocity
of the
draught.
Instead of
using
the
lamp,
it answers the
pur-
pose
to
provide
for a
draught
of warm air in other
ways.
A
very simple way
which has been
practiced
is to enclose the arc
in a
long
vertical
tube,
with
plates
on the
top
and bottom for
regulating
the
temperature
and
velocity
of the air current.
Some
provision
had to be made for
deadening
the sound.
The air
may
be rendered
dielectrically
weak also
by
rarefac-
tion.
Dischargers
of this kind have likewise been used
by
me
in connection with a
magnet.
A
large
tube is for this
purpose
provided
with
heavy
electrodes of carbon or
metal,
between
which the
discharge
is made to
pass,
the tube
being placed
in a
powerful magnetic
field. The exhaustion of the tube is carried
to a
point
at which the
discharge
breaks
through easily,
but the
pressure
should be more than Y5
millimetres,
at which the ordi.
nary
thread
discharge
occurs. In another form of
discharger,
combining
the features before
mentioned,
the
discharge
was
made to
pass
between two
adjustable magnetic pole pieces,
the
space
between them
being kept
at an elevated
temperature.
It should be remarked here that when
such,
or
interrupting
devices of
any kind,
are used and the currents are
passed through
the
primary
of a
disruptive discharge coil,
it is
not,
as a
rule,
of
advantage
to
produce
a number of
interruptions
of the current
per
second
greater
than the natural
frequency
of vibration of the
dynamo supply circuit,
which is
ordinarily
small. It should also
ba
pointed
out
here,
that while the devices mentioned in connec-
tion with the
disruptive discharge
are
advantageous
under cer-
tain
conditions, they may
be sometimes a source of
trouble,
as
they produce
intermittences and other
irregularities
in the vibra-
tion which it would be
very
desirable to overcome.
IIIGII
FREQUENCY
AND IIIGI1 POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 309
There
is,
I
regret
to
say,
in this beautiful method of conversion
a
defect,
which
fortunately
is not
vital,
and which I have been
gradually overcoming.
I will best call attention to this defect
and indicate a fruitful line of
work,
by comparing
the electrical
process
with its mechanical
analogue.
The
process may
be illus-
trated in this manner.
Imagine
a tank with a wide
opening
at
the
bottom,
which is
kept
closed
by spring pressure,
but so that
it
snaps
off
suddenly
when the
liquid
in the tank has reached a
certain
height.
Let the fluid be
supplied
to the tank
by
means
of a
pipe feeding
at a certain rate. When the critical
height
of
the
liquid
is
reached,
the
spring gives way
and the bottom of the
tank
drops
out.
Instantly
the
liquid
falls
through
the wide
open-
ing,
and the
spring, reasserting itself,
closes the bottom
again.
The tank is now
filled,
and after a certain time interval the same
process
is
repeated.
It is
clear,
that if the
pipe
feeds the fluid
quicker
than the bottom outlet is
capable
of
letting
it
pass
through,
the bottom will remain off. and the tank will still overflow.
If the rates of
supply
are
exactly equal,
then the bottom lid will
remain
partially open
and no vibration of the same" and of the
liquid
column will
generally occur, though
it
might,
if started
by
some means. But if the inlet
pipe
does not feed the fluid fast
enough
for the
outlet,
then there will be
always
vibration.
Again,
in such
case,
each time the bottom
flaps up
or
down,
the
spring
and the
liquid column,
if the
pliability
of the
spring
and
the inertia of the
moving parts
are
properly chosen,
will
perform
independent
vibrations. In this
analogue
the fluid
may
be lik-
ened to
electricity
or electrical
energy,
the tank to the
condenser,
the
spring
to the
dielectric,
and the
pipe
to the conductor
through
which
electricity
is
supplied
to the condenser. To make this
analogy quite complete
it is
necessary
to make the
assumption,
that the
bottom,
each time it
gives way,
is knocked
violently
against
a non-elastic
stop,
this
impact involving
some loss of en-
ergy
;
and
that, besides,
some
dissipation
of
energy
results due to
frictional losses. In the
preceding analogue
the
liquid
is
sup-
posed
to be under a
steady pressure.
If the
presence
of the fluid
be assumed to
vary rhythmically,
this
may
be taken as corres-
ponding
to the case of an
alternating
current. The
process
is
then not
quite
as
simple
to
consider,
but the action is the same in
principle.
It is
desirable,
in order to maintain the vibration
economically,
to reduce the
impact
and frictional losses as much as
possible.
310 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
As
regards
the
latter,
which in the electrical
analogue correspond
to the losses due to the resistance of the
circuits,
it is
impossible
to obviate them
entirely,
but
they
can be reduced to a minimum
by
a
proper
selection of the dimensions of the circuits and
by
the
the
employment
of thin conductors in the form of strands. But
the loss of
energy
caused
by
the first
breaking through
of the
dielectric which in the above
example corresponds
to the violent
knock of the bottom
against
the inelastic
stop
would be more im-
portant
to overcome. At the moment of the
breaking through,
the air
space
has a
very high
resistance,
which is
probably
re-
duced to a
very
small value when the current has reached some
strength,
and the
space
is
brought
to a
high temperature.
It
would
materially
diminish the loss of
energy
if the
space
were
always kept
at an
extremely high temperature,
but then there
would be no
disruptive
break.
By warming
the
space
moder-
ately
by
means of a
lamp
or
otherwise,
the
economy
as far as the
arc is concerned is
sensibly
increased. But the
magnet
or other
interrupting
device does not diminish the loss in the arc. Like-
wise,
a
jet
of air
only
facilitates the
carrying
off of the
energy.
Air,
or a
gas
in
general,
behaves
curiously
in this
respect.
When
two bodies
charged
to a
very high potential, discharge disrupt-
ively through
an air
space, any
amount of
energy may
be carried
off
by
the air. This
energy
is
evidently dissipated by bodily
carriers,
in
impact
and collisional losses of the molecules. The
exchange
of the molecules in the
space
occurs with inconceivable
rapidity.
A
powerful discharge taking place
between two elec-
trodes, they may
remain
entirely cool,
and
yet
the loss in the
air
may represent any
amount of
energy.
It is
perfectly prac-
ticable,
with
very great potential
differences in the
gap,
to dissi-
pate
several
horse-power
in the arc of the
discharge
without even
noticing
a small increase in the
temperature
of the electrodes.
All the frictional losses occur then
practically
in the air. If the
exchange
of the air molecules is
prevented,
as
by enclosing
the air
hermetically,
the
gas
inside of the vessel is
brought quickly
to a
high temperature,
even with a
very
small
discharge.
It is diffi-
cult to estimate how much of the
energy
is lost in sound
waves,
audible or
not,
in a
powerful discharge.
When the currents
through
the
gap
are
large,
the electrodes
may
become
rapidly
heated,
but this is not a reliable measure of the
energy
wasted in
the
arc,
as the loss
through
the
gap
itself
may
be
comparatively
small. The air or a
gas
in
general is,
'at
ordinary pressure
at
least,
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 311
clearly
not the best medium
through
which a
disruptive
dis-
charge
should occur. Air or other
gas
under
great pressure
is of
course a much more suitable medium for the
discharge gap.
I
have carried on
long-continued experiments
in this
direction,
un-
fortunately
less
practicable
on account of the difficulties and ex-
pense
in
getting
air under
great pressure.
But even if the
medium in the
discharge space
is solid or
liquid,
still the same
losses take
place, though they
are
generally smaller,
for
jusfr
as
soon as the arc is
established,
the solid or
liquid
is volatilized.
Indeed,
there is no
body
known which would not be
disintegrated
by
the
arc,
and it is an
open question among
scientific
men,
whether an arc
discharge
could occur at all in the air itself with-
out the
particles
of the electrodes
being
torn off. When the
current
through
the
gap
is
very
small and the arc
very long,
I
believe that a
relatively
considerable amount of heat is taken
up
in the
disintegration
of the
electrodes,
which
partially
on this ac-
count
may
remain
quite
cold.
The ideal medium for a
discharge gap
should
only crack,
and
the ideal electrode should be of some material which cannot be
disintegrated.
With small currents through
the
gap
it is best to
employ
aluminum,
but not when the currents are
large.
The dis-
ruptive
break in the
air,
or more or less in
any ordinary medium,
is not of the nature of a
crack,
but it is rather
comparable
to the
piercing
of innumerable bullets
through
a mass
offering great
frictional resistances to the motion of the
bullets,
this
involving
considerable loss of
energy.
A medium which would
merely
crack when strained
electrostatically
and this
possibly might
be
the case with a
perfect vacuum,
that
is, pure
ether would involve
a
very
small loss in the
gap,
so small as to be
entirely negligible,
at least
theoretically,
because a crack
may
be
produced by
an
infinitely
small
displacement.
In
exhausting
an
oblong
bulb
provided
with two aluminum
terminals,
with the
greatest care,
I
have succeeded in
producing
such a vacuum that the
secondary
discharge
of a
disruptive discharge
coil would break
disrup-
tively through
the bulb in the form of fine
spark
streams. The
curious
point
was that the
discharge
would
completely ignore
the
terminals and start far behind the two aluminum
plates
which
served as electrodes. This
extraordinary high
vacuum could
only
be maintained for a
very
short while. To return to the ideal
medium, think,
for the sake of
illustration,
of a
piece
of
glass
or
similar
body clamped
in a
vice,
and the latter
tightened
more and
312 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA
TESLA,
more. At a certain
point
a minute increase of the
pressure
will
cause the
glass
to crack. The loss of
energy
involved in
splitting
the
glass may
be
practically nothing,
for
though
the force is
great,
the
displacement
need be but
extremely
smalL Now
imagine
that the
glass
would
possess
the
property
of
closing again per-
fectly
the crack
upon
a minute diminution of the
pressure.
This is the
way
the dielectric in the
discharge space
should
behave. But inasmuch as there would be
always
some loss in the
gap,
the
medium,
which should be
continuous,
should
exchange
through
the
gap
at a
rapid
rate. In the
preceding example,
the
glass being perfectly closed,
it would mean that the dielectric in
the
discharge space possesses
a
great insulating power ;
the
glass
being cracked,
it would
signify
that the medium in the
space
is
a
good
conductor. The dielectric should
vary enormously
in
resistance
by
minute variations of the E. M. F. across the
discharge space.
This condition is
attained,
but in an
extremely
imperfect manner, by warming
the air
space
to a certain
critical
temperature, dependent
on the E. M. F. across the
gap,
or
by
otherwise
impairing
the
insulating power
of the air. But
as a matter of fact the air does never break down
disruptively,
if this term be
rigorously interpreted,
for before the sudden
rush of the current
occurs,
there is
always
a weak current
preceding it,
which rises first
gradually
and then with
compara-
tive suddenness. That is the reason
why
the rate of
change
is
very
much
greater
when
glass,
for
instance,
is broken
through,
than when the break takes
place through
an air
space
of
equiva-
lent dielectric
strength.
As a medium for the
discharge space,
a
solid,
or even a
liquid,
would be
preferable
therefor. It is some-
what difficult to conceive of a solid
body
which would
possess
the
property
of
closing instantly
after it has been cracked. But a
liquid, especially
under
great pressure,
behaves
practically
like a
solid,
while it
possesses
the
property
of
closing
the crack. Hence
it was
thought
that a
liquid
insulator
might
be more suitable as a
dielectric than air.
Following
out this
idea,
a number of different
forms of
dischargers
in which a
variety
of such
insulators,
some-
times under
great pressure,
were
employed,
have been
experi-
mented
upon.
It is
thought
sufficient to dwell in a few words
upon
one of the forms
experimented upon.
One of these dis-
chargers
is illustrated in
Figs.
168 and 168b.
A hollow metal
pulley
P
(Fig.
16
8),
was fastened
upon
an ar-
bor
#,
which
by
suitable means was rotated at a considerable
HIQII
FREQUENCY
AND HIOII POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 313
speed.
On the inside of the
pulley,
but disconnected from the
same,
was
supported
a thin disc h
(which
is shown thick for the
sake of
clearness),
of hard rubber in which there were embedded
two metal
segments
s s with metallic extensions e e into which
were screwed
conducting
terminals t t covered with thick tubes
of hard rubber 1 1. The rubber disc h with its metallic
segments
s
,9,
was finished in a
lathe,
and its entire surface
highly polished
so as to offer the smallest
possible
frictional resistance to the mo-
tion
through
a fluid. In the hollow of the
pulley
an
insulating
liquid
such as a thin oil was
poured
so as to reach
very nearly
to
the
opening
left in the
flange/,
which was screwed
tightly
on the
front side of the
pulley.
The terminals t
t,
were connected to the
opposite coatings
of a
battery
of condensers so that the
discharge
occurred
through
the
liquid.
When the
pulley
was
rotated,
the
liquid
was forced
against
the rim of the
pulley
and considerable
fluid
pressure
resulted. In this
simple way
the
discharge gap
FIG. 168a. FIG. 168b.
was filled with a medium which behaved
practically
like a
solid,
which
possessed
the
quality
of
closing instantly upon
the occur-
rence of the
break,
and which moreover was
circulating through
the
gap
at a
rapid
rate.
Very powerful
effects were
produced by
discharges
of this kind with
liquid interrupters,
of which a num-
ber of different forms were made. It was found
that,
as ex-
pected,
a
longer spark
for a
given length
of wire was obtainable
in this
way
than
by using
air as an
interrupting
device. Gener-
ally
the
speed,
and therefore also the fluid
pressure,
was limited
by
reason of the fluid
friction,
in the form of
discharger described,
but the
practically
obtainable
speed
was more than sufficient to
produce
a number of breaks suitable for the circuits
ordinarily
used. In such instances the metal
pulley
P was
provided
with a
few
projections inwardly,
and a definite number of breaks was
then
produced
which could be
computed
from the
speed
of
314 1A' VJHNTION8 OF NIKOLA TESLA.
rotation of the
pulley. Experiments
were also carried on with
liquids
of different
insulating power
with the view of
reducing
the loss in the arc. When an
insulating liquid
is
moderately
warmed,
the loss in the arc is diminished.
A
point
of some
importance
was noted in
experiments
with
various
discharges
of this kind. It was
found,
for
instance,
that
whereas the conditions maintained in these forms were favorable
for the
production
of a
great spark length,
the current so ob-
tained was not best suited to the
production
of
light
effects. Ex-
perience undoubtedly
has
shown,
that for such
purposes
a har-
monic rise and fall of the
potential
is
preferable.
Be it that a
solid is rendered
incandescent,
or
phosphorescent,
or be it that en-
ergy
is transmitted
by
condenser
coating through
the
glass,
it is
quite
certain that a
harmonically rising
and
falling potential pro-
duces less destructive
action,
and that the vacuum is more
per-
manently
maintained. This would be
easily explained
if it were
ascertained that the
process going
on in an exhausted vessel is of
an
electrolytic
nature.
In the
diagrammatical sketch, Fig. 165,
which has been
already
referred
to,
the cases which are most
likely
to be met with in
practice
are illustrated. One has at his
disposal
either direct or
alternating
currents from a
supply
station. It is convenient for
an
experimenter
in an isolated
laboratory
to
employ
a machine
G,
such as
illustrated, capable
of
giving
both kinds of currents. In
such case it is also
preferable
to use a machine with
multiple
circuits,
as in
many experiments
it is useful and convenient to
have at one's
disposal
currents of different
phases.
In the
sketch,
D
represents
the direct and A the
alternating
circuit. In
each of
these,
three branch circuits are
shown,
all of which are
provided
with double line switches s s s s s s. Consider first the
direct current conversion
;
m
represents
the
simplest
case. If
the E. M. F. of the
generator
is sufficient to break
through
a small
air
space,
at least when the latter is warmed or otherwise rend-
ered
poorly insulating,
there is no
difficulty
in
maintaining
a
vibration with fair
economy by judicious adjustment
of the
capacity,
self-induction and resistance of the circuit L
containing
the devices II m. The
magnet N, s,
can be in this case advan-
tageously
combined with the air
space.
The
discharger
d d with
the
magnet may
be
placed
either
way,
as indicated
by
the full or
by
the dotted lines. The circuit la with the connections and de-
vices is
supposed
to
possess
dimensions such as are suitable for
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 315
the maintenance of a vibration. But
usually
the E. M. r. on the
circuit or branch \a will be
something
like a 1 00 volts or
so,
and
in this case it is not sufficient to break
through
the
gap. Many
different means
may
be used to
remedy
this
by raising
the E. M. F.
across the
gap.
The
simplest
is
probably
to insert a
large
self-
induction coil in series with the circuit L. When the arc is
established,
as
by
the
discharger
illustrated in
B'ig. 166,
the
mag-
net blows the arc out the instant it is formed. Now the extra
current of the
break, being
of
high
E. M.
F.,
breaks
through
the
gap,
and a
path
of low resistance for the
dynamo
current
being
again provided,
there is a sudden rush of current from the
dynamo upon
the
weakening
or subsidence of the extra current.
This
process
is
repeated
in
rapid succession,
and in this manner I
have maintained oscillation with as low as 50
volts,
or even
less,
across the
gap.
But conversion on this
plan
is not to be recom-
mended on account of the too
heavy
currents
through
the
gap
and
consequent heating
of the electrodes
; besides,
the
frequen-
cies obtained in this
way
are
low,
owing
to the
high
self-induc-
tion
necessarily
associated with the circuit. It is
very
desirable
to have the E. M. F. as
high
as
possible, first,
in order to increase
the
economy
of the
conversion, and, secondly,
to obtain
high
frequencies.
The difference of
potential
in this electric oscilla-
tion
is,
of
course,
the
equivalent
of the
stretching
force in the
mechanical vibration of the
spring.
To obtain
very rapid
vibra-
tion in a circuit of some
inertia,
a
great stretching
force or differ-
ence of
potential
is
necessary. Incidentally,
when the E. M. F. is
very great,
the condenser which is
usually employed
in connec-
tion with the circuit need but have a small
capacity,
and
many
other
advantages
are
gained.
With a view of
raising
the E. M. F.
to a
many
times
greater
value than obtainable from
ordinary
distribution
circuits,
a
rotating
transformer
g
is
used,
as indi-
cated at i
la, Fig. 165,
or else a
separate high potential
machine
is driven
by
means of a motor
operated
from the
generator
G.
The latter
plan
is in fact
preferable,
as
changes
are easier made.
The connections from the
high
tension
winding
are
quite
similar
to those in branch la with the
exception
that a condenser
c,
which should be
adjustable,
is connected to the
high
tension
circuit.
Usually,
also,
an
adjustable
self-induction coil in series
with the circuit has been
employed
in these
experiments.
When
the tension of the currents is
very high,
the
magnet ordinarily
used in connection with the
discharger
is of
comparatively
small
316 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
value,
as it is
quite easy
to
adjust
the dimensions of the circuit
so that oscillation is maintained. The
employment
of a
steady
E. M. F. in the
high frequency
conversion affords some advan-
tages
over the
employment
of
alternating
E. M.
F.,
as the
adjust-
ments are much
simpler
and the action can be easier controlled.
But
unfortunately
one is limited
by
the obtainable
potential
dif-
ference. The
winding
also breaks down
easily
in
consequence
of the
sparks
which form between the sections of the armature
or commutator when a
vigorous
oscillation takes
place. Besides,
these transformers are
expensive
to build. It has been found
by
experience
that it is best to follow the
plan
illustrated at ma.
In this
arrangement
a
rotating
transformer
g,
is
employed
to
convert the low tension direct currents into low
frequency
alter-
nating currents, preferably
also of small tension. The tension
of the currents is then raised in a
stationary
transformer T. The
secondary
s of this transformer is connected to an
adjustable
con-
denser c which
discharges through
the
gap
or
discharger dd, placed
in either of the
ways indicated, through
the
primary
p of a dis-
ruptive discharge coil,
the
high frequency
current
being
obtained
from the
secondary
s of this
coil,
as described on
previous
occa-
sions. This will
undoubtedly
be found the
cheapest
and most con-
venient
way
of
converting
direct currents.
The three branches of the circuit A
represent
the usual cases
met in
practice
when
alternating
currents are converted. In
Fig.
15 a condenser
c., generally
of
large capacity,
is connected to the
circuit L
containing
the devices Z
Z,
mm. The devices mmare
sup-
posed
to be of
high
self-induction so as to
bring
the
frequency
of
the circuit more or less to that of the
dynamo.
In this instance
the
discharger
d d should best have a number of makes and breaks
per
second
equal
to twice the
frequency
of the
dynamo.
If not
so,
then it should have at least a number
equal
to a
multiple
or
even fraction of the
dynamo frequency.
It should be
observed,
referring
to
iJ,
that the conversion to a
high potential
is also
effected when the
discharger
d
d,
which is shown in the
sketch,
is
omitted. But the effects which are
produced by
currents which
rise
instantly
to
high
values,
as in a
disruptive discharge,
are
entirely
different from those
produced by dynamo
currents which
rise and fall
harmonically. So,
for
instance,
there
might
be in a
given
case a number of makes and breaks at d d
equal
to
just
twice the
frequency
of the
dynamo,"or
in other
words,
there
may
be the same number of fundamental oscillations as would be
pro-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURBENT8. 317
duced without the
discharge gap,
and there
might
even not be
any
quicker superimposed
vibration
; yet
the differences of
potential
at
the various
points
of the
circuit,
the
impedance
and other
pheno-
mena, dependent upon
the rate of
change,
will bear no
similarity
in
the two cases.
Thus,
when
working
with currents
discharging
dis-
ruptively,
the element
chiefly
to be considered is not the
frequency,
as a student
might
be
apt
to
believe,
but the rate of
change per
unit of time. With low
frequencies
in a certain measure the same .
effects
may
be obtained as with
high frequencies, provided
the rate
of
change
is
sufficiently great.
So if a low
frequency
current is
raised to a
potential of, say, 75,000 volts,
and the
high
tension cur-
rent
passed through
a series of
high
resistance
lamp filaments,
the
importance
of the rarefied
gas surrounding
the filament is
clearly
noted,
as will be seen
later; or,
if a low
frequency
current of several
thousand
amperes
is
passed through
a metal
bar,
striking phe-
nomena of
impedance
are
observed, just
as with currents of
high
frequencies.
But it
is,
of
course,
evident
that with low
frequency
currents it is
impossible
to obtain such rates of
change per
unit of
time as with
high frequencies,
hence the effects
produced by
the
latter are much more
prominent.
It is deemed advisable to
make the
preceding remarks,
inasmuch as
many
more
recently
described effects have been
unwittingly
identified with
high
frequencies. Frequency
alone in
reality
does not mean
anything,
except
when an undisturbed harmonic oscillation is considered.
In the branch uib a similar
disposition
to that in ib is
illustrated,
with the difference that the currents
discharging through
the
gap
d d are used to induce currents in the
secondary
s of a trans-
former T. In such case the
secondary
should be
provided
with an
adjustable
condenser for the
purpose
of
tuning
it to the
primary.
lib illustrates a
plan
of alternate current
high frequency
conversion which is most
frequently
used and which is found to
be most convenient. This
plan
has been dwelt
upon
in detail on
previous
occasions and need not be described here.
Some of these results were obtained
by
the use of a
high
frequency
alternator. A
description
of such machines will be
found in
my original paper
before the American Institute of
Electrical
Engineers,
and in
periodicals
of that
period, notably
in THE ELECTRICAL ENGINEER of March
18,
1891.
I will now
proceed
with the
experiments.
318 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
ON PHENOMENA PRODUCED BY ELECTROSTATIC FORCE.
The first class of effects I intend to show
you
are effects
pro-
duced
by
electrostatic force. It is the force which
governs
the
the motion of the
atoms,
which causes them to collide and de-
velop
the
life-sustaining energy
of heat and
light,
and which
causes them to
aggregate
in an infinite
variety
of
ways, according
to Nature's fanciful
designs,
and to form all these wondrous
structures we
perceive
around us
;
it
is,
in
fact,
if our
present
views be
true,
the most
important
force for us to consider in Na-
ture. As the term electrostatic
might imply
a
steady
electric
condition,
it should be
remarked,
that in these
experiments
the
force is not
constant,
but varies at a rate which
may
be consid-
ered
moderate,
about one million times a
second,
or thereabouts.
This enables me to
produce many
effects which are not
produ-
cible with an
unvarying
force.
When two
conducting
bodies are insulated and
electrified,
we
say
that an electrostatic force is
acting
between them. This
force manifests itself in
attractions, repulsions
and stresses in the
bodies and
space
or medium without. So
great may
be the strain
exerted in the
air,
or whatever
separates
the two
conducting
bodies,
that it
may
break
down,
and we observe
sparks
or bundles
of
light
or
streamers,
as
they
are called. These streamers form
abundantly
when the force
through
the air is
rapidly varying.
I
will illustrate this action of electrostatic force in a novel
experi-
ment in which I will
employ
the induction coil before referred
to. The coil is contained in a
trough
filled with
oil,
and
placed
under the table. The two ends* of the
secondary
wire
pass
through
the two thick columns of hard rubber which
protrude
to some
height
above the table. It is
necessary
to insulate the
ends or terminals of the
secondary heavily
with hard
rubber,
be-
cause even
dry
wood is
by
far too
poor
an insulator for these cur-
rents of enormous
potential
differences. On one of the termi-
nals of the
coil,
I have
placed
a
large sphere
of sheet
brass,
which
is connected to a
larger
insulated brass
plate,
in order to enable
me to
perform
the
experiments
under
conditions, which,
as
you
will
see,
are more suitable for this
experiment.
I now set the
coil to work and
approach
the free terminal with a metallic ob-
ject
held in
my
hand,
this
simply
to avoid burns. As I
approach
the
metallic
object
to a distance of
eight
or ten
inches,
a torrent of furi-
ous
sparks
breaks forth from the end of the
secondary wire,
which
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 319
passes through
the rubber column. The
sparks
cease when the
metal in
my
hand touches the wire.
My
arm is now traversed
by
a
powerful
electric
current,
vibrating
at about the rate of one
million times a second. All around me the electrostatic force
makes itself
felt,
and the air molecules and
particles
of dust
flying
about are acted
upon
and are
hammering violently against my
body.
So
great
is this
agitation
of the
particles,
that when the
lights
are turned out
you may
see streams of feeble
light appear
on some
parts
of
my body.
When such a streamer breaks out on
any part
of the
body,
it
produces
a sensation like the
pricking
of
a needle. Were the
potentials sufficiently high
and the
frequency
of the vibration rather
low,
the skin would
probably
be
rup-
tured under the tremendous
strain,
and the blood would rush out
with
great
force in the form of fine
spray
or
jet
so thin as to be
invisible, just
as oil will when
placed
on the
positive
terminal of
FIG. 169.
a Holtz machine. The
breaking through
of the skin
though
it
may
seem
impossible
at
first,
would
perhaps occur, by
reason of
the tissues under the skin
being incomparably
better
conducting.
This,
at
least, appears plausible, judging
from some observations.
I can make these streams of
light
visible to
all, by touching
with the metallic
object
one of the terminals as
before,
and
approaching my
free hand to the brass
sphere,
which is con-
nected to the second terminal of the coil. As the hand is
approached,
the air between it and the
sphere,
or in the imme-
diate
neighborhood,
is more
violently agitated,
and
you
see
streams of
light
now break forth from
my finger tips
and
from the whole hand
(Fig. 169).
Were I to
approach
the hand
closer, powerful sparks
would
jump
from the brass
sphere
to
my hand,
which
might
be
injurious.
The streamers offer no
particular inconvenience, except
that in the ends of the
finger
820 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
tips
a
burning
sensation is felt.
They
should not be confounded
with those
produced by
an influence
machine,
because in
many
respects they
behave
differently.
I have attached the brass
sphere
and
plate
to one of the terminals in order to
prevent
the formation
of visible streamers on that
terminal,
also in order to
prevent
sparks
from
jumping
at a considerable distance.
Besides,
the
attachment is favorable for the
working
of the coil.
The streams of
light
which
you
have observed
issuing
from
my
hand are due to a
potential
of about
200,000 volts, alternating
in
rather
irregular
intervals,
sometimes like a million times a second.
A vibration of the same
amplitude,
but four times as
fast,
to main-
tain which over
3,000,000
volts would be
required,
would be
more than sufficient to
envelop my body
in a
complete
sheet of
flame. But this flame would not burn me
up ; quite contrarily,
the
probability
is that I would not be
injured
in the least. Yet a
hundredth
part
of that
energy,
otherwise
directed,
would be
amply
sufficient to kill a
person.
The amount of
energy
which
may
thus be
passed
into the
body
of a
person depends
on the
frequency
and
potential
of the cur-
rents,
and
by making
both of these
very great,
a vast amount of
energy may
be
passed
into the
body
without
causing any
discom-
fort, except perhaps,
in the
arm,
which is traversed
by
a true
conduction current. The reason
why
no
pain
in the
body
is
felt,
and no
injurious
effect
noted,
is that
everywhere,
if a current be
imagined
to flow
through
the
body,
the direction of its flow
would be at
right angles
to the surface
;
hence the
body
of the
experimenter
offers an enormous section to the
current,
and the
density
is
very small,
with the
exception
of the
arm, perhaps,
where the
density may
be considerable. But if
only
a small
fraction of that
energy
would be
applied
in such a
way
that a cur-
rent would traverse the
body
in the same manner as a low fre-
quency
current,
a shock would be received which
might
be fatal.
A direct or low
frequency alternating
current is
fatal,
I
think,
principally
because its distribution
through
the
body
is not
uniform,
as it must divide itself in minute streamlets of
great
density, whereby
some
organs
are
vitally injured.
That such a
process
occurs I have not the least
doubt,
though
no evidence
might apparently exist,
or be found
upon
examination. The
surest to
injure
and
destroy life,
is a continuous
current,
but the
most
painful
is an
alternating
current of
very
low
frequency.
The
expression
of these
views,
which are the result of
long
con-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 321
tinued
experiment
and
observation,
both with
steady
and
varying
currents,
is elicited
by
the interest which is at
present
taken in
this
subject,
and
by
the
manifestly
erroneous ideas which are
daily propounded
in
journals
on this
subject.
I
may
illustrate an effect of the electrostatic force
by
another
striking experiment,
but
before,
I must call
your
attention to one
or two facts. I have said
before,
that when the medium be-
tween two
oppositely
electrified bodies is strained
beyond
a cer-
tain limit it
gives way and,
stated in
popular language,
the
opposite
electric
charges
unite and neutralize each other. This
breaking
down of the medium occurs
principally
when the force
acting
between the bodies is
steady,
or varies at a moderate rate.
Were the variation
sufficiently rapid,
such a destructive break
would not
occur,
no matter how
great
the
force,
for all the en-
ergy
would be
spent
in
radiation,
convection and mechanical and
chemical action. Thus the
spark length,
or
greatest
distance
which a
spark
will
jump
between the electrified bodies is the
FIG. 170a. FIG. 170b.
smaller,
the
greater
the variation or time rate of
change.
But
this rule
may
be taken to be true
only
in a
general way,
when
comparing
rates which are
widely
different.
I will show
you by
an
experiment
the difference in the effect
produced by
a
rapidly varying
and a
steady
or
moderately vary-
ing
force. I have here two
large
circular brass
plates pp (Fig.
170# and
Fig. 1706), supported
on movable
insulating
stands on
the
table,
connected to the ends of the
secondary
of a coil similar
to the one used before.
I
place
the
plates
ten or twelve inches
apart
and set the coil to work. You see the whole
space
between
the
plates, nearly
two cubic
feet,
filled with uniform
light, Fig.
170. This
light
is due to the streamers
you
have seen in the first
experiment,
which are now much more intense. I have
already
pointed
out the
importance
of these streamers in commercial
ap-
paratus
and their still
greater importance
in some
purely
scien-
tific
investigations.
Often
they
are too weak to be
visible,
but
322 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
they always exist, consuming energy
and
modifying
the action
of the
apparatus.
When
intense,
as
they
are at
present, they
produce
ozone in
great quantity,
and
also,
as Professor Crookes
has
pointed out,
nitrous acid. So
quick
is the chemical action that
if a
coil,
such as this
one,
is worked for a
very long
time it will
make the
atmosphere
of a small room
unbearable,
for the
eyes
and throat are attacked. But when
moderately produced,
the
streamers refresh the
atmosphere wonderfully,
like a thunder-
storm,
and exercises
unquestionably
a beneficial effect.
In this
experiment
the force
acting
between the
plates changes
in
intensity
and direction at a
very rapid
rate. I will now make
the rate of
change per
unit time much smaller. This I effect
by
rendering
the
discharges through
the
primary
of the induction
coil less
frequent,
and also
by diminishing
the
rapidity
of the vi-
bration in the
secondary.
The former result is
conveniently
se-
cured
by lowering
the E. M. r. over the air
gap
in the
primary
circuit,
the latter
by approaching
the two brass
plates
to a dis-
tance of about three or four inches. When the coil is set to
work,
you
see no streamers or
light
between the
plates, yet
the medium
between them is under a tremendous strain. I still further
aug-
ment the strain
by raising
the E. M. F. in the
primary circuit,
and
soon
you
see the air
give way
and the hall is illuminated
by
a
shower of brilliant and
noisy sparks, Fig.
1TO&. These
sparks
could
be
produced
also with
unvarying
force
; they
have been for
many
years
a familiar
phenomenon, though they
were
usually
obtained
from an
entirely
different
apparatus.
In
describing
these two
phenomena
so
radically
different in
appearance,
I have
advisedly
spoken
of a
"
force
"
acting
between the
plates.
It would be in
accordance with
accepted
views to
say,
that there was an
"
alter-
nating
E. M.
F," acting
between the
plates.
This term is
quite
proper
and
applicable
in all cases where there is evidence of at
least a
possibility
of an essential
inter-dependence
of the electric
state of the
plates,
or electric action in their
neighborhood.
But
if the
plates
were removed to an infinite
distance,
or if at a finite
distance,
there is no
probability
or
necessity
whatever for such
dependence.
I
prefer
to use the term
"
electrostatic
force,"
and
to
say
that such a force is
acting
around each
plate
or electrified in-
sulated
body
in
general.
There is an inconvenience in
using
this
express/on
as the term
incidentally
means a
steady
electric con-
dition
;
but a
proper
nomenclature will
eventually
settle this dif-
ficulty.
HIGH
FItEQ
UENCY AND HIQII
POTENTIAL
CUKRENTS. 323
I now return to the
experiment
to which I have
already
al-
luded,
and with which I
desire to
illustrate a
striking
effect
pro-
duced
by
a
rapidly
varying
electrostatic
force. I attach to the end
of the
wire,
I
(Fig. 171),
which is in
connection with one of the
terminals of the
secondary
of the
induction
coil,
an
exhausted
bulb I. This bulb contains a thin
carbon
filament/,
which is
fastened to a
platinum
wire
w,
sealed in the
glass
and
leading
outside of the
bulb,
where it
connects to the wire I. The
bulb
may
be exhausted to
any degree
attainable with
ordinary
apparatus.
Just a moment
before, you
have
witnessed the break-
ing
down of the air between the
charged
brass
plates.
You
know
that a
plate
of
glass,
or
any
other
insulating material,
would break
down in like manner. Had I
therefore a
metallic
coating
at-
tached to the outside of the
bulb,
or
placed
near the
same,
and
FIG. 171. FIG. 172a FIG. 172b.
were this
coating
connected to the other terminal of the
coil, you
would be
prepared
to see the
glass give way
if the strain were
sufficiently
increased. Even were the
coating
not connected to
the other
terminal,
but to an insulated
plate, still,
if
you
have
followed recent
developments, you
would
naturally expect
a
rup-
ture of the
glass.
But it will
certainly surprise you
to note that under the action
of the
varying
electrostatic
force,
the
glass gives way
when all
other bodies are removed from the bulb. In
fact,
all the sur-
rounding
bodies we
perceive might
be removed to an
infinite
dis-
tance without
affecting
the result in the
slightest.
Wher^he coil
is set to
work,
the
glass
is
invariably
broken
through
at the
seal,
or other narrow
channel,
and the vacuum is
quickly impaired.
324 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
Such a
damaging
break would not occur with a
steady force,
even
if the same were
many
times
greater.
The break is due to the
agitation
of the molecules of the
gas
within the
bulb,
and outside
of the same. This
agitation,
which is
generally
most violent in
the narrow
pointed
channel near the
seal,
causes a
heating
and
rupture
of the
glass.
This
rupture, would, however,
not
occur,
not even with a
varying
force,
if the medium
filling
the inside of
the
bulb,
and that
surrounding it,
were
perfectly homogeneous.
The break occurs much
quicker
if the
top
of the bulb is drawn
out into a h'ne fibre. In bulbs used with these coils such nar-
row, pointed
channels must therefore be avoided.
When a
conducting body
is immersed in
air,
or similar insulat-
ing medium, consisting of,
or
containing,
small
freely
movable
particles capable
of
being electrified,
and when the electrification
of the
body
is made to
undergo
a
very rapid change
which is
equivalent
to
saying
that the electrostatic force
acting
around
the
body
is
varying
in
intensity,
the small
particles
are attracted
and
repelled,
and their violent
impacts against
the
body may
cause a mechanical motion of the latter. Phenomena of this
kind are
noteworthy,
inasmuch as
they
have not been observed
before with
apparatus
such as has been
commonly
in use. If a
very light conducting sphere
be
suspended
on an
exceedingly
fine
wire,
and
charged
to a
steady potential,
however
high,
the
sphere
will remain at rest. Even if the
potential
would be
rapidly
varying, provided
that the small
particles
of
matter,
molecules or
atoms,
are
evenly distributed,
no motion of the
sphere
should re-
sult. But if one side of the
conducting sphere
is covered with a
thick
insulating layer,
the
impacts
of the
particles
will cause the
sphere
to move
about, generally
in
irregular curves,
Fig.
172&.
In like
manner,
as I have shown on a
previous occasion,
a fan of
sheet
metal, Fig.
1
72&,
covered
partially
with
insulating
material
as
indicated,
and
placed upon
the terminal of the coil so as to turn
freely,
on
it,
is
spun
around.
All these
phenomena you
have witnessed and others which
will be shown
later,
are due to the
presence
of a medium like
air,
and would not occur in a continuous medium. The action
of the air
may
be illustrated still better
by
the
following experi-
ment. I take a
glass
tube
t, Fig. 173,
of about an inch in di-
ameter,
which has a
platinum
wire w sealed in the lower
end,
and to which is attached a thin
lamp
filament
f.
I connect the
wire with the terminal of the coil and set the coil to work. The
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH
POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 325
platinum
wire is now electrified
positively
and
negatively
in
rapid
succession and the wire and air inside of the tube
is
rapidly
heated
by
the
impacts
of the
particles,
which
may
be
so violent as to render the filament
incandescent. But if I
pour
oil in the
tube, just
as soon as the wire is covered with the
oil,
all action
apparently
ceases and there is no marked evidence of
heating.
The reason of this is that the oil is a
practically
con-
tinuous medium. The
displacements
in such a continuous medium
are,
with these
frequencies,
to all
appearance
incomparably
smaller than in
air,
hence the work
performed
in such a medium
is
insignificant.
But oil would behave
very differently
with fre-
quencies many
times as
great,
for even
though
the
displacements
FIG. 178. FIG. 174.
be
small,
if the
frequency
were much
greater,
considerable work
might
be
performed
in the oil.
The electrostatic attractions and
repulsions
between bodies of
measurable dimensions
are,
of all the manifestations of this
force,
the first so-called electrical
phenomena
noted. But
though they
have been known to us for
many
centuries,
the
precise
nature of
the mechanism concerned in these actions is still unknown to
us,
and has not been even
quite satisfactorily explained.
What kind
of mechanism must that be ? We cannot
help wondering
when
we observe two
magnets attracting
and
repelling
each other with
a force of hundreds of
pounds
with
apparently nothing
between
them. We have in our commercial
dynamos magnets capable
of
sustaining
in mid-air tons of
weight.
But what are even these
326 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
forces
acting
between
magnets
when
compared
with the tremen-
dous attractions and
repulsions produced by
electrostatic
force,
to
which there is
apparently
no limit as to
intensity.
In
lightning
discharges
bodies are often
charged
to so
high
a
potential
that
they
are thrown
away
with inconceivable force and torn asunder
or shattered into
fragments.
Still even such effects cannot com-
pare
with the attractions and
repulsions
which exist between
charged
molecules or
atoms,
and which are sufficient to
project
them with
speeds
of
many
kilometres a
second,
so that under their
violent
impact
bodies are rendered
highly
incandescent and are
volatilized. It is of
special
mtev- ,t for the thinker who
inquires
into the nature of these forces I./ note that whereas the actions
between individual molecules ( atoms occur
seemingly
under
any
conditions,
the attractions and
repulsions
of bodies of measurable
dimensions
imply
a medium
possessing insulating properties. So,
if
air,
either
by being
rarefied or
heated,
is rendered more or less
conducting,
these actions between two electrified bodies
practically
cease,
while the actions between the individual atoms continue to
manifest themselves.
An
experiment may
serve as an illustration and as a means of
bringing
out other features of interest. Some time
ago
I showed
that a
lamp
filament or wire mounted in a bulb and connected to
one of the terminals of a
high
tension
secondary
coil is set
spin-
ning,
the
top
of the filament
generally describing
a circle. This
vibration was
very energetic
when the air in the bulb was at
ordinary pressure
and became less
energetic
when the air in the
bulb was
strongly compressed.
It ceased
altogether
when the air
was exhausted so as to become
comparatively good conducting.
I
found at that time that no vibration took
place
when the bulb
was
very highly
exhausted. But I
conjectured
that the vibration
which I ascribed to the electrostatic action between the walls of
the bulb and the filament should take
place
also in a
highly
exhausted bulb. To test this under conditions which were inore
favorable,
a bulb like the one in
Fig.
174,
was constructed. It
comprised
a
globe 5,
in the neck of which was sealed a
platinum
wire w
carrying
a thin
lamp filament/.
In the lower
part
of
the
globe
a tube t was sealed so as to surround the filament. The
exhaustion was carried as far as it was
practicable
with .the
appa-
ratus
employed.
This bulb verified
my expectation,
for the filament was set
spinning
when the current was turned
on,
and became incandes-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 327
cent. It also showed another
interesting feature, bearing upon
the
preceding remarks, namely,
when the filament had been
kept
incandescent some
time,
the narrow tube and the
space
in-
side were
brought
to an elevated
temperature,
and as the
gas
in
the tube then became
conducting,
the electrostatic attraction be-
tween the
glass
and the filament became
very
weak or
ceased,
and
the filament came to rest. When it came to rest it would
glow
far more
intensely.
This was
probably
due to its
assuming
the
position
in the centre of the tube where the molecular bombard-
ment was most
intense,
and also
partly
to the fact that the indi-
vidual
impacts
were more violent and that no
part
of the
supplied
energy
was converted into mechanical movement.
Since,
in ac-
cordance with
accepted views,
in this
experiment
the incandescence
must be attributed to the
impacts
of the
particles,
molecules or
atoms in the heated
space,
these
particles
must
therefore,
in order
to
explain
such
action,
be assumed to behave as
independent
car-
riers of electric
charges
immersed in an
insulating
medium
; yet
there is no attractive force between the
glass
tube and the fila-
ment because the
space
in the tube
is,
as a
whole, conducting.
It is of some interest to observe in this connection that whereas
the attraction between two electrified bodies
may
cease
owing
to
the
impairing
of the
insulating power
of the medium in which
they
are
immersed,
the
repulsion
between the bodies
may
still be
observed. This
may
be
explained
in a
plausible way.
When the
bodies are
placed
at some distance in a
poorly conducting medium,
such as
slightly
warmed or rarefied
air,
and are
suddenly
electri-
fied, opposite
electric
charges being imparted
to
them,
these
charges equalize
more or less
by leakage through
the air. But if
the bodies are
similarly
electrified,
there is less
opportunity
af-
forded for such
dissipation,
hence the
repulsion
observed in such
case is
greater
than the attraction.
Repulsive
actions in a
gas-
eous medium are
however,
as Prof. Crookes has
shown,
enhanced
by
molecular bombardment.
ON CURRENT OR DYNAMIC ELECTRICITY PHENOMENA.
So
far,
I have considered
principally
effects
produced by
a
varying
electrostatic force in an
insulating
medium,
such as air.
When such a force is
acting upon
a
conducting body
of measur-
able
dimensions,
it causes within the
same,
or on its
surface,
displacements
of the
electricity
and
gives
rise to electric
currents,
and these
produce
another kind of
phenomena,
some of which I
328 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
shall
presently
endeavor to illustrate. In
presenting
this second
class of electrical
effects,
I will avail
myself principally
of such
as are
producible
without
any
return
circuit, hoping
to interest
you
the more
by presenting
these
phenomena
in a more or less
novel
aspect.
It has been a
long
time
customary, owing
to the limited
experience
with
vibratory currents,
to consider an electric cur-
rent as
something circulating
in a closed
conducting path.
It
was
astonishing
at first to realize that a current
may
flow
through
the
conducting path
even if the latter be
interrupted,
and it
was still more
surprising
to
learn,
that sometimes it
may
be
even easier to make a current flow under such conditions
than
through
a closed
path.
But that old idea is
gradually
dis
appearing,
even
among practical men,
and will soon be
entirely
forgotten.
If I connect an insulated metal
plate
P, Fig. 175,
to one of the
terminals T of the induction coil
by
means of a
wire,
though
this
FIG. 175.
plate
be
very
well
insulated,
a current
passes through
the
wire when the coil is set to work. First I wish to
give you
evidence that there is a current
passing through
the
connecting
wire. An obvious
way
of
demonstrating
this is to insert between
the terminal of the coil and the insulated
plate
a
very
thin
plati-
num or
german
silver wire w and
bring
the latter to incandes-
cence or fusion
by
the current. This
requires
a rather
large plate
or else current
impulses
of
very high potential
and
frequency.
Another
way
is to take a coil
c, Fig. 175, containing many
turns of
thin insulated wire and to insert the same in the
path
of the cur-
rent to the
plate.
When I connect one of the ends of the coil to the
wire
leading
to another insulated
plate
p
l5
and its other end to the
terminal
TJ
of the induction
coil,
and set the latter to
work,
a cur-
rent
passes through
the inserted coil c and the existence of the
current
may
be made manifest in various
ways.
For
instance,
I
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 329
insert an iron core * within the coil. The current
being
one of
very high frequency, will,
if it be of some
strength,
soon
bring
the
iron core to a
noticeably higher temperature,
as the
hysteresis
and
current losses are
great
witli such
high frequencies.
One
might
take a core of some
size,
laminated or
not,
it would matter little
;
but
ordinary
iron wire
-^th
or th of an inch thick is suitable
for the
purpose.
While the induction coil is
working,
a current
traverses the inserted coil and
only
a few moments are sufficient
to
bring
the iron wire i to an elevated
temperature
sufficient to
soften the
sealing-wax s,
and cause a
paper
washer
p
fastened
by
it to the iron wire to fall off. But with the
apparatus
such as I
have
here, other,
much more
interesting,
demonstrations of this
kind can be made. I have a
secondary s, Fig 176,
of coarse
wire,
wound
upon
a coil similar to the first. In the
preceding experi-
ment the current
through
the coil
c,
Fig.
175,
was
very small,
but
there
being many
turns a
strong heating
effect
was, nevertheless,
FIG. 176.
produced
in the iron wire. Had I
passed
that current
through
a
conductor in order to show the
heating
of the
latter,
the current
might
have been too small to
produce
the effect desired. But with
this coil
provided
with a
secondary winding,
I can now transform
the feeble current of
high
tension which
passes through
the
prim-
ary
P into a
strong secondary
current of low
tension,
and this
current will
quite certainly
do what I
expect.
In a small
glass
tube
(t, Fig. 176),
I have enclosed a coiled
platinum wire, w,
this
merely
in order to
protect
the wire. On each end of the
glass
tube is sealed a terminal of stout wire to which one of the ends of
the
platinum
wire
w,
is connected. I
join
the terminals of the
secondary
coil to these terminals and insert the
primary p,
between the insulated
plate
r
l5
and the terminal
TJ,
of the induc-
tion coil as before. The latter
being
set to
work, instantly
the
platinum
wire w is rendered incandescent and can be
fused,
even
if it be verv thick.
330 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Instead of the
platinum
wire I now take an
ordinary
50-volt
Ifi c.
p. lamp.
When I set the induction coil in
operation
the
lamp
filament is
brought
to
high
incandescence. It
is, however,
not
necessary
to use the insulated
plate,
for the
lamp (7, Fig. 177)
is rendered incandescent even if the
plate
p
t
be disconnected.
The
secondary may
also be connected to the
primary
as indicated
by
the dotted line in
Fig. 177,
to do
away
more or less with the
electrostatic induction or to
modify
the action otherwise.
I
may
here call attention to a number of
interesting
observa-
tions with the
lamp. First,
I disconnect one of the terminals of
the
lamp
from the
secondary
s. When the induction coil
plays,
a
glow
is noted which tills the whole bulb. This
glow
is due to
electrostatic induction. It increases'when the bulb is
grasped
with the
hand,
and the
capacity
of the
experimenter's body
thus
added to the
secondary
circuit. The
secondary,
in
effect,
is
equi-
valent to a metallic
coating,
which would be
placed
near the
pri-
FIG. 177.
mary
. If the
secondary,
or its
equivalent,
the
coating,
were
placed
symmetrically
to the
primary,
the electrostatic induction would
be nil under
ordinary
conditions,
that
is,
when a
primary
return
circuit is
used,
as both halves would neutralize each other. The
secondary
is in fact
placed symmetrically
to the
primary,
but the
action of both halves of the
latter,
when
only
one of its ends is
connected to the induction
coil,
is not
exactly equal ;
hence elec-
trostatic induction takes
place,
and hence the
glow
in the bulb. I
can
nearly equalize
the action of both halves of the
primary by
connecting
the
other,
free end of the same to the insulated
plate,
as in the
preceding experiment.
When the
plate
is
connected,
the
glow disappears.
With a smaller
plate
it would not
entirely
disappear
and then it would contribute to the
brightness
of the
filament when the
secondary
is
closed, by warming
the air in the
bulb.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 331
To demonstrate another
interesting feature,
I have
adjusted
the coils used in a certain
way.
I first connect both the terminals
of the
lamp
to the
secondary,
one end of the
primary being
con-
nected to the terminal
TJ
of the induction coil and the other to
the insulated
plate
p
t
as before. When the current is turned
on,
the
lamp glows brightly,
as shown in
Fig. 17S&,
in which c is a fine
wire coil and s a coarse wire
secondary
wound
upon
it. If the
insulated
plate
p
t
is
disconnected, leaving
one of the ends a of the
FIG. 178b.
primary insulated,
the filament becomes dark or
generally
it dim-
inishes in
brightness (Fig. 1780). Connecting again
the
plate
p
t
and
raising
the
frequency
of the
current,
I make the filament
quite
dark or
barely
red
(Fig. 179J).
Once more I will discon-
nect the
plate.
One will of course infer that when the
plate
is
disconnected,
the current
through
the
primary
will be
weakened,
that therefore the E. M. F. will fall in the
secondary s,
and that
the
brightness
of the
lamp
will diminish. This
might
be the
case and the result can be secured
by
an
easy adjustment
of the
332 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
coils
;
also
by varying
the
frequency
and
potential
of the cur-
rents. But it is
perhaps
of
greater
interest to
note,
that the
lamp
increases in
brightness
when the
plate
is disconnected
(Fig. 179#).
In this case all the
energy
the
primary
receives is now sunk into
it,
like the
charge
of a
battery
in an ocean
cable,
but most of that
energy
is recovered
through
the
secondary
and used to
light
the
lamp.
The current
traversing
the
primary
is
strongest
at the end
b which is connected to the terminal T
X
of the induction
coil,
and
FIG 179b.
diminishes in
strength
towards the remote end a. But the
dyna-
mic inductive effect exerted
upon
the
secondary
s is now
greater
than
before,
when the
suspended plate
was connected to the
primary.
These results
might
have been
produced by
a number
of causes. For
instance,
the
plate
P!
being connected,
the reac-
tion from the coil c
may
be such as to diminish the
potential
at
the terminal T
t
of the induction
coil,
and therefore weaken the
current
through
the
primary
of the coil c. Or the
disconnecting
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 333
of the
plate may
diminish the
capacity
effect with relation to the
primary
of the latter coil to such an extent that the current
through
it is
diminished, though
the
potential
at the terminal
TJ
of the induction coil
may
be the same or even
higher.
Or the
result
might
have been
produced by
the
change
of
phase
of the
primary
and
secondary
currents and
consequent
reaction. But
the chief
determining
factor is the relation of the self-induction
and
capacity
of coil c and
plate
p
t
and the
frequency
of the cur-
rents. The
greater brightness
of the filament in
Fig. 179&, is,
however,
in
part
due to the
heating
of the rarefied
gas
in the
lamp by
electrostatic
induction, which,
as before
remarked,
is
greater
when the
suspended plate
is disconnected.
Still another feature of some interest I
may
here
bring
to
your
attention. When the insulated
plate
is disconnected and the sec-
ondary
of the coil
opened, by approaching
a small
object
to the
secondary,
but
very
small
sparks
can be drawn from
it, showing
that the electrostatic induction is small in this case. But
upon
the
secondary being
closed
upon
itself or
through
the
lamp,
the
filament
glowing brightly, strong sparks
are obtained from the
secondary.
The electrostatic induction is now much
greater,
because the closed
secondary
determines a
greater
flow of current
through
the
primary
and
principally through
that half of it which
is connected to the induction coil. If now the bulb be
grasped
with the
hand,
the
capacity
of the
secondary
with reference to the
primary
is
augmented by
the
experimenter's body
and the lumi-
nosity
of the filament is
increased,
the incandescence now
being
due
partly
to the flow of current
through
the filament and
partly
to the molecular bombardment of the rarefied
gas
in the
bulb.
The
preceding experiments
will have
prepared
one for the next
following
results of
interest,
obtained in the course of these in-
vestigations.
Since I can
pass
a current
through
an insulated
wire
merely by connecting
one of its ends to the source of elec-
trical
energy,
since I can induce
by
it another
current, magnetize
an iron
core, and,
in
short, perform
all
operations
as
though
a re-
turn circuit were
used, clearly
I can also drive a motor
by
the aid
of
only
one wire. On a former occasion 1 have described a sim-
ple
form of motor
comprising
a
single exciting
coil,
an iron core
and disc.
Fig.
180 illustrates a modified
way
of
operating
such
an alternate current motor
by
currents induced in a transformer
connected to one
lead,
and several other
arrangements
of circuits
334 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
for
operating
a certain class of
alternating
motors founded on the
action of currents of
differing phase.
In view of the
present
state of the art it is
thought
sufficient to describe these
arrange-
ments in a few words
only.
The
diagram, Fig.
180
II.,
shows
a
primary
coil
P,
connected with one of its ends to the line L lead-
ing
from a
high
tension transformer terminal
TJ.
In inductive
relation to this
primary
P is a
secondary
s of coarse wire in the
circuit of which is a coil c. The currents induced in the second-
ary energize
the iron core
?',
which is
preferably,
but not neces-
sarily, subdivided,
and set the metal disc d in rotation. Such a
motor M
2
as
diagramatically
shown in
Fig.
180
II.,
has been
called a
"
magnetic lag motor,"
but this
expression may
be ob-
jected
to
by
those who attribute the rotation of the disc to
eddy
currents
circulating
in minute
paths
when the core i is
finally
subdivided. In order to
operate
such a motor
effectively
on the
plan
indicated,
the
frequencies
should not be too
high,
not more
than four or five
thousand, though
the rotation is
produced
even
with ten thousand
per
second,
or more.
In
Fig.
180
I.,
a motor M
t
having
two
energizing circuits,
A and
B,
is
diagrammatically
indicated. The circuit A is connected to
the line L and in series with it is a
primary p,
which
may
have its
free end connected to an insulated
plate
p
l5
such connection
being
indicated
by
the dotted lines. The other motor circuit B
is connected to the
secondary
s which is in inductive relation to
the
primary
p. When the transformer terminal T
t
is
alternately
electrified,
currents traverse the
open
line L and also circuit A and
primary
p. The currents
through
the latter induce
secondary
currents in the circuit
s,
which
pass through
the
energizing
coil
B of the motor. The currents
through
the
secondary
s and those
through
the
primary
p differ in
phase
90
degrees,
or
nearly so,
and
are
capable
of
rotating
an armature
placed
in inductive relation
to the circuits A and B.
In
Fig.
180
III.,
a similar motor M
3
with two
energizing
cir-
cuits
A!
and
B!
is illustrated. A
primary p,
connected with one
of its ends to the line L has a
secondary s,
which is
preferably
wound for a
tolerably high
E. M.
r.,
and to which the two ener-
gizing
circuits of the motor are
connected,
one
directly
to the
ends of the
secondary
and the other
through
a condenser
c, by
the
action of which the currents
traversing
the circuit A
t
and B
t
are
made to differ in
phase.
In
Fig.
180
IV.,
still another
arrangement
is shown. In this
case two
primaries
p
t
and P
2
are connected to the line
L,
one
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 335
-e
336 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
through
a condenser c of small
capacity,
and the other
directly.
The
primaries
are
provided
witli secondaries s
t
and s
2
which are
in series with the
energizing circuits,
A
2
and B
2
and a motor M
3,
the condenser c
again serving
to
produce
the
requisite
difference
in the
phase
of the currents
traversing
the motor circuits. As
such
phase
motors with two or more circuits are now well known
in the
art, they
have been here illustrated
diagrammatically.
No
difficulty
whatever is found in
operating
a motor in the manner
indicated,
or in similar
ways ;
and
although
such
experiments up
to this
day present only
scientific
interest, they may
at a
period
not far
distant,
be carried out with
practical objects
in view.
It is
thought
useful to devote here a few remarks to the sub-
ject
of
operating
devices of all kinds
by
means of
only
one
leading
wire. It is
quite obvious,
that when
high-frequency
currents are
made use
of, ground
connections are at least when the E. M. F.
of the currents is
great
better than a return wire. Such
ground
connections are
objectionable
witli
steady
or low
frequency
cur-
rents on account of destructive chemical actions of the former
and
disturbing
influences exerted
by
both on the
neighboring
cir-
cuits;
but with
high frequencies
these actions
practically
do not
exist.
Still,
even
ground
connections become
superfluous
when
the E. M. F. is
very high,
for soon a condition is
reached,
when the
current
may
be
passed
more
economically through open,
than
through closed,
conductors. Remote as
might
seem an industrial
application
of such
single
wire transmission of
energy
to one not
experienced
in such lines of
experiment,
it will not seem so to
anyone
who for some time has carried on
investigations
of such
nature. Indeed I cannot see
why
such a
plan
should not be
practicable.
Nor should it be
thought
that for
carrying
out such
a
plan
currents of
very high frequency
are
expressly required,
for
just
as soon as
potentials
of
say 30,000
volts are
used,
the
single
wire transmission
may
be effected with low
frequencies,
and
experiments
have been made
by
me from which these infer-
ences are made.
When the
frequencies
are
very high
it has been found in lab-
oratory practice quite easy
to
regulate
the effects in the manner
shown in
diagram Fig.
181. Here two
primaries
p and p
l
are
shown,
each connected with one of its ends to the line L and with the
other end to the condenser
plates
c and
c, respectively.
Near
these are
placed
other condenser
plates
c
x
and
c,,
the former be-
ing
connected to the line L and the latter to an insulated
larger
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 337
plate
P
2
. On the
primaries
are wound secondaries s and s
t ,
of
coarse
wire,
connected to the devices d and I
respectively. By-
varying
the distances of the condenser
plates
c and c
l5
and c and
c
t
the currents
through
the secondaries s and s
t
are varied in
intensity.
The curious feature is the
great sensitiveness,
the
slightest change
in the distance of the
plates producing
consid-
erable variations in the
intensity
or
strength
of the currents. The
sensitiveness
may
be rendered extreme
by making
the
frequency
such,
that the
primary itself,
without
any plate
attached to its
free
end, satisfies,
in
conjunction
with the closed
secondary,
the
condition of resonance. In such condition an
extremely
small
change
in the
capacity
of the free terminal
produces great
varia-
tions. For
instance,
I have been able to
adjust
the conditions so
that the mere
approach
of a
person
to the coil
produces
a con-
siderable
change
in the
brightness
of the
lamps
attached to the
secondary.
Such observations and
experiments possess,
of
course,
at
present, chiefly
scientific
interest,
but
they may
soon become
of
practical importance.
Yery high frequencies
are of course not
practicable
with
motors on account of the
necessity
of
employing
iron cores. But
one
may
use sudden
discharges
of low
frequency
and thus obtain
certain
advantages
of
high-frequency
currents without
rendering
the iron core
entirely incapable
of
following
the
changes
and
without
entailing
a
very great expenditure
of
energy
in the core.
I have found it
quite practicable
to
operate
with
s.uch
low fre-
quency disruptive discharges
of
condensers, alternating-current
motors. A certain class of such motors which I advanced a few
years ago,
which contain closed
secondary circuits,
will rotate
quite vigorously
when the
discharges
are directed
through
the
exciting
coils. One reason that such a motor
operates
so well
with these
discharges
is that the difference of
phase
between the
primary
and
secondary
currents is 90
degrees,
which is
generally
not the case with
harmonically rising
and
falling
currents of low
frequency.
It
might
not be without interest to show an
experi-
ment with a
simple
motor of this
kind,
inasmuch as it is com-
monly thought
that
disruptive discharges
are unsuitable for such
purposes.
The motor is illustrated in
Fig.
182. It
comprises
a
rather
large
iron core * with slots on the
top
into which are em-
bedded thick
copper
washers c c. In
proximity
to the core is
a
freely
-movable metal disc D. The core is
provided
with a
pri-
mary exciting
coil c
a
the ends a and b of which are connected to
338 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
the terminals of the
secondary
s of an
ordinary transformer,
the
primary
p of the latter
being
connected to an
alternating
distri-
bution circuit or
generator
o of low or moderate
frequency.
The terminals of the
secondary
s are attached to a condenser c
which
discharges through
an air
gap
d d which
may
be
placed
in series or shunt to the coil c
x
. When the conditions are
properly
chosen the disc D rotates with considerable effort and the
iron core i does not
get very perceptibly
hot. With currents from
a
high-frequency
alternator,
on the
contrary,
the core
gets rapidly
hot and the disc rotates with a much smaller effort. To
perform
the
experiment properly
it should be first ascertained that the
disc D is not set in rotation when the
discharge
is not
occurring
at d d. It is
preferable
to use a
large
iron core and a condenser
of
large capacity
so as to
bring
the
superimposed quicker
oscil-
lation to a
very
low
pitch
or to do
away
\vith it
entirely. By
observing
certain
elementary
rules I have also found it
practi-
cable to
operate ordinary
series or shunt direct-current motors
with such
disruptive discharges,
and this can be done with or
without a return wire.
IMPEDANCE PHENOMENA.
Among
the various current
phenomena observed,
perhaps
the
most
interesting
are those of
impedance presented by
conductors
to currents
varying
at a
rapid
rate. In
my
first
paper
before the
American Institute of Electrical
Engineers,
I have described a
few
striking
observations of this kind. Thus I showed that when
such currents or sudden
dischaiges
are
passed through
a thick
metal bar there
may
be
points
on the bar
only
a few inches
apart,
which have a sufficient
potential
difference between them to
maintain at
bright
incandescence an
ordinary
filament
lamp.
I
have also described the curious behavior of rarefied
gas
surround-
ing
a
conductor,
due to such sudden rushes of current. These
phenomena
have since been more
carefully
studied and one or
two novel
experiments
of this kind are deemed of sufficient in-
terest to be described here.
Referring
to
Fig.
1830,
B and
BJ
are
very
stout
copper
bars
connected at their lower ends to
plates
c and c
1? respectively,
of a
condenser,
the
opposite plates
of the latter
being
connected to the
terminals of the
secondary
s of a
high-tension
transformer,
the
primary
p of which is
supplied
with
alternating
currents from an
ordinary low-frequency dynamo
& or distribution circuit. The
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 339
condenser
discharges through
an
adjustable gap
dd&& usual.
By
establishing
a
rapid
vibration it was found
quite easy
to
perform
the
following
curious
experiment.
The bars B and B
t
were
joined
at the
top by
a
low-voltage lamp
Z
3;
a little lower was
placed by
means of
clamps
c
c,
a 50-volt
lamp
4 ;
and still lower another 100-
volt
lamp
/! ;
and
finally,
at a certain distance below the latter
lamp,
an exhausted tube T.
By carefully determining
the
po-
sitions of these devices it was found
practicable
to maintain them
FIQB.
183a,
183b and 183c.
all at their
proper
illuminating power.
Yet
they
were all con-
nected in
multiple
arc to the two stout
copper
bars and
required
widely
different
pressures.
This
experiment
requires
of course
some time for
adjustment
but is
quite easily performed.
In
Figs.
1835 and
1836',
two other
experiments
are illustrated
which,
unlike the
previous
experiment,
do not
require very
care-
ful
adjustments.
In
Fig.
1835,
two
lamps,
^
and
4,
the former a
340 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
100-volt and the latter a 50-volt are
placed
in certain
positions
as
indicated,
the 100-volt
lamp being
below the 50-volt
lamp.
When
the arc is
playing
at d
'
d and the sudden
discharges
are
passed
through
the bars B
B,,
the 50-volt
lamp will,
as a
rule,
burn
brightly,
or at least this result is
easily secured,
while the 100-volt
lamp
will burn
very
low or remain
quite
dark.
Fig.
1835. Now the
bars B
B!
may
be
joined
at the
top by
a thick cross bar
-^
and it
is
quite easy
to maintain the 100-volt
lamp
at full
candle-power
while the 50-volt
lamp
remains
dark, Fig.
183c. These
results,
as I have
pointed
out
previously,
should not be considered to be
due
exactly
to
frequency
but rather to the time rate of
change
which
may
be
great,
even with low
frequencies.
A
great many
other results of the same
kind, equally interesting, especially
to
those who are
only
used to
manipulate steady currents, may
be
obtained and
they
afford
precious
clues in
investigating
the na-
ture of electric currents.
In the
preceding experiments
I have
already
had occasion to
show some
light phenomena
and it would now be
proper
to
study
these in
particular ;
but to make this
investigation
more com-
plete
I think it
necessary
to make first a few remarks on the
subject
of electrical resonance which has to be
always
observed
in
carrying
out these
experiments.
ON ELECTRICAL RESONANCE.
The effects of resonance are
being
more and more noted
by engi-
neers and are
becoming
of
great importance
in the
practical opera-
tion of
apparatus
of all kinds with
alternating
currents. A few
general
remarks
may
therefore be made
concerning
these effects.
It is
clear,
that if we succeed in
employing
the effects of resonance
practically
in the
operation
of electric devices the return wire
will,
as a matter of
course,
become
unnecessary,
for the electric vibra-
tion
may
be
conveyed
with one wire
just
as well
as,
and sometimes
even better
than,
with two. The
question
first to answer
is, then,
whether
pure
resonance effects are
producible. Theory
and ex-
periment
both show that such is
impossible
in
Nature,
for as the
oscillation becomes more and more
vigorous,
the losses in the vi-
brating
bodies and
environing
media
rapidly
increase and necessa-
rily
check the vibration which otherwise would
go
on
increasing
forever. It is a fortunate circumstance that
pure
resonance is
not
producible,
for if it were there is no
telling
what
dangers
might
not lie in wait for the innocent
experimenter.
But to a
HIGH
FREQ
UENCT AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 341
certain
degree
resonance is
producible,
the
magnitude
of the
effects
being
limited
by
the
imperfect
conductivity
and
imperfect
elasticity
of the media
or,
generally stated, by
frictional losses. The
smaller these
tosses,
the more
striking
are the effects. The same
is the case in mechanical vibration. A stout steel bar
may
be set
in vibration
by drops
of water
falling upon
it at
proper intervals;
and with
glass,
which is more
perfectly elastic,
the resonance
effect is still more
remarkable,
for a
goblet may
be burst
by
singing
into it a note of the
proper pitch.
The electrical resonance
is the more
perfectly attained,
the smaller the resistance- or the
impedance
of the
conducting path
and the more
perfect
the dielec-
tric. In a
Leyden jar discharging through
a short stranded cable
of thin wires these
requirements
are
probably
best
fulfilled,
and
the resonance effects are therefore
very prominent.
Such is not
the case with
dynamo machines,
transformers and their
circuits,
or with commercial
apparatus
in
general
in which the
presence
of iron cores
complicates
the action or renders it
impossible.
In
regard
to
Leyden jars
. with which resonance effects are
frequently demonstrated,
I would
say
that the effects observed
are often attributed but are seldom due to true
resonance,
for
an error is
quite easily
made in this
respect.
This
may
be
undoubtedly
demonstrated
by
the
following experiment. Take,
for
instance,
two
large
insulated metallic
plates
or
spheres
which
I shall
designate
A and
B; place
them at a certain small dis-
tance
apart
and
charge
them from a frictional or influence
machine to a
potential
so
high
that
just
a
slight
increase of the
difference of
potential
between them will cause the small air or
insulating space
to break down. This is
easily
reached
by
mak-
ing
a few
preliminary
trials. If now another
plate
fastened on
an
insulating
handle and connected
by
a wire to one of the ter-
minals of a
high
tension
secondary
of an induction
coil,
which
is maintained in action
by
an alternator
(preferably high
fre-
quency)
is
approached
to one of the
charged
bodies A or
B,
so as
to be nearer to either one of
them,
the
discharge
will
invariably
occur between them
;
at least it
will,
if the
potential
of the coil
in connection with the
plate
is
sufficiently high.
But the
expla-
nation of this will soon be found in the fact that the
approached
plate
acts
inductively upon
the bodies A and B and causes a
spark
to
pass
between them. When this
spark occurs,
the
charges
which
were
previously imparted
to these bodies from the influence ma-
chine,
must needs be
lost,
since the bodies are
brought
in electri-
342 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
cal connection
through
the arc formed. Xow this arc is formed
whether there be resonance or not. But even if the
spark
would
not be
produced,
still there is an
alternating
E. M. F. set
up
between
the bodies when the
plate
is
brought
near one of thfem
;
therefore
the
approach
of the
plate,
if it does not
always actually, will,
at
any
rate,
tend to break down the air
space by
inductive action. Instead
of the
spheres
or
plates
A and B we
may
take the
coatings
of a
Ley-
den
jar
with the same
result,
and in
place
of the
machine,
which
is a
high frequency
alternator
preferably,
because it is more suit-
able for the
experiment
and also for the
argument,
we
may
take
another
Leyden jar
or
battery
of
jars.
When such
jars
are dis-
charging through
a circuit of low resistance the same is traversed
by
currents of
very high frequency.
The
plate may
now be con-
nected to one of the
coatings
of the second
jar,
and when it is
brought
near to the first
jar just previously charged
to a
high
potential
from an influence
machine,
the result is the same as be-
fore,
and the first
jar
will
discharge through
a small air
space
upon
the second
being
caused to
discharge.
But both
jars
and
their circuits need not be tuned
any
closer than a basso
profundo
is to the note
produced by
a
mosquito,
as small
sparks
will be
pro-
duced
through
the air
space,
or at least the latter will be consider-
ably
more strained
owing
to the
setting up
of an
alternating
K. M. F.
by induction,
which takes
place
when one of the
jars
be-
gins
to
discharge. Again
another error of a similar nature is
quite
easily
made. If the circuits of the two
jars
are run
parallel
and
close
together,
and the
experiment
has been
performed
of dis-
charging
one
by
the
other,
and now a coil of wire be added to one
of the circuits
whereupon
the
experiment
does not
succeed,
the
conclusion that this is due to the fact that the circuits are now
not
tuned,
would be far from
being
safe. For the two circuits
act as condenser
coatings
and the addition of the coil to one of
them is
equivalent
to
bridging them,
at the
point
where the coil
is
placed, by
a small
condenser,
and the effect of the latter
might
be to
prevent
the
spark
from
jumping through
the
discharge space
by diminishing
the
alternating
E. M. F.
acting
across the same.
All these
remarks,
and
many
more which
might
be added but for
fear of
wandering
too far from the
subject,
are made with the
pardonable
intention of
cautioning
the
unsuspecting student,
who
might gain
an
entirely
unwarranted
opinion
of his skill at see-
ing every experiment
succeed
;
but
they
are in no
way
thrust
upon
the
experienced
as novel observations.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 843
In order to make reliable observations of electric resonance
effects it is
very desirable,
if not
necessary,
to
employ
an alter-
nator
giving
currents which rise and fall
harmonically,
as in
working
with make and break currents the observations are not
always trustworthy,
since
many phenomena,
which
depend-
on
the rate of
change, may
be
produced
with
widely
different fre-
quencies.
Even when
making
such observations with an alternator
one is
apt
to be mistaken. When a circuit is connected to an
alternator there are an indefinite number of values for
capacity
and
self-induction
which,
in
conjunction,
will
satisfy
the condition of
resonance. So there are in mechanics an infinite number of tun-
ing
forks which will
respond
to a note of a certain
pitch,
or loaded
springs
which have a definite
period
of vibration. But the reson-
ance will be most
perfectly
attained in that case in which the mo-
tion is effected with the
greatest
freedom. Now in
mechanics,
considering
the vibration in the common medium that
is,
air it
is of
comparatively
little
importance
whether one
tuning
fork be
somewhat
larger
than
another,
because the losses in the air are
not
very
considerable. One
may,
of
course,
enclose a
tuning
fork
in an exhausted vessel and
by
thus
reducing
the air resistance to
a minimum obtain better resonant action. Still the difference
would not be
very great.
But it would make a
great
difference if
the
tuning
fork were immersed in
mercury.
In the electrical
vibration it is of enormous
importance
to
arrange
the conditions
so that the vibration is effected with the
greatest
freedom. The
magnitude
of the resonance effect
depends,
under otherwise
equal
conditions,
on the
quantity
of
electricity
set in motion or on the
strength
of the current driven
through
the circuit. But the cir-
cuit
opposes
the
passage
of the currents
by
reason of its
imped-
ance and
therefore,
to secure the best action it is
necessary
to re-
duce the
impedance
to a minimum. It is
impossible
to overcome
it
entirely,
but
merely
in
part,
for the ohmic resistance cannot be
overcame. But when the
frequency
of the
impulses
is
very great,
the flow of the current is
practically
determined
by
self-induction.
Now self-induction can be overcome
by combining
it with
capac-
ity.
If the relation between these is
such,
that at the
frequency
used
they
annul each
other,
that
is,
have such values as to
satisfy
the
condition
of
resonance,
and the
greatest quantity
of
electricity
is made to flow
through
the external
circuit,
then the
best result is obtained. It is
simpler
and safer to
join
the con-
denser in series with the self-induction.
It is clear that in such
844 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
combinations there will
be,
for a
given frequency,
and
considering
only
the fundamental
vibration,
values which will
give
the best
result,
with the condenser in shunt to the self-induction coil
;
of
course more such values than with the condenser in series. But
practical
conditions determine the selection. In the latter case
in
performing
the
experiments
one
may
take a small self-induction
and a
large capacity
or a small
capacity
and a
large
self-induc-
tion,
but the latter is
preferable,
because it is inconvenient to ad-
just
a
large capacity by
small
steps. By taking
a coil with a
very
large
self-induction the critical
capacity
is reduced to a
very
small
value,
and the
capacity
of the coil itself
may
be sufficient. It is
easy, especially by observing
certain
artifices,
to wind a coil
through
which the
impedance
will be reduced to the value of the
ohmic resistance
only;
and for
any
coil there
is,
of
course,
a fre-
quency
at which the maximum current will be made to
pass
through
the coil. The observation of the relation between self-
FIG. 184.
induction, capacity
and
frequency
is
becoming important
in the
operation
of alternate current
apparatus,
such as transformers or
motors,
because
by
a
judicious
determination of the elements the
employment
of an
expensive
condenser becomes
unnecessary.
Thus it is
possible
to
pass through
the coils of an
alternating
current motor under the normal
working
conditions the
required
current with a low E. M. F. and do
away entirely
with the false
current,
and the
larger
the
motor,
the easier such a
plan
becomes
practicable ;
but it is
necessary
for this to
employ
currents of
very
high potential
or
high frequency.
In
Fig.
184 I. is shown a
plan
which has been followed in the
study
of the resonance effects
by
means of a
high frequency
al-
ternator.
G!
is a coil of
many turns,
which is divided into small
separate
sections for the
purpose
of
adjustment.
The final ad-
justment
was made sometimes with a few thin iron wires
(though
this is not
always advisable)
or with a closed
secondary.
The coil
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 345
Cj
is connected with one of its ends to the line L from the alter-
nator G and with the other end to one of the
plates
c of a con-
denser c
GI,
the
plate (c^
of the latter
being
connected to a much
larger plate
PJ.
In this manner both
capacity
and self-induction
were
adjusted
to suit the
dynamo frequency.
As
regards
the rise of
potential
through
resonant
action,
of
course,
theoretically,
it
may
amount to
anything
since it
depends
on self-induction and resistance and since these
may
have
any
value. But in
practice
one is limited in the selection of these
values and besides
these,
there are other
limiting
causes. One
may
start
with, say, 1,000
volts and raise the E. M. F. to 50 times
that
value,
but one cannot start with
100,000
and raise it to ten
times that value because of the losses in the media which are
great, especially
if the
frequency
is
high.
It should be
possible
to start
with,
for
instance,
two volts from a
high
or low fre-
quency
circuit of a
dynamo
and raise the E. M. r. to
many
hun-
dred times that value. Thus coils of the
proper
dimensions
might
be connected each with
only
one of its ends to the
mains from a machine of low E. M.
F.,
and
though
the circuit of
the machine would not be closed in the
ordinary acceptance
of the
term, yet
the machine
might
be burned out if a
proper
resonance
effect would be obtained. I have not been able to
produce,
nor
have I observed with currents from a
dynamo
machine,
such
great
rises of
potential.
It is
possible,
if not
probable,
that with
currents obtained from
apparatus containing
iron the
disturbing
influence of the latter is the cause that these theoretical
pos-
sibilities cannot be realized. But if such is the case I attribute
it
solely
to the
hysteresis
and Foucault current losses in the core.
Generally
it was
necessary
to transform
upward,
when the E. M.
F. was
very low,
and
usually
an
ordinary
form of induction coil
was
employed,
but sometimes the
arrangement
illustrated in
Fig.
184
II.,
has been found to be convenient. In this case a coil cis
made in a
great many
sections,
a few of these
being
used as a
primary.
In this manner both
primary
and
secondary
are ad-
justable.
One end of the coil is connected to the line
i^
from
the
alternator,
and the other line L is connected to the intermedi-
ate
point
of the coil. Such a coil with
adjustable primary
and
secondary
will be found also convenient in
experiments
with the
disruptive discharge.
When true resonance is obtained the
top
of the wave must of course be on the free end of the coil
as,
for
instance,
at the terminal of the
phosphorescence
bulb B. This is
346 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
easily recognized by observing
the
potential
of a
point
on tl it-
wire w near to the coil.
In connection with resonance effects and the
problem
of trans-
mission of
energy
over a
single
conductor which was
previously
considered,
I would
say
a few words on a
subject
which
constantly
fills
my thoughts
and which concerns the welfare of all. I mean
the transmission of
intelligible signals
or
perhaps
even
power
to
any
distance without the use of wires. I am
becoming daily
more convinced of the
practicability
of the scheme
;
and
though
I know full well that the
great majority
of scientific men will
not believe that such results can be
practically
and
immediately
realized, yet
I think that all consider the
developments
in recent
years by
a number of workers to have been such as to
encourage
thought
and
experiment
in this direction.
My
conviction has
grown
so
strong,
that I no
longer
look
upon
this
plan
of
energy
or
intelligence
transmission as a mere theoretical
possibility,
but as
a serious
problem
in electrical
engineering,
which must be carried
out some
day.
The idea of
transmitting intelligence
without
wires is the natural outcome of the most recent results of elec-
trical
investigations.
Some enthusiasts have
expressed
their be-
lief that
telephony
to
any
distance
by
induction
through
the air
is
possible.
I cannot stretch
my imagination
so
far,
but I do
firmly
believe that it is
practicable
to disturb
by
means of
power-
ful machines the electrostatic condition of the earth and thus
transmit
intelligible signals
and
perhaps power.
In
fact,
what is
there
against
the
carrying
out of such a scheme ? We now know
that electric vibration
may
be transmitted
through
a
single
con-
ductor.
Why
then not
try
to avail ourselves of the earth for
this
purpose
? We need not be
frightened by
the idea of dis-
tance. To the
weary
wanderer
counting
the
mile-posts
the earth
may appear very large,
but to that
happiest
of all
men,
the as-
tronomer,
who
gazes
at the heavens and
by
their standard
judges
the
magnitude
of our
globe,
it
appears very
small. And so I
think it must seem to the
electrician,
for when he considers the
speed
with which an electric disturbance is
propagated through
the earth all his ideas of distance must
completely
vanish.
A
point
of
great importance
would be first to know what is the
capacity
of the earth ? and what
charge
does it contain if electri-
fied ?
Though
we have no
positive
evidence of a
charged body
existing
in
space
without other
oppositely
electrified bodies
being-
near,
there is a fair
probability
that the earth is such a
body,
for
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 347
by
whatever
process
it was
separated
from other bodies and this
is the
accepted
view of its
origin
it must have retained a
charge,
as occurs in all
processes
of mechanical
separation.
If it be a
charged body
insulated in
space
its
capacity
should be
extremely
small,
less than one-thousandth of a farad. But the
upper
strata
of the air are
conducting,
and
so, perhaps,
is the medium in free
space beyond
the
atmosphere,
and these
may
contain an
opposite
charge.
Then the
capacity might
be
incomparably greater.
In
any
case it is of the
greatest importance
to
get
an idea of what
quantity
of
electricity
the earth contains. It is difficult to
say
whether we shall ever
acquire
this
necessary
knowledge,
but there
is
hope
that we
may,
and that
is, by
means of electrical resonance.
If ever we can ascertain at what
period
the earth's
charge,
when
disturbed,
oscillates with
respect
to an
oppositely
electrified
system
or known
circuit,
we shall know a fact
possibly
of the
greatest
importance
to the welfare of the human race. I
propose
to seek
for the
period by
means of an electrical
oscillator,
or a source of
alternating
electric currents. One of the terminals of the source
would be connected to earth
as,
for
instance,
to the
city
water
mains* the other to an insulated
body
of
large
surface. It is
pos-
sible that the outer
conducting
air
strata,
or free
space,
contain
an
opposite charge
and
that, together
with the
earth, they
form a
condenser of
very large capacity.
In such case the
period
of
vibration
may
be
very
low and an
alternating dynamo
machine
might
serve for the
purpose
of the
experiment.
I would then
transform the current to a
potential
as
high
as it would be found
possible
and connect the ends of the
high
tension
secondary
to the
ground
and to the insulated
body. By varying
the
frequency
of the
currents and
carefully observing
the
potential
of the insulated
body
and
watching
for the disturbance at various
neighboring points
of
the earth's surface resonance
might
be detected.
Should,
as the
majority
of scientific men in all
probability
believe,
the
period
be
extremely
small,
then a
dynamo
machine would not do and a
proper
electrical oscillator would have to be
produced
and
perhaps
it
might
not be
possible
to obtain such
rapid
vibrations. But
whether this be
possible
or
not,
and whether the earth contains a
charge
or
not,
and whatever
may
be its
period
of
vibration,
it cer-
tainly
is
possible
for of this we have
daily
evidence to
pro-
duce some electrical disturbance
sufficiently powerful
to be
per-
ceptible by
suitable
instruments at
any point
of the earth's
surface.
348 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Assume that a source of
alternating
currentss be
connected,
as
in
Fig. 185,
with one of its terminals to earth
(conveniently
to the
water
mains)
and with the other to a
body
of
large
surface p.
When the electric oscillation is set
up
there will be
a movement of
electricity
in and out of
p,
and alter-
nating
currents will
pass through
the
earth,
con-
verging to,
or
diverging from,
the
point
c where
the
ground
connection is made. In this manner
neighboring points
on the earth's surface within a
certain radius will be disturbed. But the distur-
bance will diminish with the
distance,
and the dis-
tance at which the effect will still be
perceptible
will
depend
on the
quantity
of
electricity
set in
motion. Since the
body
p is
insulated,
in order to
displace
a considerable
quantity,
the
potential
of
the source must be
excessive,
since there would be
limitations as to the surface of p. The conditions
might
be
adjusted
so that the
generator
or source
s will set
up
the same electrical movement as
though
its circuit were closed. Thus it is
certainly
$2
practicable
to
impress
an electric vibration at least
g
of a certain low
period upon
the earth
by
means of
proper machinery.
At what distance such a vibra-
tion
might
be made
perceptible
can
only
be
conjec-
tured. I have on another occasion considered the
question
how the earth
might
behave to electric
disturbances. There is no doubt
that,
since in such
an
experiment
the electrical
density
at the surface
could be but
extremely
small
considering
the size
of the
earth,
the air would not act as a
very
dis-
turbing
factor,
and there would be not much
energy
lost
through
the action of the
air,
which would be
the case if the
density
were
great. Theoretically,
then,
it could not
require
a
great
amount of
energy
to
produce
a disturbance
perceptible
at
great
dis-
tance,
or even all over the surface of the
globe.
.
tq
Now,
it is
quite
certain that at
any point
within a
certain radius of the source s a
properly adjusted
self-induction and
capacity
device can be set in action
by
resonance. But not
only
can this be
done,
but another source
s,,
Fig. 185,
similar to
s,
or
any
number of such
sources,
can be set
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 349
to work in
synchronism
with the
latter,
and the vibration thus
intensified and
spread
over a
large area,
or a flow of elec-
tricity produced
to or from the source s
t
if the same be of
opposite phase
to the source s. I think that
beyond
doubt
it is
possible
to
operate
electrical devices in a
city through
the
ground
or
pipe system by
resonance from an electrical
oscillator located at a central
point.
But the
practical
solution
of this
problem
would be of
incomparably
smaller benefit to man
than the realization of the scheme of
transmitting intelligence,
or
perhaps power,
to
any
distance
through
the earth or
environing
medium. If this is at all
possible,
distance does not mean
any-
thing. Proper apparatus
must first be
produced by
means of
which the
problem
can be attacked and I have devoted much
thought
to this
subject.
I am
firmly
convinced that it can be
done and
hope
that we shall live to see it done.
ON THE LIGHT PHENOMENA PRODUCED BY
HIGH-FREQUENCY
CUR-
RENTS OF HIGH POTENTIAL AND GENERAL REMARKS RELATING
TO THE SUBJECT.
Returning
now to the
light
effects which it has been the chief
object
to
investigate,
it is
thought proper
to divide these effects
into four classes : 1. Incandescence of a solid. 2.
Phosphorescence.
3. Incandescence or
phosphorescence
of a rarefied
gas ;
and
4.
Luminosity produced
in a
gas
at
ordinary pressure.
The first
question
is : How are these luminous effects
produced
? In order
to answer this
question
as
satisfactorily
as I am able to do in the
light
of
accepted
views and with the
experience acquired,
and to
add some interest to this
demonstration,
I shall dwell here
upon
a feature which I consider of
great importance,
inasmuch as it
promises, besides,
to throw a better
light upon
the nature of most
of the
phenomena produced by high-frequency
electric currents.
I have on other occasions
pointed
out the
great importance
of the
presence
of the rarefied
gas,
or atomic medium in
general,
around
the conductor
through
which alternate currents of
high frequency
are
passed,
as
regards
the
heating
of the conductor
by
the cur-
rents.
My experiments,
described some time
ago,
have shown
that,
the
higher
the
frequency
and
potential
difference of the cur-
rents,
the more
important
becomes the rarefied
gas
in which the
conductor is
immersed,
as a factor of the
heating.
The
poten-
tial
difference, however, is,
as I then
pointed
out,
a more im-
350 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
portant
element than the
frequency.
When both of these are
sufficiently
high,
the
heating may
be almost
entirely
due to the
presence
of the rarefied
gas.
The
experiments
to follow will
show the
importance
of the rarefied
gas, or, generally,
of
gas
at or-
dinary
or other
pressure
as
regards
the incandescence or other
luminous effects
produced by
currents of this kind.
I take two
ordinary
50-volt 16 c. p.
lamps
which are in
every
respect alike,
with the
exception,
that one has been
opened
at the
top
and the air has filled the
bulb,
while the other is at the ordi-
nary degree
of exhaustion of commercial
lamps.
When I attach
the
lamp
which is exhausted to the terminal of the
secondary
of
the
coil,
which I have
already used,
as in
experiments
illustrated
in
Fig.
179 for
instance,
and turn on the
current,
the
filament,
as
you
have before
seen,
comes to
high
incandescence. When I
attach the second
lamp,
which is filled with
air,
instead of the
former,
the filament still
glows,
but much less
brightly.
This
experiment
illustrates
only
in
part
the truth of the statements
before made. The
importance
of the filament's
being
immersed
in rarefied
gas
is
plainly
noticeable but not to such a
degree
as
might
be desirable. The reason is that the
secondary
of this coil is
wound for low
tension, having only
150
turns,
and the
potential
difference at the terminals of the
lamp
is therefore small. Were
I to take another coil with
many
more turns in the
secondary,
the effect would be
increased,
since it
depends partially
on the
potential difference,
as before remarked. But since the effect
likewise
depends
on the
frequency,
it
may
be
properly
stated that
it
depends
on the time rate of the variation of the
potential
dif-
ference. The
greater
this
variation,
the more
important
becomes
the
gas
as an element of
heating.
I can
produce
a much
greater
rate of variation in another
way, which, besides,
has the advan-
tage
of
doing away
with the
objections,
which
might
be made in
the
experiment just shown,
even if both the
lamps
were con-
nected in series or
multiple
arc to the
coil, namely,
that in con-
sequence
of the reactions
existing
between the
primary
and
secondary
coil the conclusions are rendered uncertain. This re-
sult I secure
by charging,
from an
ordinary
transformer which is
fed from the
alternating
current
supply station,
a
battery
of con-
densers,
and
discharging
the latter
directly through
a circuit of
small
self-induction,
as before illustrated in
Figs. 183*, 183&,
and 1836-.
In
Figs. 186,
1865 and
186c,
the
heavy copper
bars
BB^
are
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 351
connected to the
opposite coatings
of a
battery
of
condensers,
or
generally
in such
way,
that the
high frequency
or sudden
discharges
are made to traverse them. I connect first an
ordinary
50-volt incandescent
lamp
to the bars
by
means of
the
clamps
o c. The
discharges being passed through
the
lamp,
the filament is rendered
incandescent, though
the current
through
it is
very small,
and would not be
nearly
sufficient to
produce
a visible effect under the conditions of
ordinary
use of
the
lamp.
Instead of this I now attach to the bars another
lamp exactly
like the
first,
but with the seal broken
off,
the bulb
being
therefore filled with air at
ordinary pressure.
When the
discharges
are directed
through
the
filament,
as
before,
it does
not become incandescent. But the result
might
still be attri-
buted to one of the
many possible
reactions. I therefore connect
both the
lamps
in
multiple
arc as illustrated in
Fig.
186.
Passing
FIG. 186a.
FIG. 186b. FIG. 186c.
the
discharges through
both the
lamps, again
the filament in the
exhausted
lamp
I
glows very brightly
while that in the non-ex-
hausted
lamp
Zi
remains
dark,
as
previously.
But it should not
be
thought
that the latter
lamp
is
taking only
a small fraction of
the
energy supplied
to both the
lamps
;
on the
contrary,
it
may
consume a considerable
portion
of the
energy
and it
may
become
even hotter than the one which burns
brightly.
In this
experi-
ment the
potential
difference
at the terminals of the
lamps
varies
in
sign
theoretically
three to four million times a second. The
ends of the filaments are
correspondingly
electrified,
and the
gas
in the bulbs is
violently agitated
and a
large portion
of the
sup-
plied energy
is thus converted into heat. In the non-exhausted
bulb,
there
being
a few million times more
gas
molecules than in
the exhausted
one,
the
bombardment,
which is most violent at
the ends of the
filament,
in the neck of the
bulb,
consumes
a
352 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
large portion
of the
energy
without
producing any
visible effect.
The reason is
that,
there
being many molecules,
the bombard-
ment is
quantitatively considerable,
but the individual
impacts
are
not
very violent,
as the
speeds
of the molecules are
comparatively
small
owing
to the small free
path.
In the exhausted
bulb,
on
the
contrary,
the
speeds
are
very great,
and the individual im-
pacts
are violent and therefore better
adapted
to
produce
a visi-
ble effect.
Besides,
the convection of heat is
greater
in the former
bulb. In both the bulbs the current
traversing
the filaments is
very
small, incomparably
smaller than that which
they require
on
an
ordinary low-frequency
circuit. The
potential difference,
however,
at the ends of the filaments is
very great
and
might
be
possibly 20,000
volts or
more,
if the filaments were
straight
and
their ends far
apart.
In the
ordinary lamp
a
spark generally
oc-
curs between the ends of the filament or between the
platinum
wires
outside,
before such a difference of
potential
can be
reached.
It
might
be
objected
that in the
experiment
before shown the
lamps, being
in
multiple arc,
the exhausted
lamp might
take a
much
larger
current and that the effect observed
might
not be
exactly
attributable to the action of the
gas
in the bulbs. Such
objections
will lose much
weight
if I connect the
lamps
in
series,
with the same result. When this is done and the
discharges
are
directed
through
the
filaments,
it is
again
noted that the filament
in the non-exhausted bulb
l^
remains
dark,
while that in the
exhausted one
(7) glows
even more
intensely
than under its
normal conditions of
working, Fig.
1865.
According
to
general
ideas the current
through
the filaments should now be the
same,
were it not modified
by
the
presence
of the
gas
around the
filaments.
At this
juncture
I
may point
out another
interesting feature,
which illustrates the effect of the rate of
change
of
potential
of the currents. I will leave the two
lamps
connected in series
to the bars
BB,,
as in the
previous experiment, Fig. 186&,
but will
presently
reduce
considerably
the
frequency
of the
currents,
which was excessive in the
experiment just
before shown. This
I
may
do
by inserting
a self-induction coil in the
path
of the dis-
charges,
or
by augmenting
the
capacity
of the condensers. When
I now
pass
these
low-frequency discharges through
the
lamps,
the exhausted
lamp
I
again
is as
bright
as
before,
but it is noted
also that the non-exhausted
lamp
l
glows, though
not
quite
HIGH
FJiKQ
UENCY AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 353
as
intensely
as the other.
Reducing
the current
through
the
lamps,
I
may bring
the filament in the latter
lamp
to
redness, and,
though
the filament in the exhausted
lamp
I is
bright, Fig. I860,
the
degree
of its incandescence is much smaller than in
Fig. 1865,
when the currents were of a much
higher frequency.
In these
experiments
the
gas
acts in two
opposite
ways
in de-
termining
the
degree
of the incandescence of the
filaments,
that
is, by
convection and bombardment. The
higher
the
frequency
and
potential
of the
currents,
the more
important
becomes the bom-
bardment. The convection on the
contrary
should be the
smaller,
the
higher
the
frequency.
When the currents are
steady
there is
practically
no
bombardment,
and convection
may
therefore with
such currents also
considerably modify
the
degree
of
incandescence
and
produce
results similar to those
just
before
shown. Thus if
two
lamps exactly alike,
one exhausted and one not
exhausted,
are connected in
multiple
arc or series to a
direct-current
machine,
the filament in the non-exhausted
lamp
will
require
a
considera-
bly greater
current to be rendered incandescent. This result is
entirely
due to
convection,
and the effect is the more
prominent
the thinner the filament. Professor
Ayrton
and Mr.
Kilgour
some time
ago published quantitative
results
concerning
the
thermal
emissivity
by
radiation and convection in which the ef-
fect with thin wires was
clearly
shown. This effect
may
be strik-
ingly
illustrated
by preparing
a number of
small, short,
glass tubes,
each
containing through
its axis the thinnest obtainable
platinum
wire. If these tubes be
highly exhausted,
a number of them
may
be connected in
multiple
arc to a direct-current
machine and
all of the wires
may
be
kept
at incandescence with a smaller cur-
rent than that
required
to render incandescent a
single
one of the
wires if the tube be not exhausted. Could the tubes be so
highly
exhausted that convection would be
nil,
then the relative
amounts
of heat
given
off
by
convection and radiation could be deter-
mined without the difficulties
attending
thermal
quantitative
measurements. If a source of electric
impulses
of
high
frequency
and
very high potential
is
employed,
a still
greater
number of
the tubes
may
be taken and the wires rendered incandescent
by
a
current not
capable
of
warming perceptibly
a wire of the same
size immersed in air at
ordinary pressure,
and
conveying
the
energy
to all df them.
I
may
here describe a result which is still more
interesting,
and to which I have been led
by
the observation of these
phe-
354 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
nomena. I noted that small differences in the
density
of the air
produced
a considerable difference in the
degree
of incandescence
of the
wires,
and I
thought
that,
since in a
tube,
through
which
a luminous
discharge
is
passed,
the
gas
is
generally
not of uni-
form
density,
a
very
thin wire contained in the tube
might
be
rendered incandescent at certain
places
of smaller
density
of the
gas,
while it would remain dark at the
places
of
greater density,
where the convection would be
greater
and the bombardment less
intense.
Accordingly
a tube t was
prepared,
as illustrated in
Fig.
187,
which contained
through
the middle a
very
line
platinum
wire
w. The tube was exhausted to a moderate
degree
and it was found
that when it was attached to the terminal of a
high-frequency
coil
the
platinum
wire w would
indeed,
become incandescent in
patches,
as illustrated in
Fig.
187. Later a number of these tubes with one
or more wires were
prepared,
each
showing
this result. The ef-
fect was best noted when the striated
discharge
occurred in the
tube,
but was also
produced
when the stride were not
vi-ible,
showing that,
even
then,
the
gas
in the tube was not of uniform
density.
The
position
of the strirp was
generally
such,
that the
rarefactions
corresponded
to the
places
of incandescence or
greater
brightness
on the wire w. But in a few instances it was
noted,
that
the
bright spots
on the wire were covered
by
the dense
parts
of
the striated
discharge
as indicated
by
/ in
Fig. 187, though
the effect
Avas
barely perceptible.
This was
explained
in a
plausible way
by assuming
that the convection was not
widely
different in the
dense and rarefied
places,
and that the bombardment was
greater
on the dense
places
of the striated
discharge.
It
is,
in
fact,
often
observed in
bulbs,
that under certain conditions a thin wire is
brought
to
higher
incandescence when the air is not too
highly
rarefied. This is the case when the
potential
of the coil is not
high enough
for the
vacuum,
but the result
may
be attributed to
many
different causes. In all cases this curious
phenomenon
of
incandescence
disappears
when the
tube,
or rather the
wire,
.acquires throughout
a uniform
temperature.
Disregarding
now the
modifying
effect of convection there are
then two distinct causes which determine the incandescence of a
wire or filament with
varying currents,
that
is,
conduction cur-
rent and bombardment. With
steady
currents we have to deal
only
with the former of these two
causes,
and the
heating
effect
is a
minimum,
since the resistance is least to
steady
fiow. When
the current is a
varying
one the resistance is
greater,
and hence
HIGH
FREQ
UWCY AND HIGH
POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 355
the
heating
effect is
increased. Thus if the rate of
change
of
the current is
very great,
the
resistance
may
increase to such
an extent that the filament is
brought
to
incandescence with in-
appreciable currents,
and we are able to take a short and thick
block of carbon or other
material and
bring
it to
bright
incan-
descence with a current
incomparably
smaller than that
required
to
bring
to the same
degree
of
incandescence an
ordinary
thin
lamp
filament with a
steady
or low
frequency
current. This result
is
important,
and illustrates how
rapidly
our views on these sub-
jects
are
changing,
and how
quickly
our field of
knowledge
is ex-
FIG. 187. FIG. 188.
tending.
In the art of incandescent
lighting,
to view this result
in one
aspect only,
it has been
commonly
considered as an essen-
tial
requirement
for
practical success,
that the
lamp
filament
should be thin and of
high
resistance. But now we know that
the resistance of the filament to the
steady
flow does not mean
anything ;
the filament
might
as well be short and thick
;
for if it
be immersed in rareiied
gas
it will become incandescent
by
the
passage
of a small current. It all
depends
on the
frequency
and
potential
of the currents. We
may
conclude from
this,
that it
356 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
would be of
advantage,
so far as the
lamp
is
considered,
to em-
ploy high frequencies
for
lighting,
as
they
allow the use of short
and thick filaments and smaller currents.
If a wire or filament be immersed in a
homogeneous medium,
all
the
heating
is due to true conduction
current,
but if it be enclosed
in an exhausted vessel the conditions are
entirely
different. Here
the
gas begins
to act and the
heating
effect of the conduction cur-
rent,
as is shown in
many experiments, may
be
very
small com-
pared
with that of the bombardment. This is
especially
the case if
the circuit is not closed and the
potentials
are of course
very high.
Suppose
that a fine filament enclosed in an exhausted vessel be
connected with one of its ends to the terminal of a
high
tension
coil and with its other end to a
large
insulated
plate. Though
the circuit is not
closed,
the
filament,
as I have before
shown,
is
brought
to incandescence. If the
frequency
and
potential
be
comparatively low,
the filament is heated
by
the current
passing
through
it. If the
frequency
and
potential,
and
principally
the
latter,
be
increased,
the insulated
plate
need 'be but
very small,
or
may
be done
away
with
entirely ;
still the filament will become
incandescent, practically
all the
heating being
then due to the bom-
bardment. A
practical way
of
combining
both the effects of
conduction currents and bombardment is illustrated in
Fig. 188,
in which an
ordinary lamp
is shown
provided
with a
very
thin
filament which has one of the ends of the latter connected to a
shade
serving
the
purpose
of the insulated
plate,
and the other
end to the terminal of a
high
tension source. It should not be
thought
that
only
rarefied
gas
is an
important
factor in the heat-
ing
of a conductor
by varying currents,
but
gas
at
ordinary pres-
sure
may
become
important,
if the
potential
difference and fre-
quency
of the currents is excessive. On this
subject
I have al-
ready stated,
that when a conductor is fused
by
a stroke of
lightning,
the current
through
it
may
be
exceedingly small,
not
even sufficient to heat the conductor
perceptibly,
were the latter
immersed in a
homogeneous
medium.
From the
preceding
it is clear that when a conductor of
high
resistance is connected to the terminals of a source of
high
fre-
quency
currents of
high potential,
there
may
occur considerable
dissipation
of
energy, principally
at the ends of the
conductor,
in
consequence
of the action of the
gas surrounding
the conductor.
Owing
to
this,
the current
through
a section of the conductor at
a
point midway
between its ends
may
be much smaller than
HIGH
FRE^JENOY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 357
through
a section near the ends.
Furthermore,
the current
passes
principally through
the outer
portions
of the
conductor,
but this
effect is to be
distinguished
from the skin effect as
ordinarily
in-
terpreted,
for the latter
would,
or
should,
occur also in a continu-
ous
incompressible
medium. If a
great many
incandescent
lamps
are connected in series to a source of such
currents,
the
lamps
at
the ends
may
burn
brightly,
whereas those in the middle
may
re-
main
entirely
dark. This is due
principally
to
bombardment,
as
before stated. But even if the currents be
steady, provided
the
difference of
potential
is
very great,
the
lamps
at the end will
burn more
brightly
than those in the middle. In such case there
is no
rhythmical bombardment,
and the result is
produced
en-
tirely by leakage.
This
leakage
or
dissipation
into
space
when
the tension is
high,
is considerable when incandescent
lamps
are
used,
and still more considerable with
arcs,
for the latter act like
flames.
Generally,
of
course,
the
dissipation
is much smaller
with
steady,
than with
varying,
currents.
I have contrived an
experiment
which illustrates in an inter-
esting
manner the effect of lateral diffusion. If a
very long
tube
is attached to the terminal of a
high frequency coil,
the luminos-
ity
is
greatest
near the terminal and falls off
gradually
towards
the remote end. This is more marked if the tube is narrow.
A small tube about one-half inch in diameter and twelve
inches
long (Fig. 189),
has one of its ends drawn out into a fine
fibre/ nearly
three feet
long.
The tube is
placed
in a brass socket
T which can be screwed on the terminal T
X
of the induction coil.
The
discharge passing through
the tube first illuminates the bot-
tom of the
same,
which is of
comparatively large
section
;
but
through
the
long glass
fibre the
discharge
cannot
pass.
But
gradually
the rarefied
gas
inside becomes warmed and more con-
ducting
and the
discharge spreads
into the
glass
fibre. This
spread-
ing
is so
slow,
that it
may
take half a minute or more until the
discharge
has worked
through up
to the
top
of the
glass fibre,
then
presenting
the
appearance
of a
strongly
luminous thin
thread.
By adjusting
the
potential
at the terminal the
light may
be made to travel
upwards
at
any speed. Once, however,
the
glass
fibre is
heated,
the
discharge
breaks
through
its entire
length instantly.
The
interesting point
to be noted is
that,
the
higher
the
frequency
of the
currents,
or in other
words,
the
greater relatively
the lateral
dissipation,
at a slower rate
may
the
light
be made to
propagate through
the fibre. This
experiment
358 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8L*.
~
\
is best
performed
with a
highly
exhausted and
freshly
made tube.
When the tube has been used for some time the
experiment
often fails. It is
possible
that the
gradual
and slow
impairment
of the vacuum is the cause. This slow
propagation
of the dis-
charge through
a
very
narrow
glass
tube
corresponds exactly
to
the
propagation
of heat
through
a bar warmed at one end. The
quicker
the heat is carried
away laterally
the
longer
time it will
take for the heat to warm the remote end. When the current
of a low
frequency
coil is
passed through
the fibre from end to
end,
then the lateral
dissipation
is small and the
discharge
in-
stantly
breaks
through
almost without
exception.
FIG. 189. FIG. l0.
After these
experiments
and observations which have shown
the
importance
of the
discontinuity
or atomic structure of the
medium and which will serve to
explain,
in a measure at
least,
the nature of the four kinds of
light
effects
producible
with
these
currents,
I
may
now
give you
an illustration of these
effects. For the sake of interest I
may
do this in a manner
which to
many
of
you might
be novel. You have seen before
that we
may
now
convey
the electric vibration to a
body by
means of a
single
wire or conductor of
any
kind. Since the
HIGH
FREQ
UENCY AND HIGH FOTENTIAL CURRENTS. 359
human frame is
conducting
I
may convey
the vibration
through
my body.
First,
as in some
previous experiments,
I connect
my body
with
one of the terminals of a
high-tension
transformer and take in
my
hand an exhausted bulb which contains a small carbon button
mounted
upon
a
platinum
wire
leading
to the outside of the
bulb,
and the button is rendered
incandescent as soon as the transformer
is set to work
(Fig. 190).
I
may place
a
conducting
shade on the
bulb which serves to
intensify
the
action,
but is not
necessary.
Nor is it
required
that the button should be in
conducting
con-
nection witli the hand
through
a wire
leading through
the
glass,
FIG. 192.
for sufficient
energy may
be transmitted
through
the
glass
itself
by
inductive action to render the button incandescent.
Next I take a
highly
exhausted bulb
containing
a
strongly
phosphorescent body,
above which is mounted a small
plate
of
aluminum on a
platinum
wire
leading
to the
outside,
and the cur-
rents
flowing through my body
excite intense
phosphorescence
in the bulb
(Fig. 191).
Next
again
I take in
my
hand a
simple
exhausted
tube,
and in the same manner the
gas
inside the tube
is rendered
highly
incandescent or
phosphorescent (Fig. 192).
Finally,
I
may
take in
my
hand a
wire,
bare or covered with thick
insulation,
it is
quite immaterial;
the electrical vibration is su
intense as to cover the wire with a luminous film
(Fig. 193).
360
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
A few words must now be devoted to each of these
phenomena.
In the first
place,
I will consider the incandescence of a button or of
a solid in
general,
and dwell
upon
some facts which
apply equally
to all these
phenomena.
It was
pointed
out before that when a
thin
conductor,
such as a
lamp filament,
for
instance,
is connected
with one of its ends to the terminal of a transformer of
high
tension the filament is
brought
to incandescence
partly by
a
conduction current and
partly by
bombardment. The shorter
and thicker the filament the more
important
becomes the
latter,
and
finally, reducing
the filament to a mere
button,
all the heat-
ing
must
practically
be attributed to the bombardment. So in
the
experiment
before
shown,
the button is rendered incandescent
by
the
rhythmical impact
of
freely
movable small bodies in the
bulb. These bodies
may
be the molecules of the residual
gas,
particles
of dust or
lumps
torn from the electrode
;
whatever
they
are,
it is certain that the
heating
of the button is
essentially
con-
nected with the
pressure
of such
freely
movable
particles,
or of
atomic matter in
general
in the bulb. The
heating
is the more
intense the
greater
the number of
impacts per
second and the
greater
the
energy
of each
impact.
Yet the button would
be heated also if it were connected to a source of a
steady po-
tential. In such a case
electricity
would be carried
away
from
the button
by
the
freely
movable carriers or
particles flying
about,
and the
quantity
of
electricity
thus carried
away might
be
sufficient to
bring
the button to incandescence
by
its
passage
through
the latter. But the bombardment could not be of
great
importance
in such case. For this reason it would
require
a com-
paratively very great supply
of
energy
to the button to maintain
it at incandescence with a
steady potential.
The
higher
the fre-
quency
of the electric
impulses
the more
economically
can the
button be maintained at incandescence. One of the chief rea-
sons
why
this is
so, is,
I
believe,
that with
impulses
of
very high
frequency
there is less
exchange
of the
freely
movable carriers
around the electrode and this
means,
that in the bulb the heated
matter is better confined to the
neighborhood
of the button. If
a double
bulb,
as illustrated in
Fig.
194 be
made, comprising
a
large globe
B and a small one
5,
each
containing
as usual a fila-
ment/"
mounted on a
platinum
wire w and w
t ,
it is
found,
that if
the filaments
ff
be
exactly alike,
it
requires
less
energy
to
keep
the filament in the
globe
b at a certain
degree
of
incandescence,
than that in the
globe
B. This is due to the confinement of the
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS 361
movable
particles
around the button. In this case it is also ascer-
tained,
that the filament in the small
globe
5 is less deteriorated
when maintained a certain
length
of time at incandescence. This
is a
necessary consequence
of the fact that the
gas
in the small
bulb becomes
strongly
heated and therefore a
very good
con-
ductor,
and less work is then
performed
on the
button,
since the
bombardment becomes less intense as the
conductivity
of the
gas
increases. In this
construction,
of
course,
the small bulb becomes
very
hot and when it reaches an elevated
temperature
the con-
vection and radiation on the outside increase. On another oc-
casion I have shown bulbs in which this drawback was
largely
avoided. In these instances a
very
small
bulb, containing
a re-
fractory button,
was mounted in a
large globe
and the
space
be-
FIG. 193. FIG. 194.
tween the walls of both was
highly
exhausted. The outer
large
globe
remained
comparatively
cool in such constructions.
When
the
large globe
was on the
pump
and the vacuum between the
walls maintained
permanent by
the continuous action of the
pump,
the outer
globe
would remain
quite
cold,
while the button
in the small bulb was
kept
at incandescence.
But when the seal
was
made,
and the button in the small bulb maintained incan-
descent some
length
of
time,
the
large globe
too would become
warmed. From this I
conjecture
that if vacuous
space (as
Prof.
Dewar
finds)
cannot
convey
heat,
it is so
merely
in virtue of our
rapid
motion
through space
or, generally
speaking, by
the moti n
of the medium
relatively
to
us,
for a
permanent
condition could
362 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
not be maintained without the medium
being constantly
renewed.
A vacuum
cannot,
according
to all
evidence,
be
permanently
maintained around a hot
body.
In these
constructions,
before
mentioned,
the small bulb inside
would,
at least in the first
stages, prevent
all bombardment
a*
- against
the outer
large globe.
It occurred to me then to ascer-
tain how a metal sieve would behave in this
respect,
and several
bulbs,
as illustrated in
Fig. 195,
were
prepared
for this
purpose.
r
.
In a
globe &,
was mounted a thin filament
f (or button) upon
a
platinum
wire w
passing through
a
glass
stem and
leading
to the
outside of the
globe.
The filament
/"was
surrounded
by
a metal
sieve s. It was found in
experiments
with such bulbs that a sieve
with wide meshes
apparently
did not in the
slightest
affect the
bombardment
against
the
globe
b. When the vacuum was
high,
the shadow of the sieve was
clearly projected against
the
globe
and the latter would
get
hot in a short while. In some bulbs the
sieve .s was connected to a
platinum
wire sealed in the
glass.
When this w
r
ire was connected to the other terminal of the induc-
tion coil
(the
E. M. F.
being kept
low in this
case),
or to an insu-
lated
plate,
the bombardment
against
the outer
globe
1) was
diminished.
By taking
a sieve with fine meshes the bombard-
ment
against
the
globe
b was
always diminished,
but even then
if the exhaustion was carried
very far,
and when the
potential
of
the transformer was
very high,
the
globe
1} would be bombarded
and heated
quickly, though
no shadow
pf
the sieve was
visible,
owing
to the smallness of the meshes. But a
glass
tube or other
continuous
body
mounted so as to surround the
filament,
did en-
tirely
cut off the bombardment and for a while the outer
globe
b
would remain
perfectly
cold. Of course when the
glass
tube
was
sufficiently
heated the bombardment
against
the outer
globe
could be noted at once. The
experiments
with these bulbs
seemed to show that the
speeds
of the
projected
molecules or
particles
must be considerable
(though quite insignificant
when
compared
with that of
light),
otherwise it would be difficult to
understand how
they
could traverse a fine metal sieve without
being affected,
unless it were found that such small
particles
or
atoms cannot be acted
upon directly
at measurable distances.
In
regard
to the
speed
of the
projected
atoms,
Lord Kelvin has
recently
estimated it at about one kilometre a second or there-
abouts in an
ordinary
Crookes bulb. As the
potentials
obtainable
with a
disruptive discharge
coil are much
higher
than with or-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. :',(>:;
dinary coils,
the
speeds must,
of
course,
be much
greater
when
the bulbs are
lighted
from such a coil.
Assuming
the
speed
to
be as
high
as five kilometres and uniform
through
the whole
trajectory,
as it should be in a
very highly
exhausted
vessel,
then
if the alternate electrifications of the electrode would be of a
frequency
of five
million,
the
greatest
distance a
particle
could
get away
from the electrode would be one
millimetre,
and if it
could be acted
upon directly
at that
distance,
the
exchange
of
electrode matter or of the atoms would be
very
slow and there
would be
practically
no bombardment
against
the bulb. This at
least should be
so,
if the action of an electrode
upon
the atoms
of the residual
gas
would be such as
upon
electrified bodies which
we can
perceive.
A hot
body
enclosed in an exhausted bulb
produces always
atomic
bombardment,
but a hot
body
has no
definite
rhythm,
for its molecules
perform
vibrations of all kinds.
If a bulb
containing
a button or filament be exhausted as
high
as is
possible
with the
greatest
care and
by
the use of the best ar-
tifices,
it is often observed that the
discharge
cannot,
at
first,
break
through,
but after some
time, probably
in
consequence
of
some
changes
within the
bulb,
the
discharge finally passes through
and the button is rendered incandescent. In
fact,
it
appears
that
the
higher
the
degree
of exhaustion the easier is the incandescence
produced.
There seem to be no other causes to which the in-
candescence
might
be attributed in such case
except
to the bom-
bardment or similar action of the residual
gas,
or of
particles
of
matter in
general.
But if the bulb be exhausted with the
great-
est care can these
play
an
important part
? Assume the vacuum
in the bulb to be
tolerably perfect,
the
great
interest then centres
in the
question
: Is the medium which
pervades
all
space
con-
tinuous or atomic ? If
atomic,
then the
heating
of a
conducting
button or filament in an exhausted vessel
might
be due
largely
to ether
bombardment,
and then the
heating
of a conductor
in
general through
which currents of
high frequency
or
high poten-
tial are
passed
must be modified
by
the behavior of such medium
;
then also the skin
effect,
the
apparent
increase of the ohmic
re-
sistance, etc., admit, partially
at
least,
of a different
explanation.
It is
certainly
more in accordance with
many
phenomena
ob-
served with
high-frequency
currents to hold that all
space
is
per-
vaded with free
atoms,
rather than to assume that it is devoid
of
these,
and dark and
cold,
for so it must
be,
if filled with a con-
tinuous
medium,
since in such there can be neither heat nor
light.
364 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
Is then
energy
transmitted
by independent
carriers or
by
the
vibration of a continuous medium ? This
important question
is
by
no means as
yet positively
answered. But most of the effects
which are here
considered, especially
the
light effects,
incandes-
cence,
or
phosphorescence,
involve the
presence
of free atoms and
would be
impossible
without these.
In
regard
to the incandescence of a
refractory
button
(or
fila-
ment)
in an exhausted
receiver,
which has been one of the sub-
jects
of this
investigation,
the chief
experiences,
which
may
serve
as a
guide
in
constructing
such
bulbs, may
be summed
up
as fol-
lows : 1. The button should be as small as
possible, spherical,
of a smooth or
polished surface,
and of
refractory
material which
withstands
evaporation
best. 2. The
support
of the button
should be
very
thin and screened
by
an aluminum and mica
sheet,
as I have described on another occasion. 3. The exhaustion of
the bulb should be as
high
as
possible.
4. The
frequency
of the
currents should be as
high
as
practicable.
5. The currents should
be of a harmonic rise and
fall,
without sudden
interruptions.
6.
The heat should be confined to the button
by inclosing
the same
in a small bulb or otherwise. 7. The
space
between the walls of
the small bulb and the outer
globe
should be
highly
exhausted.
Most of the considerations which
apply
to the incandescence
of a solid
just
considered
may
likewise be
applied
to
phosphor-
escence.
Indeed,
in an exhausted vessel the
phosphorescence is,
as a
rule,
primarily
excited
by
the
powerful beating
of the elec-
trode stream of atoms
against
the
phosphorescent body.
Even in
many cases,
where there is no evidence of such a
bombardment,
I think that
phosphorescence
is excited
by
violent
impacts
of
atoms,
which are not
necessarily
thrown off from the electrode
but are acted
upon
from the same
inductively through
the
medium or
through
chains of other atoms. That mechanical
shocks
play
an
important part
in
exciting phosphorescence
in a
bulb
may
be seen from the
following experiment.
If a
bulb,
constructed as that illustrated in
Fig.
1Y4,
be taken and exhausted
with the
greatest
care so that the
discharge
cannot
pass,
the fila-
ment
f
acts
by
electrostatic induction
upon
the tube t and the
latter is set in vibration. If
the tube o be rather
wide,
about an
inch or
so,
the filament
may
be so
powerfully
vibrated that when-
ever it hits the
glass
tube it excites
phosphorescence.
But the
phosphorescence
ceases when the filament comes to rest. The
vibration can be arrested and
again
started
by varying
the
HIGH
FEEQ
UENCT AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 365
frequency
of the currents. Now the filament lias its own
period
of
vibration,
and if the
frequency
of the currents is such
that there is
resonance,
it is
easily
set
vibrating, though
the
po-
tential of the currents be small. I have often observed that the
filament in the bulb is
destroyed by
such mechanical resonance.
The filament vibrates as a rule so
rapidly
that it cannot be seen
and the
experimenter may
at first be
mystified.
When such an
experiment
as the one described is
carefully performed,
the
po-
tential of the currents need be
extremely small,
and for this
reason I infer that the
phosphorescence
is then due to the
mechanical shock of the filament
against
the
glass, just
as it is
produced by striking
a loaf of
sugar
with a knife. The mechani-
cal shock
produced by
the
projected
atoms is
easily
noted when
a bulb
containing
a button is
grasped
in the hand and the cur-
rent turned on
suddenly.
I believe that a bulb could be shat-
tered
by observing
the conditions of resonance.
In tlie
experiment
before cited it
is,
of
course, open
to
say,
that the
glass tube, upon coming
in contact with the
filament,
re-
tains a
charge
of a certain
sign upon
the
point
of contact. If
now the filament
again
touches the
glass
at the same
point
while
it is
oppositely charged,
the
charges equalize
under evolution of
light.
But
nothing
of
importance
would be
gained by
such an
explanation.
It is
unquestionable
that the initial
charges given
to the atoms or to the
glass play
some
part
in
exciting phospho-
rescence.
So,
for
instance,
if a
phosphorescent
bulb be first ex-
cited
by
a
high frequency
coil
by connecting
it to one of the ter-
minals of the latter and the
degree
of
luminosity
be
noted,
and then
the bulb be
highly charged
from a Holtz machine
by attaching
it
preferably
to the
positive
terminal of the
machine,
it is found
that when the bulb is
again
connected to the terminal of the
high
frequency
coil,
the
phosphorescence
is far more intense. On
another occasion I have considered the
possibility
of some
phos-
phorescent phenomena
in bulbs
being produced by
the incandes-
cence of an infinitesimal
layer
on the surface of the
phosphores-
cent
body. Certainly
the
impact
of the atoms is
powerful enough
to
produce
intense incandescence
by
the
collisions,
since
they bring
quickly
to a
high temperature
a
body
of considerable bulk. If
any
such effect
exists,
then the best
appliance
for
producing phospho-
rescence in a
bulb,
which we know so
far,
is a
disruptive discharge
coil
giving
an enormous
potential
with but few fundamental dis-
charges, say
25-30
per
second, just enough
to
produce
a continu-
366
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TES1.A.
ous
impression upon
the
eye.
It is a fact that such a coil excites
phosphorescence
under almost
any
condition and at all
degrees
of
exhaustion,
and I have observed effects which
appear
to be due
to
phosphorescence
even at
ordinary pressures
of the
atmosphere,
when the
potentials
are
extremely high.
But if
phosphorescent
light
is
produced by
the
equalization
of
charges
of electrified
atoms
(whatever
this
may
mean
ultimately),
then the
higher
the
frequency
of the
impulses
or alternate
electrifications,
the
more economical will be the
light production.
It is a
long
known and
noteworthy
fact that all the
phosphorescent
bodies
are
poor
conductors of
electricity
and
heat,
and that all bodies
cease to emit
phosphorescent light
when
they
are
brought
to a
certain
temperature.
Conductors on the
contrary
do not
possess
this
quality.
There are but few
exceptions
to the rule. Carbon
is one of them.
Becquerel
noted that carbon
phosphoresces
at
at a certain elevated
temperature preceding
the dark red. This
phenomenon may
be
easily
observed in bulbs
provided
with a
rather
large
carbon electrode
(say,
a
sphere
of
six millimetres di-
ameter).
If the current is turned on after a few
seconds,
a snow
white film covers the
electrode, just
before it
gets
dark red.
Similar effects are noted with other
conducting
bodies,
but
many
scientific men will
probably
not attribute them to true
phosphor-
escence. Whether true incandescence has
anything
to do with
phosphorescence
excited
by
atomic
impact
or mechanical shocks
still remains to be
decided,
but it is a fact that all
conditions,
w
T
hich tend to localize and increase the
heating
effect at the
point
of
impact,
are almost
invariably
the most favorable for the
pro-
duction of
phosphorescence. So,
if the electrode be
very small,
which is
equivalent
to
saying
in
general,
that the electric
density
is
great
;
if the
potential
be
high,
arid if the
gas
be
highly
rare-
fied,
all of which
things imply high speed
of the
projected
atoms,
or
matter,
and
consequently
violent
impacts
the
phosphores-
cence is
very
intense. If a bulb
provided
with a
large
and small
electrode be attached to the terminal of an induction
coil,
the
small electrode excites
phosphorescence
while the
large
one
may
not do
so,
because of the smaller electric
density
and hence
smaller
speed
of the atoms. A bulb
provided
with a
large
elec-
trode
may
be
grasped
with the hand Avhile the electrode is con-
nected to the terminal of the coil and it
may
not
phosphoresce
;
but if instead of
grasping
the bulb with the
hand,
the same be
touched with a
pointed wire,
the
phosphorescence
at once
spreads
11IG1I
VllI&Q
UENCY AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRKltTS. 307
through
the
bulb,
because of the
great
density at the
point
of
contact. .With low
frequencies
it seems that
gases
of
great
atomic
weight
excite more intense
phosphorescence
than those
of smaller
weight,
as for
instance,
hydrogen.
With
high
fre-
quencies
the observations are not
sufficiently
reliable to draw a
conclusion.
Oxygen,
as is
well-known, produces exceptionally
strong
effects,
which
may
be in
part
due to chemical action. A
bulb with
hydrogen
residue seems to be most
easily
excited.
Electrodes which are most
easily
deteriorated
produce
more
intense
phosphorescence
in
bulbs,
but the condition is not
per-
manent because of the
impairment
of the vacuum and the
deposi-
tion of the electrode matter
upon
the
phosphorescent
surfaces.
Some
liquids,
as
oils,
for
instance, produce magnificent
effects of
phosphorescence (or
fluorescence
?),
but
they
last
only
a few
{seconds. So if a bulb has a trace of oil on the walls and the
current is turned
on,
the
phosphorescence only persists
for a few
moments until the oil is carried
away.
Of all bodies so far
tried,
sulphide
of zinc seems to be the most
susceptible
to
phosphores-
cence. Some
samples,
obtained
through
the kindness of Prof.
Henry
in
Paris,
were
employed
in
many
of these bulbs. One of
the defects of this
sulphide is,
that it loses its
quality
of
emitting
light
when
brought
to a
temperature
which is
by
no means
high.
It can
therefore,
be used
only
for feeble intensities. An obser-
vation which
might
deserve notice
is,
that when
violently
bom-
barded from an aluminum electrode
it assumes a black
color,
but
singularly enough,
it returns to the
original
condition when it
cools down.
The most
important
fact arrived at in
pursuing investigations
in this direction
is,
that in all cases it is
necessary,
in order to ex-
cite
phosphorescence
with a minimum amount of
energy,
to ob-
serve certain conditions.
Namely,
there is
always,
no matter what
the
frequency
of the
currents, degree
of exhaustion and character
of the bodies
in the
bulb,
a certain
potential
(assuming
the bulb
excited from one
terminal)
or
potential
difference
(assuming
the
bulb to be excited
with both
terminals)
which
produces
the most
economical
result. If the
potential
be
increased,
considerable
energy
may
be wasted without
producing
any
more
light,
and if
it be
diminished,
then
again
the
light production
is not as econom-
ical. The exact condition
under which the best result is obtained
seems to
depend
on
many things
of a different
nature,
and it is to
be
yet investigated by
other
experimenters,
but it will
certainly
368 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
have to be observed when such
phosphorescent
bulbs are
oper-
ated,
if the best results are to be obtained.
Coming
now to the most
interesting
of these
phenomena,
the
incandescence or
phosphorescence
of
gases,
at low
pressures
or at
the
ordinary pressure
of the
atmosphere,
we must seek the ex-
planation
of these
phenomena
in the same
primary causes,
that
is,
in shocks or
impacts
of the atoms. Just as molecules or atoms
beating upon
a solid
body
excite
phosphorescence
in the same or
render it
incandescent,
so when
colliding among
themselves
they
produce
similar
phenomena.
But this is a
very
insufficient ex-
planation
and concerns
only
the crude mechanism.
Light
is
pro-
duced
by
vibrations which
go
on at a rate almost inconceivable.
If we
compute,
from the
energy
contained in the form of known
radiations in a definite
space
the force which is
necessary
to set
up
such
rapid vibrations,
we
find,
that
though
the
density
of the
ether be
incomparably
smaller than that of
any body
we
know,
even
hydrogen,
the force is
something surpassing comprehension.
What is this
force,
which in mechanical measure
may
amount to
thousands of tons
per square
inch ? It is electrostatic force in the
light
of modern views. It is
impossible
to conceive how a
body
of measurable dimensions could be
charged
to so
high
a
potential
that the force would be sufficient to
produce
these vibrations.
Long
before
any
such
charge
could be
imparted
to the
body
it
would be shattered into atoms. The sun emits
light
and
heat,
and
so does an
ordinary
flame or incandescent
filament,
but in neither
of these can the force be accounted for if it be assumed that it is
associated with the
body
as a whole.
Only
in one
way may
we
account for
it, namely, by identifying
it with the atom. An
atom is so
small,
that if it be
charged by coming
in contact with
an electrified
body
and the
charge
be assumed to follow the same
law as in the case of bodies of measurable
dimensions,
it must
retain a
quantity
of
electricity
which is
fully capable
of account-
ing
for these forces and tremendous rates of vibration. But the
atom behaves
singularly
in this
respect
it
always
takes the same
"
charge."
It is
very likely
that resonant vibration
plays
a most
important
part
in all manifestations of
energy
in nature.
Throughout space
all matter is
vibrating,
and all rates of vibration are
represented,
from the lowest musical note to the
highest pitch
of the chemical
rays,
hence an
atom,
or
complex
of
atoms,
no matter what its
period,
must find a vibration with which it is in resonance.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 869
"When we consider the enormous
rapidity
of the
light vibrations,
we realize the
impossibility
of
producing
such vibrations
directly
with
any apparatus
of
measurable
dimensions,
and we are driven
to the
only possible
means of
attaining
the
object
of
setting up
waves of
light by
electrical means and
economically,
that
is,
to
affect the molecules or atoms of a
gas,
to cause them to collide and
vibrate. We then must ask ourselves How can free
molecules
or atoms .be affected ?
It is a fact that
they
can be affected
by
electrostatic
force,
as is
apparent
in
many
of these
experiments. By varying
the electro-
static force we can
agitate
the
atoms,
and cause them to collide
accompanied by
evolution of heat and
light.
It is not demonstrated
beyond
doubt that we can affect them otherwise. If a luminous
discharge
is
produced
in a closed exhausted
tube,
do the atoms
arrange
themselves in obedience to
any
other but to electrostatic
force
acting
in
straight
lines from atom to atom ?
Only recently
I
investigated
the mutual action between two circuits with extreme
rates of vibration. When a
battery
of a few
jars (c
c c
c,
Fig.
196)
is
discharged through
a
primary
p of low resistance
(the
con-
nections
being
as illustrated in
Figs. 183,
183&andl83c),
and the
frequency
of vibration is
many
millions there are
great
differ-
ences of
potential
between
points
on the
primary
not more than
a few inches
apart.
These differences
may
be
10,000
volts
per
inch,
if not
more,
taking
the maximum value of the E. M. F. The
secondary
s is therefore acted
upon by
electrostatic
induction,
which is in such extreme cases of much
greater importance
than
the
electro-dynamic.
To such sudden
impulses
the
primary
as
well as the
secondary
are
poor conductors,
and therefore
great
differences of
potential may
be
produced by
electrostatic induc-
tion between
adjacent points
on the
secondary.
Then
sparks may
jump
between the wires and streamers become visible in the dark
if the
light
of the
discharge through
the
spark gap
c? c? be
carefully
excluded. If now we substitute a closed vacuum tube for the
metallic
secondary s,
the differences of
potential produced
in the
tube
by
electrostatic induction from the
primary
are
fully
suffi-
cient to excite
portions
of it
;
but as the
points
of certain differ-
ences of
potential
on the
primary
are not
fixed,
but are
generally
constantly changing
in
position,
a luminous band is
produced
in
the
tube, apparently
not
touching
the
glass,
as it
should,
if the
points
of maximum and minimum differences of
potential
were
fixed on the
primary.
I do not exclude the
possibility
of such a
370 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
tube
being
excited
only by electro-dynamic induction,
for
very
able
physicists
hold this view
;
but in
my opinion,
there is as
yet
no
positive proof given
that atoms of a
gas
in a closed tube
may
arrange
themselves in chains under the action of an electromotive
impulse produced by electro-dynamic
induction in the tube. I
have been unable so far to
produce
striae in a
tube,
however
long,
and at whatever
degree
of
exhaustion,
that
is,
striae at
right
angles
to the
supposed
direction of the
discharge
or the axis of
the tube
;
but I have
distinctly
observed in a
large bulb,
in which
a wide luminous band was
produced by passing
a
discharge
of a
battery through
a wire
surrounding
the
bulb,
a circle of feeble
luminosity
between two luminous
bands,
one of which was more
intense than the other.
Furthermore,
with
my present experi-
ence I do not think that such a
gas discharge
in a closed tube
can
vibrate,
that
is,
vibrate as a whole. I am convinced that no
V
FIG. 196. FIG. 197.
discharge through
a
gas
can vibrate. The atoms of a
gas
behave
very curiously
in
respect
to sudden electric
impulses.
The
gas
does not seem to
possess any appreciable
inertia to such
impulses,
for it is a
fact,
that the
higher
the
frequency
of
the
impulses,
with the
greater
freedom does the
discharge
pass through
the
gas.
If the
gas possesses
no inertia
thqui
it cannot
vibrate,
for some inertia is
necessary
for the free vibra-
tion. I conclude from this that if a
lightning discharge
occurs
between two
clouds,
there can be no
oscillation,
such as would
be
expected, considering
the
capacity
of the clouds. But if
the
lightning discharge
strike the
earth,
there is
always
vibra-
tion in the
earth,
but not in the cloud. In a
gas discharge
each
atom vibrates at its own
rate,
but there is no vibration of the
conducting gaseous
mass as a whole. This is an
important
consideration in the
great problem
of
producing light
economi-
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH
POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 371
callj,
for it teaches us that to reach this result we must use
impulses
of
very high frequency
and
necessarily also of
high
potential.
It is a fact that
oxygen produces
a more intense
light
in a tube. Is it because
oxygen
atoms
possess
some inertia
and the vibration does not die out
instantly
? But then
nitrogen
should be as
good,
and chlorine and
vapors
of
many
other bodies
much better than
oxygen,
unless the
magnetic properties
of the
latter enter
prominently
into
play. Or,
is the
process
in the tube
of an
electrolytic
nature ?
Many
observations
certainly speak
for
it,
the most
important being
that matter is
always
carried
away
from the electrodes and the vacuum in a bulb cannot be
perma-
nently
maintained. If such
process
takes
place
in
reality,
then
again
must we take
refuge
in
high frequencies, for,
with
such,
electrolytic
action should be reduced to a
minimum,
if not ren_
dered
entirely impossible.
It is an undeniable fact that with
very
high frequencies, provided
the
impulses
be of harmonic
nature,
like those obtained from an
alternator,
there is less deteri-
oration and the vacua are more
permanent.
With
disruptive
dis-
charge
coils there are sudden rises of
potential
and the vacua are
more
quickly impaired,
for the electrodes are
deteriorated in a
very
short time. It was observed in some
large tubes,
which
were
provided
with
heavy
carbon blocks B B
l5
connected to
plati-
num wires w
w^
(as
illustrated in
Fig. 197),
and which were em-
ployed
in
experiments
with the
disruptive discharge
instead of the
ordinary
air
gap,
that the carbon
particles
under the action of the
powerful magnetic
field in which the tube was
placed,
were de-
posited
in
regular
fine lines in the middle of the
tube,
as illus-
trated. These lines were attributed to the deflection or distortion
of the
discharge by
the
magnetic field,
but
why
the
deposit
occiirred
principally
where the field was most intense did not
appear quite
clear. A fact of
interest,
likewise
noted,
was
that the
presence
of a
strong magnetic
field increases the deteri-
oration of the
electrodes, probably by
reason of the
rapid
inter-
ruptions
it
produces, whereby
there is
actually
a
higher
E. M. F.
maintained between the electrodes.
Much would remain to be said about the luminous effects
pro-
duced in
gases
at low or
ordinary pressures.
With the
present
experiences
before us we cannot
say
that the essential nature of
these
charming phenomena
is
sufficiently
known. But
investiga-
tions in this direction are
being pushed
with
exceptional
ardor.
Every
line of scientific
pursuit
has its
fascinations,
but electrical
372 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
investigation appears
to
possess
a
peculiar attraction,
for there is
no
experiment
or observation of
any
kind in the domain of this
wonderful science which Avould not
forcibly appeal
to us. Yet
to me it
seems,
that of all the
many
marvelous
things
we
observe,
a vacuum
tube,
excited
by
an electric
impulse
from a distant
source, bursting
forth out of the darkness and
illuminating
the
room with its beautiful
light,
is as
lovely
a
phenomenon
as can
greet
our
eyes.
More
interesting
still it
appears when,
reducing
the fundamental
discharges
across the
gap
to a
very
small nuiu-
FIG. 198.
ber and
waving
the tube about we
produce
all kinds of
designs
in luminous lines. So
by way
of amusement I take a
straight
long tube,
or a
square one,
or a
square
attached to a
straight tube,
and
by whirling
them about in the
hand,
I imitate the
spokes
of
a
wheel,
a Gramme
winding,
a drum
winding,
an alternate cur-
rent motor
winding,
etc.
(Fig. 198).
Viewed from a distance the
effect is weak and much of its
beauty
is
lost,
but
being
near or
holding
the tube in the
hand,
one cannot resist its charm.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND 1IIQR POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 373
In
presenting
these
insignificant
results I have not
attempted
to
arrange
and co-ordinate
them,
as would be
proper
in a
strictly
scientific
investigation,
in which
every succeeding
result should
be a
logical sequence
of the
preceding,
so that it
might
be
guessed
in advance
by
the careful reader or attentive listener. I have
preferred
to concentrate
my energies chiefly upon advancing
novel facts or ideas which
might
serve as
suggestions
to
others,
and this
may
serve as an excuse for the lack of
harmony.
The
explanations
of the
phenomena
have been
given
in
good
faith
and in the
spirit
of a student
prepared
to find that
they
admit of
a better
interpretation.
There can be no
great
harm in a student
taking
an erroneous
view,
but when
great
minds
err,
the world
must
dearly pay
for their mistakes.
CHAPTEK XXIX.
TESLA ALTERNATING CURRENT GENERATORS FOR HIGH FRE-
QUENCY,
IN DETAIL.
It lias become a common
practice
to
operate
arc
lamps by
alter-
nating
or
pulsating,
as
distinguished
from
continuous,
currents
;
but an
objection
which has been raised to such
systems
exists in
the fact that the arcs emit a
pronounced sound,
varying
with the
rate of the alternations or
pulsations
of current. This noise is
due to the
rapidly alternating heating
and
cooling,
and conse-
quent expansion
and
contraction,
of the
gaseous
matter
forming-
the
arc,
which
corresponds
with the
periods
or
impulses
of the
current. Another
disadvantageous
feature is found in the diffi-
culty
of
maintaining
an
alternating
current arc in
consequence
of
the
periodical
increase in resistance
corresponding
to the
periodi-
cal
working
of the current. This feature entails a further dis-
advantage, namely,
that small arcs are
impracticable.
Theoretical considerations have led Mr. Tesla to the belief
that these
disadvantageous
features could be obviated
by employ-
ing
currents of a
sufficiently high
number of
alternations,
and his
anticipations
have been confirmed in
practice.
These
rapidly
alternating
currents render it
possible
to maintain small arcs
which, besides, possess
the
advantages
of silence and
persistency.
The latter
quality
is due to the
necessarily rapid
alternation^
in
consequence
of which the arc has no time to
cool,
and is
always
maintained at a
high temperature
and low resistance.
At the outset of his
experiments
Mr. Tesla encountered
great
difficulties in the construction of
high frequency
machines. A
generator
of this kind is described
here, which, though
con-
structed
quite
some time
ago,
is well
worthy
of a detailed de-
scription.
It
may
be
mentioned,
in
passing,
that
dynamos
of
this
type
have been used
by
Mr. Tesla in his
lighting
researches
and
experiments
with currents of
high potential
and
high
fre-
quency,
and reference to them will be found in his lectures
elsewhere
printed
in this volume.
1
1. See
pages
153-4 5.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 375
In the
aecompaning engravings, Figs.
199 and 200 show the
machine, respectively,
in side elevation and vertical cross-section
;
Figs. 201,
202 and 203
showing enlarged
details of construction.
As will be
seen,
A is an annular
magnetic frame,
the interior of
which is
provided
with a
large
number of
pole-pieces
D.
Owing
to the
very large
number and small size of the
poles
and the
spaces
between
them,
the field coils are
applied by
wind-
ing
an insulated conductor F
zigzag through
the
grooves,
as shown
in
Fig. 203, carrying
the wire around the annulus to form as
many layers
as is desired. In this
way
the
pole-pieces
D will be
energized
with
alternately opposite polarity
around the entire
ring.
For the
armature,
Mr. Tesla
employs
a
spider carrying
a
ring
j,
turned
down, except
at its
edges,
to form a
trough-like recep-
tacle for a mass of fine annealed iron wires
K,
which are wound
in the
groove
to form the core
proper
for the armature-coils.
Pins L are set in the sides of the
ring
j and the coils M are wound
over the
periphery
of the armature-structure
and around the
pins.
The coils M are connected
together
in
series,
and these terminals
N carried
through
the hollow shaft H to
contact-rings
P
P,
from
which the currents are taken off
by
brushes o.
In this
way
a machine with a
very large
number of
poles may
be constructed.
It is
easy,
for
instance,
to obtain in this manner
three hundred and
seventy-five
to four hundred
poles
in a machine
that
may
be
safely
driven at a
speed
of fifteen hundred or six-
teen hundred revolutions
per
minute,
which will
produce
ten
376 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA
TESLA,
thousand or eleven thousand alternations of current
per
second.
Arc
lamps
K R are shown in the
diagram
as connected
up
in series
with the machine in
Fig.
200. If such a current be
applied
to
running
arc
lamps,
the sound
produced by
or in the arc becomes
practically
inaudible, for, by increasing
the rate of
change
in the
current,
and
consequently
the number of vibrations
per
unit of
time of the
gaseous
material of the arc
up to,
or
beyond,
ten
thousand or eleven thousand
per second,
or to what is
regarded
as the limit of
audition,
the sound due to such vibrations will not
be audible. The exact number of
changes
or undulations neces-
sary
to
produce
this result will
vary
somewhat
according
to the
size of the arc that is to
say,
the smaller the
arc,
the
greater
the
FIGS.
200, 201,
202 and 203.
number of
changes
that will be
required
to render it inaudible
within certain limits. It should also be stated that the arc should
not exceed a certain
length.
The difficulties encountered in the construction of these
machines are of a mechanical as well as an electrical nature.
The machines
may
be
designed
on two
plans
: the field
may
be
formed either of
alternating poles,
or of
polar projections
of the
same
polarity. Up
to about
15,000
alternations
per
second in an
experimental machine,
the former
plan may
be
followed,
but a
more efficient machine is obtained on the second
plan.
In the machine above
described,
which was
capable
of
running
two arcs of normal candle
power,
the field was
composed
of a
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HLOU POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 37?
ring
of
wrought
iron 32 inches outside
diameter,
and about 1
inch thick. The inside diameter was 30 inches. There were 384
polar projections.
The wire was wound in
zigzag form,
but two
wires were wound so as to
completely envelop
the
projections.
The distance between the
pro jections
is about
T
3
^ inch,
and
they
are a little over
j\
inch thick. The field
magnet
was made rela-
tively
small so as to
adapt
the machine for a constant current.
There are 384 coils connected in two series. It was found im-
practicable
to use
any
wire much thicker than No. 26 B. and S.
gauge
on account of the local effects. In such a machine the
clearance should be as small as
possible;
for this reason the
machine was made
only
1 inch
wide,
so that the
binding
wires
might
be obviated. The armature wires must be wound with
FIG. 204.
great care,
as
they
are
apt
to
fly
off in
consequence
of the
great
peripheral speed.
In various
experiments
this machine has been
run as
high
as
3,000
revolutions
per
minute.
Owing
to the
great
speed
it was
possible
to obtain as
high
as 10
amperes
out of the
machine. The electromotive force was
regulated by
means of
an
adjustable
condenser within
very
wide
limits,
the limits
being
the
greater,
the
greater
the
speed.
This machine was
frequently
used to run Mr. Tesla's
laboratory lights.
The machine above described was
only
one of
many
such
types
constructed. It serves well for an
experimental
machine,
but if still
higher
alternations are
required
and
higher efficiency
is
necessary,
then a machine on a
plan
shown in
Figs.
204 to
378
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
207,
is
preferable.
The
principal advantage
of this
type
of
machine is that there is not much
magnetic leakage,
and that a
field
may
be
produced, varying greatly
in
intensity
in
places
not
much distant from each other.
In these
engravings, Figs.
204 and 205 illustrate a machine in
which the armature conductor and field coils are
stationary,
while
the field
magnet
core revolves.
Fig.
206 shows a machine
embodying
the same
plan
of
construction,
but
having
a
stationary
field
magnet
and
rotary
armature.
The conductor in which the currents are induced
may
be
arranged
in various
ways ;
but Mr. Tesla
prefers
the
following
method : He
employs
an annular
plate
of
copper D,
and
by
FIG. 205.
means of a saw cuts in it radial slots from one
edge nearly
through
to the
other, beginning alternately
from
opposite edges.
In this
way
a continuous
zigzag
conductor is formed. When the
polar projections
are inch
wide,
the width of the conductor
should
not,
under
any
circumstances,
be more than
^
inch wide
;
even then the
eddy
effect is considerable.
To the inner
edge
of this
plate
are secured two
rings
of non-
magnetic
metal
E,
which are insulated from the
copper
conductor,
but held
firmly
thereto
by
means of the bolts F. Within the
rings
E is then
placed
an annular coil
G,
which is the
energizing
coil for the field
magnet.
The conductor D and the
parts
at-
tached thereto are
supported
by
means of the
cylindrical
shell or
HIGH
FREQ
UENCr AND HIGH
POTENTIA L
CURRENTS. 379
casting
A
A,
the two
parts
of which are
brought together
and
clamped
to the outer
edge
of the conductor D.
The core for the field
magnet
is built
up
of two circular
parts
H
H,
formed with
annular
grooves i, which,
when the two
parts
are
brought together,
form a
space
for the
reception
of the ener-
gizing
coil G. The hubs of the cores are trued
off,
so as to fit
closely against
one
another,
while the outer
portions
or
flanges
which form the
polar
faces j
j,
are reduced somewhat in thick-
ness to make room for the
conductor
D,
and are serrated on their
faces. The number of serrations in the
polar
faces is
arbitrary
;
FIG. 206.
but there must exist between them and the radial
portions
of
the conductor D certain
relation,
which will be understood
by
reference to
Fig.
207 in which N N
represent
the
projections
or
points
on one face of the core of the
field,
and s s the
points
of
the other face. The conductor D is shown in this
figure
in section
a a'
designating
the radial
portions
of the
conductor,
and 5 the
insulating
divisions between them. The relative width of the
parts
a a' and the
space
between
any
two
adjacent points
N N or
s s is such that when the radial
portions
a of the conductor are
passing
between the
opposite points
N s where the field is
strong-
est,
the intermediate radial
portions
a' are
passing through
the
380 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
widest
spaces midway
between such
points
and where the field is
weakest. Since the core on one side is of
opposite polarity
to
the
part facing it,
all the
projections
of one
polar
face will be of
opposite polarity
to those of the other face.
Hence,
although
the
space
between
any
two
adjacent points
on the same face
may
be
extremely small,
there will be no
leakage
of the
magnetic
lines between
any
two
points
of the same
name,
but the lines of
force will
pass
across from one set of
points
to the other. The
construction followed obviates to a
great degree
the distortion of
the
magnetic
lines
by
the action of the current in the conductor
D,
in which it will be observed the current is
flowing
at
any given
time from the centre toward the
periphery
in one set of radial
parts
a and in the
opposite
direction in the
adjacent parts
a'.
In order to connect the
energizing
coil
G, Fig. 204,
with a source
of
continuous
current,
Mr. Tesla utilizes two
adjacent
radial
por-
tions of the conductor D for
connecting
the terminals of the coil
G with two
binding posts
M. For this
purpose
the
plate
D is cut
vwwyy/
tr
m.mmmm ...'>
FIG. 207.
entirely through,
as
shown,
and the break thus made is
bridged
over
by
a short conductor c. The
plate
D is cut
through
to form
two terminals
d,
which are connected to
binding posts
N. The
core H
H,
when rotated
by
the
driving pulley, generates
in the con-
ductors D an
alternating
current,
which is taken off from the
binding posts
ST.
When it is desired to rotate the conductor between the faces
of a
stationary
field
magnet,
the construction shown in
Fig.
206,
is
adopted.
The conductor D in this case is or
may
be
made in
substantially
the same manner as above described
by
slotting
an annular
conducting-plate
and
supporting
it between
two heads
o,
held
together by
bolts o and fixed to the
driving-shaft
K. The inner
edge
of the
plate
or conductor D is
preferably
flanged
to secure a firmer union between it and the heads o. It
is insulated from the head. The
field-magnet
in this case con-
sists of two annular
parts
H
H, provided
with annular
grooves
i
for the
reception
of the coils. The
flanges
or faces
surrounding
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH
POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 381
the annular
groove
are
brought together,
while the inner
flanges
are
serrated,
as in the
previous case,
and form the
polar
faces.
The two
parts
H H are
formed with a base
E, upon
which the
machine rests, s s are
non-magnetic
bushings
secured or set in
the central
opening
of the cores. The conductor D is cut
entirely
through
at one
point
to form
terminals,
from which
insulated
conductors T are led
through
the shaft to
collecting-rings
v.
In one
type
of machine of this kind
constructed
by
Mr.
Tesla,
the field had 480
polar projections
on each
side,
and from this
machine it was
possible
to obtain
30,000
alternations
per
second.
As the
polar projections
must
necessarily
be
very narrow,
very
thin wires or sheets must be used to avoid the
eddy
current
effects. Mr. Tesla has thus constructed machines with a station-
ary
armature and
rotating field,
in which case also the
field-coil
was
supported
so that the
revolving part
consisted
only
of a
wrought
iron
body
devoid of
any
wire and also machines with a
rotating
armature and
stationary
field. The machines
may
he
either drum or
disc,
but Mr. Tesla's
experience
shows the latter
to be
preferable.
In the course of a
very interesting
article contributed to the
Electrical World in
February,
1891,
Mr. Tesla makes some
sug-
gestive
remarks on these
high frequency
machines and his ex-
periences
with
them,
as well as with other
parts
of the
high
frequency apparatus.
Part of it is
quoted
here and is as
follows :
The writer will
incidentally
mention that
any
one who at-
tempts
for the first time to construct such a machine will have a
tale of woe to tell. He will first start
out,
as a matter of
course,
by making
an armature with the
required
number of
polar pro-
jections.
He will then
get
the satisfaction of
having produced
an
apparatus
which is fit to
accompany
a
thoroughly Wagnerian
opera.
It
may
besides
possess
the virtue of
converting
mechani-
cal
energy
into heat in a
nearly perfect
manner. If there is a
reversal in the
polarity
of the
projections,
he will
get
heat out of
the machine
;
if there is no
reversal,
the
heating
will be
less,
but
the
output
will be next to
nothing.
He will then abandon the
iron in the
armature,
and he will
get
from the
Scylla
to the
Charybdis.
He will look for one
difficulty
and will find
another,
but,
after a few
trials,
he
may get nearly
what he wanted.
3*2 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TK8LA.
Among
the
many experiments
winch
may
be
performed
with
such a
machine,
of not the least interest are those
performed
with a
high-tension
induction coil. The character of the dis-
charge
is
completely changed.
The arc is established at much
greater
distances,
and it is so
easily
affected
by
the
slightest
cur-
rent of air that it often
wriggles
around in the most
singular
manner. It
usually
emits the
rhythmical
sound
peculiar
to the
alternate current
arcs,
but the curious
point
is that the sound
may
be heard with a number of alternations far above ten thou-
sand
per second,
which
by many
is considered to be about the
limit of audition. In
many respects
the coil behaves like a static
machine. Points
impair considerably
the
sparking interval,
elec-
tricity escaping
from them
freely,
and from a wire attached to
one of the terminals streams of
light issue,
as
though
it were
connected
to a
pole
of a
powerful Toepler
machine. All these
phenomena
are,
of
course, mostly
due to the enormous differ-
ences of
potential
obtained. As a
consequence
of the self-induc-
tion of the coil and the
high frequency,
the current is minute
while there is a
corresponding
rise of
pressure.
A current im-
pulse
of some
strength
started in such a coil should
persist
to
flow no less than four ten-thousandths of a second. As this time
is
greater
than half the
period,
it occurs that an
opposing
electro-
motive force
begins
to act while the current is still
flowing.
As
a
consequence,
the
pressure
rises as in a tube filled with
liquid
and vibrated
rapidly
around its axis. The current is so small
that,
in the
opinion
and
involuntary experience
of the
writer,
the
discharge
of even a
very large
coil cannot
produce seriously
in-
jurious
effects, whereas,
if the same coil were
operated
with a
current of lower
frequency, though
the electromotive force would
be much
smaller,
the
discharge
would be most
certainly injuri-
ous. This
result, however,
is due in
part
to the
high frequency.
The writer's
experiences
tend to show that the
higher
the fre-
quency
the
greater
the amount of electrical
energy
which
may
be
passed through
the
body
without serious discomfort
;
whence
it seems certain that human tissues act as condensers.
One is not
quite prepared
for the behavior of the coil when
connected to a
Leyden jar.
One,
of
course, anticipates
that since
the
frequency
is
high
the
capacity
of the
jar
should be small. He
therefore takes a
very
small
jar,
about the size of a small wine
glass,
but he finds that even with this
jar
the coil is
practically
short-circuited.
He then reduces the
capacity
until he comes to
HIGH
FItEQ
UENCT AND HIG1I POTENTIAL
CURliENTS, 383
about the
capacity
of two
spheres, say,
ten centimetres in diam-
eter and two to four centimetres
apart.
The
discharge
then as-
sumes the form of a serrated band
exactly
like a succession of
sparks
viewed in a
rapidly revolving
mirror
;
the
serrations,
of
course,
corresponding
to the condenser
discharges.
In this case
one
may
observe a
queer phenomenon.
The
discharge
starts at
the nearest
points,
works
gradually up,
breaks
somewhere near
the
top
of the
spheres, begins again
at the
bottom,
and so on.
This
goes
on so fast that several serrated bands are seen at once.
One
may
be
puzzled
for a few
minutes,
but the
explanation
is
simple enough.
The
discharge begins
at the nearest
points,
the air
is heated and carries the arc
upward
until it
breaks,
when it is re-
established at the nearest
points,
etc. Since the current
passes
easily through
a condenser of even small
capacity,
it will be found
(juite
natural that
connecting only
one terminal to a
body
of the
same
size,
no matter how well
insulated, impairs considerably
the
striking
distance of the arc.
Experiments
with Greissler tubes are of
special
interest. An
exhausted
tube,
devoid of electrodes of
any kind,
will
light up
at
some distance from the coil. If a tube from a vacuum
pump
is
near the coil the whole of the
pump
is
brilliantly lighted.
An
incandescent
lamp approached
to the coil
lights up
and
gets per-
ceptibly
hot. If a
lamp
have the terminals connected to one of
the
binding posts
of the coil and the hand is
approached
to the
bulb,
a
very
curious and rather
unpleasant discharge
from the
glass
to the hand takes
place,
and the filament
may
become in-
candescent. The
diSc"Iiarge
resembles to some extent the stream
issuing
from the
plates
of a
powerful Toepler machine,
but is of
incomparably greater quantity.
The
lamp
in this case acts as a
condenser,
the rarefied
gas being
one
coating,
the
operator's
hand
the other.
By taking
the
globe
of a
lamp
in the
hand,
and
by
bringing
the metallic terminals near to or in contact with a con-
ductor connected to the
coil,
the carbon is
brought
to
bright
in-
candescence
and the
glass
is
rapidly
heated. With a 100-volt 10 c.
p. lanro one
may
without
great
discomfort stand as much current
as will
bring
the
lamp
to a considerable
brilliancy ;
but it can be
held in the hand
only
for a few
minutes,
as the
glass
is heated in
an
incredibly
short time. When a tube is
lighted by bringing
it
near to the coil it
may
be made to
go
out
by interposing
a metal
plate
on the hand between the coil and tube
;
but if the metal
plate
be fastened to a
glass
rod or otherwise
insulated,
the tube
384 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
may
remain
lighted
if the
plate
be
interposed,
or
may
even in-
crease in
luminosity.
The effect
depends
on the
position
of the
plate
and tube
relatively
to the
coil,
and
may
be
always easily
foretold
by assuming
that conduction takes
place
from one ter-
minal of the coil to the other.
According
to the
position
of the
plate,
it
may
either divert from or direct the current to the tube.
In another line of work the writer has in
frequent experiments
maintained incandescent
lamps
of 50 or 100 volts
burning
at
any
desired candle
power
with both the terminals of each
lamp
con-
nected to a stout
copper
wire of no more than a few feet in
length.
These
experiments
seem
interesting enough,
but
they
are not more so than the
queer experiment
of
Faraday,
which
has been revived and made much of
by
recent
investigators,
and
in which a
discharge
is made to
jump
between two
points
of a
bent
copper
wire. An
experiment may
be cited here which
may
seem
equally interesting.
If a Geissler
tube,
the terminals of
which are
joined by
a
copper wire,
be
approached
to the
coil,
cer-
tainly
no one would be
prepared
to see the tube
light up.
Curiously enough,
it does
light up, and,
what is
more,
the
wire does not seem to make much difference. Now one is
apt
to think in the first moment that the
impedance
of the
wire
might
have
something
to do with the
phenomenon.
But
this is of course
immediately rejected,
as for this an enormous
frequency
would be
required.
This
result, however,
seems
puzzling only
at h'rst
;
for
upon
reflection it is
quite
clear that
the wire can make but little difference. It
may
be
explained
in
more than one
way,
but it
agrees perhaps
best with observation
to assume that conduction takes
place
from the terminals of the
coil
through
the
space.
On this
assumption,
if the tube with the
wire be held in
any position,
the wire can divert little more than
the current which
passes through
the
space occupied by
the wire
and the metallic terminals of the tube
;
through
the
adjacent
space
the current
passes practically
undisturbed. For this
reason,
if the tube be held in
any position
at
right angles
to the line
joining
the
binding posts
of the
coil,
the wire makes
hardly any
difference,
but in a
position
more or less
parallel
with that line
it
impairs
to a certain extent the
brilliancy
of the tube and its
facility
to
light up.
Numerous other
phenomena may
be ex-
plained
on the same
assumption.
For
instance,
if the ends of the
tube be
provided
with washers of sufficient size and held in the
line
joining
the terminals of the
coil,
it will not
light up,
and
then
nearly
the whole of the
current,
which would otherwise
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 385
pass uniformly through
the
space
between the
washers,
is di-
verted
through
the wire. But if the tube be inclined
sufficiently
to that
line,
it will
light up
in
spite
of the
washers.
Also,
if a
metal
plate
be fastened
upon
a
glass
rod and held at
right angles
to the line
joining
the
binding posts,
and nearer to one of
them,
a tube held more or less
parallel
with the line will
light up
in-
stantly
when one of the terminals touches the
plate,
and will
go
out when
separated
from the
plate.
The
greater
the surface of
the
plate, up
to a certain
limit,
the easier the tube will
light up.
When a tube is
placed
at
right angles
to the
straight
line
joining
the
binding posts,
and then
rotated,
its
luminosity steadily
in-
creases until it is
parallel
with that line. The writer must
state,
however,
that he does nat favor the idea of a
leakage
or current
through
the
space any
more than as a suitable
explanation,
for he
is convinced that all these
experiments
could not be
performed
with
a static machine
yielding
a constant difference of
potential,
and
that condenser action is
largely
concerned in these
phenomena.
It is well to take certain
precautions
when
operating
a Ruhm-
korff coil with
very rapidly alternating
currents. The
primary
current should not be turned on too
long,
else the core
may get
so hot as to melt the
gutta-percha
or
paraffin,
or otherwise
injure
the
insulation,
and this
may
occur in a
surprisingly
short
time,
considering
the current's
strength.
The
primary
current
being
turned
on,
the tine wire terminals
may
be
joined
without
great
risk,
the
impedance being
so
great
that it is difficult to force
enough
current
through
the fine wire so as to
injure it,
and in
fact the coil
may
be on the whole much safer when the terminals
of the fine wire are connected than when
they
are insulated
;
but
special
care should be taken when the terminals are con-
nected to the
coatings
of a
Leyden jar,
for with
anywhere
near
the critical
capacity,
which
just
counteracts the self-induction at
the
existing frequency,
the coil
might
meet the fate of St.
Poly-
carpus.
If an
expensive
vacuum
pump
is
lighted up by being
near to the coil or touched with a wire connected to one of the
terminals,
the current should be left on no more than a few
moments,
else the
glass
will be cracked
by
the
heating
of the
rarefied
gas
in one of the narrow
passages
in the writer's own
experience quod
erat demonstrandum.
1
1. It is
thought necessary
to remark
that, although
the induction coil
may
give quite
a
good
result when
operated
with such
rapidly alternating currents,
yet
its construction,
quite irrespective
of the iron
core,
makes it
very
unfit for
such
high frequencies,
and to obtain the best results the construction should be
greatly
modified.
386 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
There are a
good many
other
points
of interest which
may
be
observed in connection with such a machine.
Experiments
with
the
telephone,
a conductor in a
strong
field or with a condenser
or
arc,
seem to afford certain
proof
that sounds far above the
usual
accepted
limit of
hearing
would be
perceived.
A
telephone
will emit notes of twelve to thirteen thousand vibrations
per
second
;
then the
inability
of the core to follow such
rapid
alter-
nations
begins
to tell.
If, however,
the
magnet
and core be
replaced by
a condenser and the terminals connected to the
high-
tension
secondary
of a
transformer, higher
notes
may
still be
heard. If the current be sent around a
finely
laminated core
and a small
piece
of thin sheet iron be held
gently against
the
core,
a sound
may
be still heard with thirteen to fourteen thou-
sand alternations
per
second, provided
the current is
sufficiently
strong.
A small
coil, however, tightly packed
between the
poles
of a
powerful magnet,
will emit a sound with the above number
of
alternations,
and arcs
may
be audible with a still
higher
fre-
quency.
The limit of audition is
variously
estimated. In Sir
William Thomson's
writings
it is stated somewhere that ten
thousand
per second,
or
nearly
so,
is the limit.
Other,
but less
reliable,
sources
give
it as
high
as
twenty-four
thousand
per
second. The above
experiments
have convinced the writer that
notes of an
incomparably higher
number of vibrations
per
second
would be
perceived provided they
could be
produced
with suffi-
cient
power.
There is no reason
why
it should not be so. The
condensations
and rarefactions of the air would
necessarily
set
the
diaphragm
in a
corresponding
vibration and some sensation
would be
produced,
whatever within certain limits the
velocity
of transmission to their nerve
centres,
though
it is
probable
that
for want of exercise the ear would not be able to
distinguish any
such
high
note. With the
eye
it is different
;
if the sense of
vision is based
upon
some resonance
effect,
as
many believe,
no
amount of increase in the
intensity
of the ethereal vibration
could extend our
range
of vision on either side of the visible
spectrum.
The limit of audition of an arc
depends
on its size. The
greater
the surface
by
a
given heating
effect in the
arc,
the
higher
the limit of audition. The
highest
notes are emitted
by
the
high-tension
discharges
of an induction coil in which the arc
is,
so to
speak,
all surface. If R be the resistance of an
arc,
and C
the
current,
and the linear dimensions be n times
increased,
then
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 387
the resistance is
,
and with the same current
density
the cur-
rent would be
v?C;
hence the
heating
effect is n* times
greater,
while the surface is
only
n* times as
great.
For this reason
very
large
arcs would not emit
any rhythmical
sound even with a
very
low
frequency.
It must be
observed,
however,
that the sound
emitted
depends
to some extent also on the
composition
of the
carbon. If the carbon contain
highly refractory material, this,
when
heated,
tends to maintain the
temperature
of the arc uni-
form and the sound is lessened
;
for this reason it would seem
that an
alternating
arc
requires
such carbons.
With currents of such
high frequencies
it is
possible
to obtain
noiseless
arcs,
but the
regulation
of the
lamp
is rendered ex-
tremely
difficult on account of the
excessively
small attractions
or
repulsions
between conductors
conveying
these currents.
An
interesting
feature of the arc
produced by
these
rapidly
alternating
currents is its
persistency.
There are two causes for
it,
one of which is
always present,
the other sometimes
only.
One' is due to the character of the current and the other to a
property
of the machine. The first cause is the more
important
one,
and is due
directly
to the
rapidity
of the alternations.
When an arc is formed
by
a
periodically undulating current,
there is a
corresponding
undulation in the
temperature
of the
gaseous
column, and, therefore,
a
corresponding
undulation in
the resistance of the arc. But the resistance of the arc varies
enormously
with the
temperature
of the
gaseous column, being
practically
infinite when the
gas
between the electrodes is cold.
The
persistence
of the
arc, therefore, depends
on the
inability
of
the column to cool. It is for this reason
impossible
to maintain
an arc with the current
alternating only
a few times a second.
On the other
hand,
with a
practically
continuous
current,
the arc
is
easily maintained,
the column
being constantly kept
at a
high
temperature
and low resistance. The
higher
the
frequency
the
smaller the time interval
during
which the arc
may
cool and in-
crease
considerably
in resistance. With a
frequency
of
10,000
per
second or more in an arc of
equal
size
excessively
small varia-
tions of
temperature
are
superimposed upon
a
steady temperature,
like
ripples
011 the surface of a
deep
sea. The
heating
effect is
practically
continuous and the arc behaves like one
produced by
a continuous
current,
with the
exception, however,
that it
may
not be
quite
as
easily
started,
and that the electrodes are
equally
888 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
consumed
;
though
the writer has observed some
irregularities
in
this
respect.
The second cause alluded
to,
which
possibly may
not be
pre-
sent,
is due to the
tendency
of a machine of such
high frequency
to maintain a
practically
constant current. When the arc is
lengthened,
the electromotive force rises in
proportion
and the
arc
appears
to be more
persistent.
Such a machine is
eminently adapted
to maintain a constant
current,
but it is
very
unfit for a constant
potential.
As a matter
of
fact,
in certain
types
of such machines a
nearly
constant cur-
rent is an almost unavoidable result. As the number of
poles
or
polar projections
is
greatly increased,
the clearance becomes of
great importance.
One has
really
to do with a
great
number of
very
small machines. Then there is the
impedance
in the arma-
ture, enormously augmented by
the
high frequency. Then,
again,
the
magnetic leakage
is facilitated. If there are three or
four hundred alternate
poles,
the
leakage
is so
great
that it is
virtually
the same as
connecting,
in a
two-pole machine,
the
poles
by
a
piece
of iron. This
disadvantage,
it is
true,
may
be obviated
more or less
by using
a field
throughout
of the same
polarity,
but then one encounters difficulties of a different nature. All
these
things
tend to maintain a constant current in the armature
circuit.
In this connection it is
interesting
to notice that even
to-day
engineers
are astonished at the
performance
of a constant current
machine, just as,
some
years ago, they
used to consider it an ex-
traordinary performance
if a machine was
capable
of
maintaining
a constant
potential
difference between the terminals. Yet one
result is
just
as
easily
secured as the other. It must
only
be
remembered that in an inductive
apparatus
of
any kind,
if con-
stant
potential
is
required,
the inductive relation between the
primary
or
exciting
and
secondary
or armature circuit must be
the closest
possible ; whereas,
in an
apparatus
for constant cur-
rent
just
the
opposite
is
required. Furthermore,
the
opposition
to the current's flow in the induced circuit must be as small as
possible
in the former and as
great
as
possible
in the latter case.
But
opposition
to a current's flow
may
be caused in more than
one
way.
It
may
be caused
by
ohmic resistance or self-induc-
tion. One
may
make the induced circuit of a
dynamo
machine
or transformer of such
high
resistance that when
operating
de-
vices of
considerably
smaller resistance within
very
wide limits a
HIGH
FREQ
UENCY AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 389
nearly
constant current is maintained. But such
high
resistance
involves a
great
loss in
power,
hence it is not
practicable.
Not
so self-induction. Self-induction does not
necessarily
mean loss
of
power.
The moral
is,
use self-induction instead of resistance.
There
is, however,
a
circumstance which favors the
adoption
of
this
plan,
and this
is,
that a
very high
self-induction
may
be
obtained
cheaply by surrounding
a
comparatively
small
length
of wire more or less
completely
with
iron, and, furthermore,
the
effect
may
be exalted at will
by causing
a
rapid
undulation of the
current. To sum
up,
the
requirements
for constant current
are: Weak
magnetic
connection between the induced and
inducing circuits, greatest possible
self-induction with the
least
resistance, greatest practicable
rate of
change
of the
current. Constant
potential,
on the other
hand, requires
: Clos-
est
magnetic
connection between the
circuits, steady
induced
current, and,
if
possible,
no reaction. If the latter conditions
could be
.fully
satisfied in a constant
potential machine,
its
output
would
surpass many
times that of a machine
primarily designed
to
give
constant current.
Unfortunately,
the
type
of machine
in which these conditions
may
be satisfied is of little
practical
value, owing
to the small electromotive force obtainable and the
difficulties iii
taking
off the current.
With their keen inventor's
instinct,
the now successful arc-
light
men have
early recognized
the desiderata of a constant
current machine. Their arc
light
machines have weak
fields,
large
armatures,
with a
great length
of
copper
wire and few
commutator
segments
to
produce great
variations in the current's
strength
and to
bring
self-induction into
play.
Such machines
may
maintain within considerable limits of variation in the re-
sistance of the circuit a
practically
constant current. Their out-
put
is of course
correspondingly
diminished, and, perhaps
with
the
object
in view not to cut down the
output
too
much,
a sim-
ple
device
compensating exceptional
variations is
employed.
The undulation of the current is almost essential to the commer-
cial success of an
arc-light system.
It introduces in the circuit a
steadying
element
taking
the
place
of a
large
ohmic
resistance,
without
involving
a
great
loss in
power,
and,
what is more im-
portant,
it allows the use of
simple
clutch
lamps,
which with a
current of a certain number of
impulses per second,
best suitable
for each
particular lamp,
will,
if
properly
attended
to, regulate
even better than the finest clock-work
lamps.
This
discovery
has been made
by
the writer several
years
too late.
:-MK) INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
It has been asserted
by competent English
electricians that in a
constant-current machine or transformer the
regulation
is effected
by varying
the
phase
of the
secondary
current. That this view
is erroneous
may
be
easily proved by using,
instead of
lamps,
de-
vices each
possessing
self-induction and
capacity
or self-induction
and resistance that
is,
retarding
and
accelerating components
in such
proportions
as to not affect
materially
the
phase
of the
secondary
current.
Any
number of such devices
may
be inserted
or cut
out,
still it will be found that the
regulation occurs,
a con-
stant current
being maintained,
while the electromotive force is
varied with the number of the devices. The
change
of
phase
of
the
secondary
current is
simply
a result
following
from the
changes
in
resistance, and,
though secondary
reaction is
always
of more or less
importance, yet
the real cause of the
regulation
lies in the existence of the conditions above enumerated. It
should be
stated, however,
that in the case of a machine the above
remarks are to be restricted to the cases in which the machine is
independently
excited. If the excitation be effected
by
commu-
tating
the armature
current,
then the iixed
position
of the brushes
makes
any shifting
of the neutral line of the utmost
importance,
and it
may
not be
thought
immodest of the writer to mention
that,
as far as records
go,
he seems to have been the first who has
successfully regulated
machines
by providing
a
bridge
connection
between a
point
of the external circuit and the commutator
by
means of a third brush. The armature and field
being properly
proportioned
and the brushes
placed
in th eir determined
posi-
tions,
a constant current or constant
potential
resulted from the
shifting
of the diameter of commutation
by
the
varying
loads.
In connection with machines of such
high frequencies,
the
condenser affords an
especially interesting study.
It is
easy
to
raise the electromotive force of such a machine to four or five
times the value
by simply connecting
the condenser to the cir-
cuit,
and the writer has
continually
used the condenser for the
the
purposes
of
regulation,
as
suggested by Blakesley
in his book
on alternate
currents,
in which he has treated the most
frequently
occurring
condenser
problems
with
exquisite simplicity
and clear-
ness. The
high frequency
allow
r
s the use of small
capacities
and
renders
investigation easy. But, although
in most of the
experi-
ments the result
may
be
foretold,
some
phenomena
observed seem
at first curious. One
experiment performed
three or four months
ago
with such a machine and a condenser
may
serve as an il-
HI&H
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 391
lustration. A machine was used
giving
about
20,000
alternations
per
second. Two bare wires about
twenty
feet
long
and two
millimetres in
diameter,
in close
proximity
to each
other,
were
connected to the terminals of the machine at the one
end,
and
to a condenser at the other. A small transformer without an
iron
core,
of
course,
was used to
bring
the
reading
within
range
of a Cardew voltmeter
by connecting
the voltmeter to the
secondary.
On the terminals of the condenser the electromotive
force was about 120
volts,
and from there inch
by
inch it
gradu-
ally
fell until at the terminals of the machine it was about 65
volts. It was
virtually
as
though
the condenser were a
gene-
rator,
and the line and armature circuit
simply
a resistance con-
nected to it. The writer looked for a case of
resonance,
but he
was unable to
augment
the effect
by varying
the
capacity very
carefully
and
gradually
or
by changing
the
speed
of the ma-
chine. A case of
pure
resonance he was unable to obtain.
When a condenser was connected to the terminals of the ma-
chine the self-induction of the armature
being
first determined
in the maximum and minimum
position
and the mean value taken
the
capacity
which
gave
the
highest
electromotive force corre-
sponded
most
nearly
to that which
just
counteracted the self-in-
duction with the
existing frequency.
If the
capacity
was in-
creased or
diminished,
the electromotive force fell as
expected.
With
frequencies
as
high
as the above
mentioned,
the con-
denser effects are of enormous
importance.
The condenser
becomes a
highly
efficient
apparatus capable
of
transferring
considerable
energy.
In an
appendix
to this book will be found a
description
of the
Tesla
oscillator,
which its inventor believes will
among
other
great
advantages give
him the
necessary high
frequency
conditions,
while
relieving
him of the inconveniences
that attach to
genera-
tors of the
type
described
at the
beginning
of this
chapter.
CHAPTEK XXX.
ALTERNATE CURRENT ELECTROSTATIC INDUCTION APPARATUS.*
ABOUT a
year
and a half
ago
while
engaged
in the
study
of
alternate currents of short
period,
it occurred to me that such
currents could be obtained
by rotating charged
surfaces in close
proximity
to conductors.
Accordingly
I devised various forms
FIG. 208.
of
experimental apparatus
of which two are illustrated in the
accompanying engravings.
In the
apparatus
shown in
Fig. 208,
A is a
ring
of
dry
shel-
lacked hard wood
provided
on its inside with two sets of tin-foil
coatings,
a and
J,
all the a
coatings
and all the I
coatings being
connected
together, respectively,
but
independent
from each
other. These two sets of
coatings
are connected to two termi-
1. Article
by
Mr. Tesla in The Electrical
Engineer,
N.
Y., May 6,
1891.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 393
nals,
T. For the sake of clearness
only
a few
coatings
are shown.
Inside of the
ring A,
and in close
proximity
to it there is
arranged
to rotate a
cylinder B,
likewise of
dry,
shellacked hard
wood,
and
provided
with two similar sets of
coatings,
a
1
and J
1
,
all the coat-
ings
a}
being
connected to one
ring
and all the
others,
S
l
,
to
another marked
-f-
and . These two
sets,
a
1
and J
1
are
charged
to a
high potential by
a Holtz or Wimshurst
machine,
and
may
be connected to a
jar
of some
capacity.
The inside of
ring
A is
coated with mica in order to increase the induction and also to
allow
higher potentials
to be used.
When the
cylinder
B with the
charged coatings
is
rotated,
a
FIG. 20J.
circuit connected to the terminals T is traversed
by alternating
currents. Another form of
apparatus
is illustrated
in
Fig.
209.
In this
apparatus
the two sets of tin-foil
coatings
are
glued
on a
plate
of
ebonite,
and a similar
plate
which is
rotated,
and the
coatings
of which are
charged
as in
Fig.
208,
is
provided.
The
output
of such an
apparatus
is
very
small,
but some of
the effects
peculiar
to
alternating
currents of short
periods may
l>e observed. The
effects, however,
cannot be
compared
with
those obtainable with an induction coil which is
operated by
an
alternate current machine of
high frequency,
some of which
were described
by
me a short while
ago.
CHAPTER XXXI.
"
MASSAGE
"
WITH CURRENTS OF HIGH
FREQUENCY.
1
I TRUST that the
present
brief communication will not be inter-
preted
as an effort on
my part
to
put myself
on record as a
"patent
medicine"
man,
for a serious worker cannot
despise
anything
more than the misuse and abuse of
electricity
which we
have
frequent
occasion to witness.
My
remarks are elicited
by
the
lively
interest which
prominent
medical
practitioners
evince
at
every
real advance in electrical
investigation.
The
progress
in recent
years
has been so
great
that
every
electrician and elec-
trical
engineer
is confident that
electricity
will become the means
of
accomplishing many things
that have been
heretofore,
with
our
existing knowledge,
deemed
impossible.
]S
r
o wonder'then
that
progressive physicians
also should
expect
to find in it a
powerful
tool and
help
in new curative
processes.
Since I had
the honor to
bring
before the American Institute of Electrical
Engineers
some results in
utilizing alternating
currents of
high
tension,
I have received
many
letters from noted
physicians
in-
quiring
as to the
physical
effects of such currents of
high
fre-
quency.
It
may
be remembered that I then demonstrated that
a
body perfectly
well insulated in air can be heated
by simply
connecting
it with a source of
rapidly alternating high potential.
The
heating
in this case is due in all
probability
to the bombard-
ment of the
body by air,
or
possibly by
some other
medium,
which is molecular or atomic in
construction,
and the
presence
of which has so far
escaped
our
analysis
for
according
to
my
ideas,
the true ether radiation with such
frequencies
as even a
few millions
per
second must be
very
small. This
body may
be
a
good
conductor or it
may
be a
very poor
conductor of elec-
tricity
with little
change
in the result. The human
body is,
in
such a
case,
a fine
conductor,
and if a
person
insulated in a
room,
or no matter
where,
is
brought
into contact with such a source of
1. Article
by
Mr. Tesla in Tlie EUctrical
Engineer
of Deo.
23d,
1891.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 395
rapidly alternating high potential,
the skin is heated
by
bom-
bardment. It is a mere
question
of the dimensions and character
of the
apparatus
to
produce any degree
of
heating
desired.
It has occurred to me
whether,
with such
apparatus properly
prepared,
it would not be
possible
for a skilled
physician
to find
in it a means for the effective treatment of various
types
of dis-
ease. The
heating will,
of
course,
be
superficial,
that
is,
on the
skin,
and would
result,
whether the
person operated
on were in
bed or
walking
around a
room,
whether dressed in thick clothes or
whether reduced to nakedness. In
fact,
to
put
it
broadly,
it is
conceivable that a
person entirely
nude at the North Pole
might
keep
himself
comfortably
warm in this manner.
Without
vouching
for all the results, which
must,
of
course,
be
determined
by experience
and
observation,
I can at least warrant
the fact that
heating
would occur
by
the use of this method of
subjecting
the human
body
to bombardment
by alternating
cur-
rents of
high potential
and
frequency
such as I have
long
worked
with. It is
only
reasonable to
expect
that some of the novel ef-
fects will be
wholly
different from those obtainable with the old
familiar
therapeutic
methods
generally
used. Whether
they
would all be beneficial or not remains to be
proved.
CHAPTEE XXXII.
ELECTRIC DISCHARGE IN VACUUM TUBES.*
IN The Electrical
Engineer
of June 10 I have noted the de-
scription
of some
experiments
of Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
on the
"
Electric
Discharge
in Vacuum
Tubes,"
and in
your
issue of June
24 Prof. Elihu Thomson describes an
experiment
of the same
kind. The fundamental idea in these
experiments
is to set
up
an electromotive force in a vacuum tube
preferably
devoid of
any
electrodes
by
means of
electro-magnetic induction,
and to
excite the tube in this manner.
As I view the
subject
I
should,
think that to
any experimenter
who had
carefully
studied the
problem confronting
us and who
attempted
to find a solution of
it,
this idea must
present
itself as
naturally as,
for
instance,
the idea of
replacing
the tinfoil coat-
ings
of a
Leyden jar by
rarefied
gas
and
exciting luminosity
in
the condenser thus obtained
by repeatedly charging
and
discharg-
ing
it. The idea
being obvious,
whatever merit there is in this
line of
investigation
must
depend upon
the
completeness
of the
study
of the
subject
and the correctness of the observations. The
following
lines are not
penned
with
any
desire on
my part
to
put
myself
on record as one who has
performed
similar
experiments,
but with a desire to assist other
experimenters by pointing
out
certain
peculiarities
of the
phenomena observed, which,
to all
ap-
pearances,
have not been noted
by
Prof. J. J.
Thomson, who,
however,
seems to have
gone
about
systematically
in his investi-
gations,
and who has been the first to make his results known.
These
peculiarities
noted
by
me would seem to be at variance
with the views of Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
and
present
the
pheno-
mena in a different
light.
My investigations
in this line
occupied
me
principally during
the winter and
spring
of the
past year. During
this time
many
dif-
ferent
experiments
were
performed,
and in
my exchanges
of ideas
1. Article
by
Mr. Tesla in The Electrical
Engineer.
N.
Y., July 1,
1891.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 397
on this
subject
with Mr. Alfred S.
Brown,
of the "Western Union
Telegraph Company,
various different
dispositions
were
suggested
which were carried out
by
me in
practice. Fig.
210
may
serve
as an
example
of one of the
many
forms of
apparatus
used. This
consisted of a
large glass
tube sealed at one end and
projecting
into an
ordinary
incandescent
lamp
bulb. The
primary, usually
consisting
of a few turns of
thick,
well-insulated
copper
sheet was
inserted within the
tube,
the inside
space
of the bulb
furnishing
the
secondary.
This form of
apparatus
was arrived at after some
experimenting,
and was used
principally
with the view of en-
abling
me to
place
a
polished reflecting
surface on the inside of
the
tube,
and for this
purpose
the last turn of the
primary
was
covered with a thin silver sheet. In all forms of
apparatus
used
FIG. 210.
there was no
special
difficulty
in
exciting
a luminous circle or
cylinder
in
proximity
to the
primary.
As to the number of
turns,
I cannot
quite
understand
why
Prof. J. J. Thomson should think that a few turns were
"quite
sufficient,"
but lest I should
impute
to him an
opinion
he
may
not
have,
I will add that I have
gained
this
impression
from the
reading
of the
published
abstracts
of his lecture.
Clearly,
the
number of turns which
gives
the best result in
any
case,
is de-
pendent
on the dimensions
of the
apparatus,
and,
were it not for
various
considerations,
one turn would
always give
the best
result.
I have found that it is
preferable
to use in these
experiments
an alternate current machine
giving
a moderate number of alter-
398 . NVENTION8 OF NIKOLA TESLA.
nations
per
second to excite the induction coil for
charging
the
Leyden jar
which
discharges through
the
primary
shown dia-
grammatically
in
Fig. 211,
as in such
case,
before the
disrup-
tive
discharge
takes
place,
the tube or bulb is
slightly
excited and
the formation of the luminous circle is
decidedly
facilitated.
FIG. 211.
But I have also used a Wimshurst machine in some
experi-
ments.
Prof. J. J. Thomson's view of the
phenomena
under consid-
eration seems to be that
they
are
wholly
due to
electro-magnetic
action. I
was,
at one
time,
of the same
opinion,
but
upon
care-
fully investigating
the
subject
I was led to the conviction that
they
are more of an electrostatic nature. It must be remem-
bered that in these
experiments
we have to deal with
primary
currents of an enormous
frequency
or rate of
change
and of
high
potential,
and that the
secondary
conductor consists of a rarefied
FIG. 212.
gas,
and that under such conditions electrostatic effects must
play
an
important part.
In
support
of
my
view I will describe a few
experiments
made
by
me. To excite
luminosity
in the tube it is not
absolutely
necessary that the conductor should be closed. For
instance,
if
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH
POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 399
an
ordinary
exhausted tube
(preferably
of
large
diameter)
be
surrounded
by
a
spiral
of thick
copper
wire
serving
as the
prim-
ary^
a
feebly
luminous
spiral may
be induced in the
tube,
roughly
shown in
Fig.
212. In one of these
experiments
a curious
phe-
nomenon was observed
;
namely,
two
intensely
luminous
circles,
each of them close to a turn of the
primary spiral,
were formed
inside of the
tube,
and I attributed this
phenomenon
to the ex-
istence of nodes on the
primary.
The circles were connected
by
a faint luminous
spiral parallel
to the
primary
and in close
prox-
imity
to it. To
produce
this effect I have found it
necessary
to
strain the
jar
to the utmost. The turns of the
spiral
tend to
close and form
circles,
but
this,
of
course,
would be
expected,
and does not
necessarily
indicate an
electro-magnetic
effect
;
whereas the fact that a
glow
can be
produced
along
the
primary
in the form of an
open spiral argues
for an
electrostatic effect.
FIG. 213.
In
using
Dr.
Lodge's
recoil
circuit,
the electrostatic action is
likewise
apparent.
The
arrangement
is illustrated in
Fig.
213.
In his
experiment
two hollow exhausted tubes H H were
slipped
over the wires of the recoil circuit and
upon discharging
the
jar
in the usual manner
luminosity
was excited in the tubes.
Another
experiment performed
is illustrated in
Fig.
214. In
this case an
ordinary lamp-bulb
was surrounded
by
one or two
turns of thick
copper
wire P and the luminous circle L excited
in the bulb
by discharging
the
jar through
the
primary.
The
lamp-bulb
was
provided
with a tinfoil
coating
on the side
oppo-
site to the
primary
and each time the tinfoil
coating
was con-
nected to the
ground
or to a
large object
the
luminosity
of the
circle was
considerably
increased. This was
evidently
due to
electrostatic action.
In other
experiments
I have noted that when the
primary
touches the
glass
the luminous circle is easier
produced
and is
400 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
more
sharply
defined
;
but I have not noted
that, generally speak-
ing,
the circles induced were
very sharply defined,
as Prof. J. J.
Thomson has observed
;
on the
contrary,
in
my experiments they
were broad and often the whole of the bulb or tube was illumi-
nated
;
and in one case I have observed an
intensely purplish
FIG. 214.
glow,
to which Prof. J. J. Thomson refers. But the circles were
always
in close
proximity
to the
primary
and were
considerably
easier
produced
when the latter was
very
close to the
glass,
much
more so than would be
expected assuming
the action to be elec-
FIG. 215.
tromagnetic
and
considering
the distance
;
and these facts
speak
for an electrostatic effect.
Furthermore I have observed that there is a molecular bom-
bardment in the
plane
of the luminous circle at
right angles
to
the
glass supposing
the circle to be in the
plane
of the
primary
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL
CURRENTS. 401
this bombardment
being
evident from the
rapid heating
of the
glass
near the
primary.
Were the bombardment not at
right
angles
to the
glass
the
heating
could not be so
rapid.
If there
is a circumferential movement of the molecules
constituting
the
luminous
circle,
I have
thought
that it
might
be rendered mani-
fest
by placing
within the tube or
bulb, radially
to the
circle,
a
thin
plate
of mica coated with some
phosphorescent
material and
another such
plate tangentially
to the circle. If the molecules
would move
circumferentially,
the former
plate
would be ren-
dered more
intensely phosphorescent.
For want of time I
have,
however,
not been able to
perform
the
experiment.
Another observation made
by
me was that when the
specific
inductive
capacity
of the medium between the
primary
and
secondary
is
increased,
the inductive effect is
augmented.
This
is
roughly
illustrated in
Fig.
215. In this case
luminosity
was
excited in an exhausted tube or bulb B and a
glass
tube T
slipped
between the
primary
and the
bulb,
when the effect
pointed
out
was noted. Were the action
wholly electromagnetic
no
change
could
possibly
have been observed.
I have likewise noted that when a bulb is surrounded
by
a
wire closed
upon
itself and in the
plane
of the
primary,
the for-
mation of the luminous circle within the bulb is not
prevented.
But if instead of the wire a broad
strip
of tinfoil is
glued upon
the
bulb,
the formation of the luminous band was
prevented,
be-
cause then the action was distributed over a
greater
surface. The
effect of the closed tinfoil was no doubt of an electrostatic
nature,
for it
presented
a much
greater
resistance than the closed wire
and
produced
therefore a much smaller
electromagnetic
effect.
Some of the
experiments
of Prof. J. J. Thomson also would
seem to show some electrostatic action. For
instance,
in the ex-
periment
with the bulb enclosed in a bell
jar,
I should think
that when the latter is exhausted so far that the
gas
enclosed
reaches the maximum
conductivity,
the formation of the circle
in the bulb and
jar
is
prevented
because of the
space surrounding
the
primary being highly conducting ;
when the
jar
is further
exhausted,
the
conductivity
of the
space
around the
primary
diminishes and the circles
appear
necessarily
first in the bell
jar,
as the rarefied
gas
is nearer to the
primary.
But were the in-
ductive effect
very powerful,
they
would
probably appear
in the
bulb also.
If, however,
the bell
jar
were exhausted to the
high-
est
degree they
would
very likely
show themselves in the bulb
403 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
only,
that
is,
supposing
the vacuous
space
to be
non-conducting.
On the
assumption
that in these
phenomena
electrostatic actions
are concerned we find it
easily explicable why
the introduction
of
mercury
or the
heating
of the bulb
prevents
the formation of
the luminous band or shortens the
after-glow ;
and also
why
in
some cases a
platinum
wire
may prevent
the excitation of the
tube. Nevertheless some of the
experiments
of Prof. J. J.
Thomson would seem to indicate an
electromagnetic
effect. I
may
add that in one of
my experiments
in which a vacuum was
produced by
the Torricellian
method,
I was unable to
produce
the luminous
band,
but this
may
have been due to the weak ex-
citing
current
employed.
My principal argument
is the
following
: I have
experiment-
ally proved
that if the same
discharge
which is
barely
sufficient
to excite a luminous band in the bulb when
passed through
the
primary
circuit be so directed as to exalt the electrostatic induc-
tive effect
namely, by converting upwards
an exhausted
tube,
devoid of
electrodes, may
be excited at a distance of several feet.
SOME EXPERIMENTS ON THE ELECTRIC DISCHARGE IN VACUUM TUBES.
BY PROF. J. J. THOMSON, M.A.,
F.R.S.
The
phenomena
of vacuum
discharges were,
Prof. Thomson
said, greatly
simplified
when their
path
was
wholly gaseous,
the
complication
of the dark
space surrounding
the
negative electrode,
and the stratifications so
commonly
observed in
ordinary
vaciium
tubes,
being
absent. To
produce discharges
in
FIG. 216. FIG. 2V,
tubes devoid of electrodes
was, however,
not
easy
to
accomplish,
for the
only
available means of
producing
an electromotive force in the
discharge
circuit
was
by electro-magnetic
induction.
Ordinary
methods of
producing
variable
induction were
valueless,
and recourse was had to the
oscillatory discharge
of a
1. Abstract of a
paper
read before
Physical Society
of London.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HTGII POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 403
Leyden jar,
which combines the two essentials of a current whose maximum
value is
enormous,
and whose
rapidity
of alternation is
immensely great.
The
discharge circuits,
which
may
take the
shape
of
bulbs,
or of tubes bent in the
form of
coils,
were
placed
in close
proximity
to
glass
tubes filled with
mercury,
which formed the
path
of the
oscillatory discharge.
The
parts
thus corres-
ponded
to the
windings
of an induction
coil,
the vacuum tubes
being
the sec-
ondary,
and the tubes filled with
mercury
the
primary.
In such an
apparatus
the
Leyden jar
need not be
large,
and neither
primary
nor
secondary
need have
many
turns,
for this would increase the self-induction of the
former,
and
lengthen
the
discharge path
in the latter.
Increasing
the self-induction of the
primary
reduces the E. M. F. induced in the
secondary,
whilst
lengthening
the
secondary
does not increase the E. M. F.
per
unit
length.
The two or three
turns,
as shown in
Fig.
216,
in
each,
were found to be
quite sufficient, and,
on
discharging
the
Leyden jar
between two
highly polished
knobs in the
primary
FIG. 218.
FIG. 219.
circuit,
a
plain
uniform band of
light
was seen to
pass
round the
secondary.
An exhausted
bulb, Fig.
217, containing
traces of
oxygen
was
plaeed
within a
primary spiral
of three
turns, and,
on
passing
the
jar discharge,
a circle of
light
was seen within the bulb inclose
proximity
to the
primary
circuit,
accom-
panied by
a
purplish glow,
which lasted for a second or more. On
heating
the
bulb,
the duration of the
glow
was
greatly
diminished,
and it could be in-
stantly extinguished by
the
presence
of an
electro-magnet.
Another exhausted
bulb, Fig. 218,
surrounded
by
a
primary spiral,
was contained in a
bell-jar,
and when the
pressure
of air in the
jar
was about that of the
atmosphere,
the
secondary
discharge
occurred
in the bulb,
as is
ordinarily
the case. On ex-
hausting
the
jar,
however,
the luminous
discharge grew
fainter,
and a
point
was reached at which no
secondary discharge
was visible. J urther exhaustion
of the
jar
caused the
secondary discharge
to
appear
outside of the bulb. The
fact of
obtaining
no luminous
discharge,
either in the bulb or
jar,
the author
404 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
could
only explain
on two
suppositions,
viz.: that under the conditions then ex-
isting
the
specific
inductive
capacity
of the
gas
was
very great,
or that a dis-
charge
could
pass
without
being
luminous. '1 he author had also .observed
that the
conductivity
of a vacuum tube without electrodes increased as the
pres-
sure
diminished,
until a certain
point
was
reached,
and afterwards diminished
again,
thus
showing
that the
high
resistance of a
nearly perfect
vacuum is in
no
way
due to the
presence
of the electrodes. One
peculiarity
of the
discharges
was their local
nature,
the
rings
of
light being
much more
sharply
denned than
was to be
expected. They
were also found to be most
easily produced
when
the chain of molecules in the
discharge
were all of the same kind. For ex-
ample,
a
discharge
could be
easily
sent
through
a tube
many
feet
long,
but the
introduction of a small
pellet
of
mercury
in the tube
stopped
the
discharge,
although
the
conductivity
of the
mercury
was much
greater
than that of the
vacuum. In some cases he had noticed that a
very
fine wire
placed
within a
tube,
on the side remote from the
primary circuit,
would
prevent
a luminous
discharge
in that tube.
Pig.
219 shows an exhausted
secondary
coil of one
loop containing
bulbs
;
the
discharge passed along
the inner side of the
bulbs,
the
primary
coils
being
placed
within the
secondary.
1
In The Electrical
Engineer
of
August 12,
I find some re-
marks of Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
which
appeared originally
in the
London Electrician and which have a
bearing upon
some
experi-
ments described
by
me in
your
issue of
July
1.
I did
not,
as Prof. J. J. Thomson seems to
believe,
misunder-
stand his
position
in
regard
to the cause of the
phenomena
considered,
but I
thought
that in his
experiments,
as well as in
my own,
electrostatic effects were of
great importance.
It did
not
appear,
from the
meagre description
of his
experiments,
that
all
possible precautions
had been taken to exclude these effects.
I did not doubt that
luminosity
could be excited in a closed tube
when electrostatic action is
completely
excluded. In
fact,
at the
outset,
I
myself
looked for a
purely electrodynamic
effect and
believed that I had obtained it. But
many experiments per-
formed at that time
proved
to me that the electrostatic effects
were
generally
of far
greater importance,
and admitted of a more
satisfactory explanation
of most of the
phenomena
observed.
In
using
the term electrostatic I had reference rather to the
nature of the action than to a
stationary condition,
which is the
usual
acceptance
of the term. To
express myself
more
clearly,
I will
suppose
that near a closed exhausted tube be
placed
a small
sphere charged
to a
very high potential.
The
sphere
would act
inductively upon
the
tube,
and
by distributing electricity
over
1. Article
by
Mr. Tesla in The Electrical
Engineer,
N.
Y., August
26,
1891.
HIGH
FREQUENCY
AND HIGH POTENTIAL CURRENTS. 405
the same would
undoubtedly produce luminosity (if
the
potential
be
sufficiently high),
until a
permanent
condition would be
reached.
Assuming
the tube to be
perfectly
well
insulated,
there would be
only
one instantaneous flash
during
the act of
distribution. This would be due to the electrostatic action
simply.
But
now, suppose
the
charged sphere
to be moved at short in-
tervals with
great speed along
the exhausted tube. The tube
would now be
permanently excited,
as the
moving sphere
would
cause a constant redistribution of
electricity
and collisions of the
molecules of the rarefied
gas.
We would still have to deal with
an electrostatic
eifect,
and in addition an
electrodynamic
effect
would be observed. But if it were found
that,
for
instance,
the
effect
produced depended
more on the
specific
inductive
capa-
city
than on the
magnetic permeability
of the medium which
would
certainly
be the case for
speeds incomparably
lower than
that of
light
then I believe I would be
justified
in
saying
that
the effect
produced
was more of an electrostatic nature. I do
not mean to
say,
however,
that
any
similar condition
prevails
in
the case of the
discharge
of a
Leyden jar through
the
primary,
but I think that such an action would be desirable.
It is in
the
spirit
of the above
example
that I used the terms
"
more of an electrostatic
nature,"
and have
investigated
the in-
fluence of bodies of
high specific
inductive
capacity,
and
observed,
for
instance,
the
importance
of the
quality
of
glass
of which the
tube is made. I also endeavored to ascertain the influence of a
medium of
high permeability by using oxygen.
It
appeared
from
rough
estimation that an
oxygen
tube when excited under
similar conditions that
is,
as far as could be determined
gives
more
light
;
but
this,
of
course, may
be due to
many
causes.
Without
doubting
in the least
that,
with the care and
precau-
tions taken
by
Prof. J. J.
Thomson,
the
luminosity
excited was
due
solely
to
electrodynamic
action,
I would
say
that in
many
experiments
I have observed curious instances of the ineffective-
ness of the
screening,
and I have also found that the electritica.
tion
through
the air is often of
very great importance,
and
may,
in some
cases,
determine the excitation of the tube.
In his
original
communication
to the
Electrician,
Prof. J. J.
Thomson refers to the fact that the
luminosity
in a tube near a
wire
through
which a
Leyden jar
was
discharged
was noted
by
Hittorf. I think that the feeble luminous effect referred to has
406 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
been noted
by many experimenters,
but in
my experiments
the
effects were much more
powerful
than those
usually
noted.
The
following
is the communication
1
referred to :
"Mr. Tesla seems to ascribe the effects he observed to electrostatic
action,
and I have no
doubt,
from the
description
he
gives
of his method of conduct-
ing
his
experiments,
that in them electrostatic action
plays
a
very important
part.
He
seems, however,
to have misunderstood
my position
with
respect
to
the cause of these
discharges,
which is
not,
as he
implies,
that
luminosity
in
tubes without electrodes cannot be
produced by
electrostatic
action,
but that it
can also be
produced
when this action is excluded. As a matter of
fact,
it is
very
much easier to
get
the
luminosity
when these electrostatic effects are
operative
than when
they
are not. As an illustration of this I
may
mention
that the first
experiment
I tried with the
discharge
of a
Leyden jar produced
luminosity
in the
tube,
but it was not until after six weeks' continuous
experi-
menting
that I was able to
get
a
discharge
in the exhausted tube which I was
satisfied was due to what is
ordinarily
called
electrodynamic
action. It is ad-
visable to have a clear idea of what we mean
by
electrostatic action.
If,
previous
to the
discharge
of the
jar,
the
primary
coil is raised to a
high po-
tential,
it will induce over the
glass
of the tube a distribution of
electricity.
When the
potential
of the
primary suddenly falls,
this electrification will re-
distribute
itself,
and
may pass through
the rarefied
gas
and
produce luminosity
in
doing
so. "Whilst the
discharge
of the
jar
is
going
on,
it is
difficult, and,
from a theoretical
point
of
view, undesirable,
to
separate
the effect into
parts,
one of which is called
electrostatic,
the other
electromagnetic ;
what we can
prove
is that in this case the
discharge
is not such as would be
produced by
electromotive forces derived from a
potential
function. In
my experiments
the
primary
coil was connected to
earth, and,
as a further
precaution,
the
primary
was
separated
from the
discharge
tube
by
a screen of
blotting paper,
moistened
with dilute
sulphuric acid,
and connected to earth. Wet
blotting paper
is a
sufficiently good
conductor to screen off a
stationary
electrostatic effect,
though
it is not a
good enough
one to
stop
waves of
alternating
electromotive
intensity.
When
showing
the
experiments
to the
Physical Society
I could
not,
of
course,
keep
the tubes covered
up,
but,
unless
my memory
deceives
me,
I stated the
precautions
which had ben taken
against
the electrostatic effect. To correct
misapprehension
I
may
state that I did not read a formal
paper
to the
Society,
my object being
to exhibit a few of the most
typical experiments.
The ac-
count of the
experiments
in the Electrician was from a
reporter's note,
and was
not
written,
or even
read,
by
me. I have now almost finished
writing
out,
and
hope very shortly
to
publish,
an account of these and a
large
number of allied
experiments, including
some
analogous
to those mentioned
by
Mr. Tesla on the
effect of conductors
placed
near the
discharge tube,
which I
find,
in some
cases,
to
produce
a
diminution,
in others an
increase,
in the
brightness
of the
discharge,
as well as some on the effect of the
presence
of substances of
large
specific
inductive
capacity.
These seem to me to admit of a
satisfactory
ex-
planation,
for
which, however,
I must refer to
my paper."
1. Note
by
Prof. J. J. Thomson in the London
Electrician,
July 24,
1891.
PART III.
MISCELLANEOUS INVENTIONS AND
WRITINGS.
CHAPTER XXXIII.
METHOD OF OBTAINING DIRECT FROM ALTERNATING CURRENTS.
THIS method
consists in
obtaining
direct from
alternating
currents,
or in
directing
the waves of an
alternating
current so as
to
produce
direct or
substantially
direct currents
by developing
or
producing
in the branches of a circuit
including
a source of al-
ternating currents,
either
permanently
or
periodically,
and
by
electric,
electro-magnetic,
or
magnetic agencies,
manifestations of
energy,
or what
may
be termed active resistances of
opposite
electrical
character, whereby
the currents or current waves of
op-
posite sign
will be diverted
through
different
circuits,
those of
one
sign passing
over one branch and those of
opposite sign
over
the other.
We
may
consider herein
only
the case of a circuit divided into
two
paths,
inasmuch as
any
further subdivision involves
merely
an extension of the
general principle. Selecting, then, any
cir-
cuit
through
which is
flowing
an
alternating current,
Mr. Tesla
divides such circuit at
any
desired
point
into two branches or
paths.
In one of these
paths
he inserts some device to create
an electromotive force counter to the waves or
impulses
of cur-
rent of one
sign
and.
a similar device in the other branch which
opposes
the waves of
opposite sign.
Assume,
for
example,
that
these devices are
batteries, primary
or
secondary,
or continuous
current
dynamo
machines. The waves or
impulses
of
opposite
direction
composing
the main current have a natural
tendency
to
divide between the two branches
;
but
by
reason of the
opposite
electrical character or effect of the two
branches,
one will offer
an
easy passage
to a current of a certain
direction,
while the other
will offer a
relatively high
resistance to the
passage
of the same
current. The result of this
disposition
is,
that the waves of cur-
rent of one
sign
will, partly
or
wholly, pass
over one of the
paths
or
branches,
while those of the
opposite sign pass
over the other.
There
may
thus be obtained from an
alternating
current two or
more direct currents without the
employment
of
any
commutator
410 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
such as it has been heretofore
regarded
as
necessary
to use. The
current in either branch
may
be used in the same
way
and for
the same
purposes
as
any
other direct current that
is,
it
may
be
made to
charge secondary
batteries,
energize electro-magnets,
or
for
any
other
analogous purpose.
Fig.
220
represents
a
plan
of
directing
the
alternating
currents
by
means of devices
purely
electrical in character.
Figs.
221,
222, 223, 224, 225,
and 226 are
diagrams
illustrative of other
ways
of
carrying
out the invention.
In
Fig. 220,
A
designates
a
generator
of
alternating currents,
and B B the main or line circuit therefrom. At
any given point
in this circuit at or near which it is desired to obtain direct cur-
rents,
the circuit B is divided into two
paths
or branches c D. In
each of these branches is
placed
an electrical
generator,
which
for the
present
we will assume
produces
direct or continuous cur-
FIG. 220.
rents. The direction of the current thus
produced
is
opposite
in
one branch to that of the current in the other
branch, or,
con-
sidering
the two branches as
forming
a closed
circuit,
the
gene-
rators E F are connected
up
in series
therein,
one
generator
in
each
part
or half of the circuit. The electromotive force of the
current sources E and F
may
be
equal
to or
higher
or lower than
the electromotive forces in the branches c
D,
or between the
points
x and Y of the circuit B B. If
equal,
it is evident that current
waves of one
sign
will be
opposed
in one branch and assisted in
the other to such an extent that all the waves of one
sign
will
pass
over one branch and those of
opposite sign
over the other.
If,
on the other
hand,
the electromotive force of the sources E F
be lower than that between x and
Y,
the currents in both
branches will be
alternating,
but the waves of one
sign
will
pre-
ponderate.
One of the
generators
or sources of current E or F
may
be
dispensed
with
;
but it is
preferable
to
employ both,
if
OBTAINING DIRECT FROM
ALTERNATING
CURRENTS. 411
they
offer an
appreciable
resistance,
as the two brandies will be
thereby
better
balanced. The
translating
or other
devices to be
acted
upon by
the current are
designated by
the letters
G,
and
they
are inserted in the
branches c D in
any
desired manner
;
but
in order to better
preserve
an even
balance between the branches
due
regard should,
of
course,
be had to the number and character
of the devices.
Figs. 221, 222, 223,
and 224
illustrate what
may
termed "elec-
tro-magnetic"
devices for
accomplishing
a similar result that is
to
say,
instead of
producing directly by
a
generator
an electro-
motive force in each branch of the
circuit,
Mr. Tesla establishes
a field or fields of force and leads the branches
through
the same
in such manner that an active
opposition
of
opposite
effect or di-
rection will be
developed
therein
by
the
passage,
or
tendency
to
pass,
of the alternations of current. In
Fig. 221,
for
example,
A is
FIG. 221.
the
generator
of
alternating currents,
B B the line
circuit,
and c D
the branches over which the
alternating
currents are directed. In
each branch is included the
secondary
of a transformer or induc-
tion
coil, which,
since
they correspond
in their functions to the
batteries of the
previous figure,
are
designated by
the letters E F.
The
primaries
H H' of the induction coils or transformers are
connected either in
parallel
or series with a source of direct or
continuous currents
i,
and the number of convolutions is so cal-
culated for the
strength
of the current from i that the cores J j'
will be saturated. The connections are such that the conditions
in the two transformers are of
opposite
character that is to
say,
the
arrangement
is such that a current wave or
impulse
corres-
ponding
in direction with that of the direct current in one
pri-
mary,
as
H,
is of
opposite
direction to that in the other
primary
H'.
It thus results that while one
secondary
offers a resistance or
op-
412 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
position
to the
passage through
it of a wave of one
sign,
the other
secondary similarly opposes
a wave of
opposite sign.
In conse-
quence,
the waves of one
sign will,
to a
greater
or less
extent, pass
by way
of one
branch,
while those of
opposite sign
in like man-
ner
pass
over the other branch.
In lieu of
saturating
the
primaries by
a source of continuous
current,
we
may
include the
primaries
in the branches c
D,
re-
spectively,
and
periodically
short-circuit
by any
suitable mechani-
cal devices such as an
ordinary revolving
commutator their
secondaries. It will be
understood,
of
course,
that the rotation
and action of the commutator must be in
synchronism
or in
proper
accord with the
periods
of the alternations in order to
secure the desired results. Such a
disposition
is
represented
FIG. 222.
diagrammatically
in
Fig.
222.
Corresponding
to the
previous
figures,
A is the
generator
of
alternating currents,
B B the
line,
and c D the two branches for the direct currents. In branch c
are included two
primary
coils E
E',
and in branch D are two
similar
primaries
F F' The
corresponding
secondaries for these
coils and which are on the same subdivided cores j or
j',
are in
circuits the terminals of which connect to
opposite segments
K
K',
and L
i/, respectively,
of a commutator. Brushes b I bear
upon
the commutator and
alternately
short-circuit the
plates
K
and
K',
and L and
L', through
a connection c. It is obvious that
either the
magnets
and
commutator,
or the
brushes, may
revolve.
The
operation
will be understood from a consideration of the
effects of
closing
or
short-circuiting
the secondaries. For ex-
ample,
if at the instant when a
given
wave of current
passes,
one
OBTAINING DIRECT FROM ALTERNATING CURRENTS. 418
set of secondaries be
short-circuited, nearly
all the current flows
through
the
corresponding primaries ;
but the secondaries of the
other branch
being open-circuited,
the self-induction in the
primaries
is
highest,
and hence little or no current will
pass
through
that branch.
If,
as the current
alternates,
the second-
aries of the two branches are
alternately short-circuited,
the
result will be that the currents of one
sign pass
over one branch
and those of the
opposite sign
over the other. The disadvan-
tages
of this
arrangement,
which would seem to result from the
employment
of
sliding contacts,
are in
reality very slight,
inas-
much as the electromotive force of the secondaries
may
be made
exceedingly low,
so that
sparking
at the brushes is avoided.
Fig.
223 is a
diagram, partly
in
section,
of another
plan
of
carrying
out the invention. The circuit B in this case is
divided,
as
before,
and each branch includes the coils of both the fields
FIG. 223.
and
revolving
armatures of two induction devices. The arma-
tures o P are
preferably
mounted on the same
shaft,
and are ad-
justed
relatively
to one another in such manner that when the
self-induction
in one
branch,
as c. is
maximum,
in the other branch
D it is minimum.
The armatures
are rotated in
synchronism
with
the alternations from the source A. The
winding
or
position
of the armature coils is such that a current
in a
given
direction
passed
through
both armatures
would establish in
one, poles
simi-
lar to those in the
adjacent
poles
of the
field,
and in the
other,
poles
unlike the
adjacent
field
poles,
as indicated
by
n n s s in
the
diagram.
If the like
poles
are
presented,
as shown in cir-
cuit
D,
the condition
is that of a closed
secondary upon
a
primary,
or the
position
of least inductive
resistance
;
hence a
given
alter-
nation of current
will
pass
mainly through
D. Ahalf revolution
of the armatures
produces
an
opposite
effect and the
succeeding
414 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
current
impulse passes through
c.
Using
this
figure
as an illus-
tration,
it is evident that the fields N M
may
be
permanent
mag-
nets or
independently
excited and the armatures o P
driven,
as in
the
present case,
so as to
produce
alternate
currents,
which will
set
up alternately impulses
of
opposite
direction in the two
branches D
c,
which in such case would include the armature cir-
cuits and
translating
devices
only.
In
Fig.
224 a
plan
alternative with that shown in
Fig.
222 is
illustrated. In the
previous
case
illustrated,
each branch c and D
contained one or more
primary coils,
the secondaries of which
were
periodically
short circuited in
synchronism
with the alter-
nations of current from the main source
A,
and' for this
purpose
a commutator was
employed.
The latter
may, however,
be dis-
pensed
with and an armature with a closed coil substituted.
Referring
to
Fig.
224 in one of the
branches,
as
c,
are two coils
FIG. 224.
M',
wound on laminated
cores,
and in the other branches D are
similar coils N'. A subdivided or laminated armature o
7
, carry-
ing
a closed coil
R',
is
rotatably supported
between the coils M'
N',
as shown. In the
position
shown that
is,
with the coil K'
paral-
lel with the convolutions of the
primaries
N' M'
practically
the
whole current will
pass through
branch
D,
because the self-in-
duction in coils M' M' is maximum.
If, therefore,
the armature
and coil be rotated at a
proper speed relatively
to the
periods
or
alternations of the source
A,
the same results are obtained as in
the case of
Fig.
222.
Fig.
225 is an instance of what
may
be
called,
in distinction to
the
others,
a
"
magnetic
"
means of
securing
the result, v and
w are two
strong permanent magnets provided
with armatures
v'
w', respectively.
The armatures are made of thin laminae of
soft iron or
steel,
and the amount of
magnetic
metal which
they
OBTAINING DIRECT FROM ALTERNATING CURRENTS. 4ir>
contain is so calculated that
they
will be
fully
or
nearly
saturated
by
the
magnets.
Around the armatures are coils E
F, contained,
respectively,
in the circuits c and D. The connections and elec-
trical conditions in this case are similar to those in
Fig. 221,
except
that the current source of
i, Fig. 221,
is
dispensed
with
and the saturation of the core of coils E F obtained froth the
per-
manent
magnets.
The
previous
illustrations have all shown the two branches or
paths containing
the
translating
or induction devices as in deriva-
tion one to the other
;
but this is not
always necessary.
For
example,
in
Fig.
226,
A is an
alternating-current generator;
B
B,
the line wires or circuit. At
any given point
in the circuit let
us form two
paths,
as D
D',
and at another
point
two
paths,
as c
c''. Either
pair
or
group
of
paths
is similar to the
previous
dis-
FIG. 225.
positions
with the electrical source or induction device in one
branch
only,
while the two
groups
taken
together
form the
obvious
equivalent
of the cases in which an induction device or
generator
is included in both branches.
In one of the
paths,
as
D,
are included the devices to be
operated by
the current. In
the other
branch,
as
D',
is an induction device that
opposes
the
current
impulses
of one direction and directs them
through
the
branch D.
So, also,
in branch c are
translating
devices
o,
and in
branch c' an induction device or its
equivalent
that diverts
through
c
impulses
of
opposite
direction to those diverted
by
the
device in branch D'. The
diagram
shows a
special
form of in-
duction device for this
purpose,
.r / are the
cores,
formed with
pole-pieces, upon
which are wound the coils M N. Between these
pole-pieces
are mounted at
right angles
to one another the
mag-
netic armatures o
P, preferably
mounted on the same shaft and
416 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
designed
to be rotated in
synchronism
with the alternations of
current. When one of the armatures is in line with the
poles
or
in the
position occupied by
armature
p,
the
magnetic
circuit of
the induction device is
practically
closed
;
hence there will be
the
greatest opposition
to the
passage
of a current
through
coils
N N. The alternation will therefore
pass by way
of branch D.
At the same
time,
the
magnetic
circuit of the other induction
device
being
broken
by
the
position
of the armature
o,
there will
be less
opposition
to the current in coils
M,
which will shunt the
current from branch c. A reversal of the current
being
attended
by
a
shifting
of the
armatures,
the
opposite
effect is
produced.
Other modifications of these methods are
possible,
but need
not be
pointed
out. In all these
plans,
it will be
observed,
there
PIG
is
developed
in one or all of these branches of a circuit from a
source of
alternating currents,
an active
(as distinguished
from a
dead)
resistance or
opposition
to the currents of one
sign,
for the
purpose
of
diverting
the currents of that
sign through
the other
or another
path,
but
permitting
the currents of
opposite sign
to
pass
without substantial
opposition.
Whether the division of the currents or waves of current of
opposite sign
be effected with absolute
precision
or not is imma-
terial,
since it will be sufficient if the waves are
only partially
diverted or
directed,
for in such case the
preponderating
influence
in each branch of the circuit of the waves of one
sign
secures
the same
practical
results in
many
if not all
respects
as
though
the current were direct and continuous.
OBTAINING DIRECT FROM
ALTERNATING CURRENTS. 417
An
alternating
and a direct current have been combined so that
the waves of one direction or
sign
were
partially
or
wholly
over-
come
by
the direct current
;
but
by
this
plan only
one set of al-
ternations are
utilized,
whereas
by
the
system just
described the
entire current is rendered available.
By
obvious
applications
of
this
discovery
Mr. Tesla is enabled to
produce
a self
-exciting
al-
ternating dynamo,
or to
operate
direct current meters on alter-
nating-current
circuits or to run various devices such as arc
lamps
by
direct currents in the same circuit with incandescent
lamps
or other devices
operated by alternating
currents.
It will be observed that if an intermittent counter or
opposing
force be
developed
in the branches of the circuit and of
higher
electromotive force than that of the
generator,
an
alternating
current will result in each
branch,
with the waves of one
sign
preponderating,
while a
constantly
or
uniformly acting oppo-
sition in the branches of
higher
electromotive force than the
generator
would
produce
a
pulsating
current,
which conditions
would
be,
under some
circumstances,
the
equivalent
of those de-
scribed.
CHAPTER XXXIY.
CONDENSERS WITH PLATES IN OIL.
IN
experimenting
with currents of
high frequency
and
high
potential,
Mr. Tesla has found that
insulating
materials such as
glass,
mica,
and in
general
those bodies which
possess
the
highest
specific
inductive
capacity,
are inferior as insulators in such de-
vices when currents of the kind described are
employed compared
with those
possessing high insulating power, together
with a smaller
specific
inductive
capacity ;
and he has also found that it is
very
de-
sirable to exclude all
gaseous
matter from the
apparatus,
or
any
ac-
FIG. 227. FIG. 228.
cess of the same to the electrified
surfaces,
in order to
prevent
heat-
ing by
molecular bombardment and the loss or
injury consequent
thereon. He has therefore devised a method to
accomplish
these
results and
produce highly
efficient and reliable
condensers, by
using
oil as the dielectric
1
. The
plan
admits of a
particular
con-
1. Mr. Tesla's
experiments,
as the careful reader of his three lectures will
perceive,
have revealed a
very important
fact which is taken
advantage
of in
this invention.
Namely,
he has shown that in a condenser a considerable
amount of
energy may
be
wasted,
and the condenser
may
break down
merely
because
gaseous
matter is
present
between the surfaces. A number of
experi-
ments are described in the
lectures,
which
bring
out this fact
forcibly
and serve
as a
guide
in the
operation
of
high
tension
apparatus.
But besides
bearing
upon
this
point,
these
experiments
also throw a
light upon investigations
of a
purely
scientific nature and
explain
now the lack of
harmony among
the ob-
servations of various
investigators.
Mr. Tesla shows that in a fluid such as oil
the losses are
very
small as
compared
with those incurred in a
gas.
.
CONDENSERS WITH PLA TEN IN OIL.
419
struction of
condenser,
in whicli the distance between the
plates
is
adjustable,
and of which he takes
advantage.
In the
accompanying illustrations,
Fig.
227 is a section of a
condenser constructed in
accordance with this
principle
and hav-
ing
stationary plates
;
and
Fig.
228 is a similar view of a condenser
with
adjustable plates.
Any
suitable box or
receptacle
A
may
be used to contain the
plates
or armatures. These latter are
designated by
B and c and
are
connected, respectively,
to terminals i> and
E,
which
pass
out
through
the sides of the case. The
plates ordinarily
are
separated
by strips
of
porous insulating
material
F,
which are used
merely
for the
purpose
of
maintaining
them in
position.
The
space
within the can is filled with oil G. Such a condenser will
prove
highly
efficient and will not become heated or
permanently
in-
jured.
In
many
cases it is desirable to
vary
or
adjust
the
capacity
of
a
condenser,
and this is
provided
for
by securing
the
plates
to ad-
justable supports
as,
for
example,
to rods n
passing through
stuffing
boxes K in the sides of case A and furnished with nuts
L,
the ends of the rods
being
threaded for
engagement
with the
nuts.
It is well known that oils
possess insulating properties,
and it
it has been a common
practice
to
interpose
a
body
of oil between
two conductors for
purposes
of insulation
;
but Mr. Tesla be-
lieves he has discovered
peculiar properties
in oils which ren-
der them
very
valuable in this
particular
form of device.
CHAPTER XXXY.
ELECTROLYTIC REGISTERING METER.
AN
ingenious
form of
electrolytic
meter attributable to Mr.
Tesla is one in which a conductor is immersed in a
solution,
so
arranged
that metal
may
be
deposited
from the solution or taken
away
in such a manner that the electrical resistance of the con-
ductor is varied in a definite
proportion
to the
strength
of the
current the
energy
of which is to be
computed, whereby
this
variation in resistance serves as a measure of the
energy
and also
may
actuate
registering mechanism,
whenever the resistance
rises above or falls below certain limits.
In
carrying
out this idea Mr. Tesla
employs
an
electroly-
tic
cell, through
which extend two conductors
parallel
and
in close
proximity
to each other. These conductors he connects
in series
through
a
resistance,
but in such manner that there is
an
equal
difference of
potential
between them
throughout
their
entire extent. The free ends or terminals of the conductors'are
connected either in series in the circuit
supplying
the current to
the
lamps
or other
devices,
or in
parallel
to a resistance in the
circuit and in series with the current
consuming
devices. Under
such circumstances a current
passing through
the conductors
establishes a difference of
potential
between them which is
pro-
portional
to the
strength
of the
current,
in
consequence
of which
there is a
leakage
of current from one conductor to the other
across the solution. The
strength
of this
leakage
current is
pro-
portional
to the difference of
potential, and, therefore,
in
propor-
tion to the
strength
of the current
passing through
the conductors.
Moreover,
as there is a constant difference of
potential
between
the two conductors
throughout
the entire extent that is
exposed
to the
solution,
the current
density through
such solution is the
same at all
corresponding points,
and hence the
deposit
is uni-
form
along
the whole of one of the
conductors,
while the metal
is taken
away uniformly
from the other. The resistance of one
conductor is
by
this means
diminished,
while that of the other is
ELECTROLYTIC
REGISTERING METER.
421
increased,
both in
proportion
to the
strength
of the current
pass-
ing through
the conductors. From sucli variation in the resis-
tance of either or both of the
conductors
forming
the
positive
and
negative
electrodes of the
cell,
the current
energy expended
may
be
readily computed.
Figs.
229 and 230
illustrate two
forms of such a meter.
In
Fig.
229 G
designates
a
direct-current
generator.
L L are
the conductors of the circuit
extending
therefrom. A is a tube
of
glass,
the ends of which are
scaled,
as
by
means of in-
sulating plugs
or
caps
B B. c c' are two conductors
extending
through
the tube
A,
their ends
passing
out
through
the
plugs
B to
FIG. 229.
terminals thereon. These conductors
may
be
corrugated
or
formed in other
proper ways
to offer the desired electrical resis-
tance. K is a resistance connected in series witli the two con-
ductors c
c',
which
by
their free terminals are connected
up
in
circuit with one of the conductors L.
The method of
using
this device and
computing by
means
thereof the
energy
of the current will be
readily
understood.
First,
the resistances of the two conductors c
c',
respectively,
are
accurately
measured and noted. Then a known current is
passed
through
the instrument for a
-given
time,
and
by
a second meas-
urement the increase and diminution of the resistances of the two
conductors are
respectively
taken. From these data the constant is
422 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
obtained that is to
say,
for
example,
the increase of resistance of
one conductor or the diminution of the resistance of the other
per
lamp
hour. These two measurements
evidently
serve as a
check,
since the
gain
of one conductor should
equal
the loss of the other.
A further check is afforded
by measuring
both wires in series with
the
resistance,
in which case the resistance of the whole should
remain constant.
In
Fig.
230 the conductors c c' are connected in
parallel,
the
current device at x
passing
in one branch iirst
through
a resis-
tance R' and then
through
conductor
c,
while on the other branch
it
passes
iirst
through
conductor
c',
and then
through
resistance
FIG. 280.
R". The resistances R' R" are
equal,
as also are the resistances of
the conductors c c'. It
is, moreover,
preferable
that the
respective
resistances of the conductors c c' should be a known and con-
venient fraction of the coils or resistances R' R". It will be ob-
served that in the
arrangement
shown in
Fig.
230 there is a constant
potential
difference between the two conductors c c'
throughout
their entire
length.
It will be seen that in both cases
illustrated,
the
proportionality
of the increase or decrease of resistance to the current
strength
will
always
be
preserved,
for what one conductor
gains
the other
loses,
and the resistances of the conductors c c'
being
small as
ELECTROLYTIC REGISTERING METER. 423
compared
with the resistances in series with them. It will be
understood that
after.
each measurement or
registration
of a
given
variation of resistance in one or both
conductors,
the direction of
the current should -be
changed
or the instrument
reversed,
so that
the
deposit
will be taken from the conductor which has
gained
and added to that which has lost. This
principle
is
capable
of
many
modifications. For
instance,
since there is a section of the
circuit to
wit,
the conductor c or c' that varies in resistance in
proportion
to the current
strength,.
such variation
maybe
utilized,
as is done in
many analogous cases,
to effect the
operation
of
various automatic
devices,
such as
registers.
It is
better,
how-
ever,
for the sake of
simplicity
to
compute
the
energy by
meas-
urements of resistance.
The chief
advantages
of this
arrangement
are, first,
that it is
possible
to read off
directly
the amount of the
energy expended
by
means of a
properly
constructed ohm-meter and without re-
sorting
to
weighing
the
deposit ; secondly
it is not
necessary
to
employ shunts,
for the whole of the current to be measured
may
be
passed through
the instrument
; third,
the
accuracy
of the in-
strument and correctness of the indications are but
slightly
af-
fected
by changes
in
temperature.
It is also said that such meters
have the merit of
superior economy
and
compactness,
as well as
of
cheapness
in construction.
Electrolytic
meters seem to need
every auxiliary advantage
to make them
permanently popular
and
successful,
no matter how much
ingenuity may
be shown in their
design.
CHAPTEK XXXVI.
THERMO-MAGNETIC MOTORS AND PYRO-MAGNETIC GENERATORS.
No electrical inventor of the
present day dealing
with the
problems
of
light
and
power
considers that he has done himself
or his
opportunities justice
until he has attacked the
subject
of
thermo-magiietism.
As far back as the
beginning
of the seven-
teenth
century
it was shown
by
Dr. William
Gilbert,
the father
of modern
electricity,
that a loadstone or iron bar when heated
to redness loses its
magnetism
;
and since that time the influence
of heat on the
magnetic
metals has been
investigated frequently,
though
not with
any
material or
practical
result.
For a man of Mr. Tesla's inventive
ability,
the
problems
in
this field have
naturally
had no small
fascination,
and
though
he
has but
glanced
at
them,
it is to be
hoped
he
may
find time to
pursue
the
study deeper
and further. For such as
he,
the in-
vestigation
must
undoubtedly
bear fruit. Meanwhile he has
worked out one or two
operative
devices
worthy
of note.
1
He
obtains mechanical
power by
a
reciprocating
action
resulting
from the
joint operations
of
heat,
magnetism,
and a
spring
or
weight
or other force that is to
say
he
subjects
a
body magnet-
ized
by
induction or otherwise to the action of heat until the
magnetism
is
sufficiently
neutralized to allow a
weight
or
spring
to
give
motion to the
body
and lessen the action of the
heat,
so
that the
magnetism may
be
sufficiently
restored to move the
1. It
will,
of
course,
be inferred from the nature of these devices that the
vibration obtained in this manner is
very
slow
owing
to the
inability
of the
iron to follow
rapid changes
in
temperature.
In an interview with Mr. Tesla
on this
subject,
the
compiler
learned of an
experiment
which will interest
students. A
simple
horseshoe
magnet
is taken and a
piece
of sheet iron bent in
the form of an L is
brought
in contact with one of the
poles
and
placed
in
such a
position
that it is
kept
in the attraction of the
opposite pole delicately
suspended.
A
spirit lamp
is
placed
under the sheet iron
piece
and when the
iron is heated to a certain
temperature
it is
easily
set in vibration
oscillating
as
rapidly
as 400 to 500 times a minute. The
experiment
is
very easily per-
formed and is
interesting principally
on account of the
very rapid
rate of
vibration.
TlIKIIMO-MAGNETISM AND PYRO MAGNKTIHM. 4-25
body
in tlie
opposite direction,
and
again subject
the same to the
demagnetizing power
of the heat.
Use is made of either an
electro-magnet
or a
permanent mag-
net,
and the heat is directed
against
a
body
that is
magnetized
by induction,
rather than
directly against
a
permanent magnet,
thereby avoiding
the loss of
magnetism
that
might
result in the
permanent magnet by
the action of heat. Mr. Tesla also
provides
for
lessening
the volume of the heat or for
intercepting
the same
during
that
portion
of the
reciprocation
in which the
cooling
action takes
place.
In the
diagrams
are shown some of the numerous
arrangements
that
may
be made use of in
carrying
out this idea. In all
of these
figures
the
magnet-poles
are marked N
s,
the armature
A,
the Bunsen burner or other source of heat
H,
the axis of mo-
FIG. 232. FIG. 231.
FIG. 233.
tion
M,
and the
spring
or the
equivalent
thereof
namely,
a
weight
is marked w.
In
Fig.
281 the
permanent
magnet
N is connected with a
frame,
F, supporting
the axis
M,
from which the arm P
hangs,
and at the
lower end of which the armature
A is
supported.
The
stops
2
and :-J limit the extent of
motion,
and the
spring
w tends to draw
the armature A
away
from the
magnet
N. It will now be under-
stood that the
magnetism
of > is sufficient to overcome the
spring
w and draw the armature A toward the
magnet
N. The
heat
acting upon
the armature A neutralizes
its induced
magnet-
ism
sufficiently
for the
spring
w to draw the armature A
away
from the
magnet
M and also from the heat at ir. The armature
now
cools,
and the attraction of the
magnet
N overcomes
the
spring
w and draws the armature A back
again
above the burm-i-
42(5 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
ii,
so that the same is
again
heated and the
operations
are re-
peated.
The
reciprocating
movements thus obtained are em-
ployed
as a source of mechanical
power
in
any
desired manner.
Usually
a
connecting-rod
to a crank
upon
a
fly-wheel
shaft would
be made use
of,
as indicated in
Fig.
240.
Fig.
232
represents
the same
parts
as before described
;
but an
Fie. 234. FIG. 235.
electro-magnet
is illustrated in
place
of a
permanent magnet.
The
operations, however,
are the same.
In
Fig.
233 are shown the same
parts
as in
Figs.
231 and
232,
but
they
are
differently arranged.
The armature
A,
instead of
swinging,
is
stationary
and held
by
arm
p',
and the core N s of
the
electro-magnet
is made to
swing
within the helix
Q,
the
core
being suspended by
the arm p from the
pivot
M. A
shield,
R,
is connected with the
magnet-core
and
swings
with
it,
so
that after the heat has
demagnetized
the armature A to such an
extent that the
spring
w draws the core N s
away
from the arma-
ture
A,
the shield K comes between the flame H and armature
A,
thereby intercepting
the action of the heat and
allowing
the ar-
mature to
cool,
so that the
magnetism, again preponderating,
causes the movement of the core N s toward the armature A and
the removal of the shield R from above the
flame,
so that the heat
again
acts to lessen or neutralize the
magnetism.
A
rotary
or
other movement
may
be obtained from this
reciprocation.
Fig.
234
corresponds
in
every respect
with
Fig. 233, except
that a
permanent horseshoe-magnet,
N s is
represented
as
taking
the
place
of the
electro-magnet
in
Fig.
233.
In
Fig.
235 is shown a
helix, Q,
with an armature
adapted
to
swing
toward or from the helix. In this case there
may
be a soft-
THERMO-MAGNETI8M AND
PJEO-MAGNETI8M. 4-21
iron core in the
helix,
or the armature
may
assume the form of a
solenoid
core,
there
being
no
permanent
core within the helix.
Fig.
23tf is an end
view,
and
Fig.
237 a
plan view, illustrating
the method as
applied
to a
swinging armature, A,
and a
stationary
permanent magnet,
N s. In this instance Mr. Tesla
applies
the
heat to an
auxiliary
armature or
keeper, T,
which is
adjacent
to
and
preferably
in direct contact with the
magnet.
This arma-
ture
T,
in the form of a
plate
of
sheet-iron,
extends across from
one
pole
to the other and is of sufficient section to
practically
form a
keeper
for the
magnet,
so that when the armature T is
cool
nearly
all the lines of force
pass
over the same and
very
little
free
magnetism
is exhibited. Then the armature
A,
which
swings
freely
on the
pivots
M in front of the
poles
N
s,
is
very
little at-
tracted and the
spring
w
pulls
the same
way
from the
poles
into
the
position
indicated in the
diagram.
The heat is directed
upon
the iron
plate
T at some distance from the
magnet,
so as to allow
the
magnet
to
keep comparatively
cool. This heat is
applied
be-
neath the
plate by
means of the burners
H,
and there is a con-
nection from the armature A or its
pivot
to the
gas-cock
6,
or
other device for
regulating
the heat. The heat
acting upon
the
middle
portion
of the
plate T,
the
magnetic
conductivity
of the
heated
portion
is diminished or
destroyed,
and a
great
number of
the lines of force are deflected over the armature
A,
which is now
FIG. 287.
FIG. 238.
FIG.
powerfully
attracted and drawn into
line,
or
nearly
so,
with the
poles
N s. In so
doing
the cock 6 is
nearly
closed and the
plate
T
cools,
the lines of force are
again
deflected over the
same,
the
attraction exerted
upon
the armature
A is
diminished,
and the
spring
w
pulls
the same
away
from the
magnet
into the
position
shown
by
full
lines,
and the
operations
are
repeated.
The ar-
438 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA
rangement
shown in
Fig.
236 has the
advantages
that the
mag-
net and armature are
kept
cool and the
strength
of the
per-
manent
magnet
is better
preserved,
as the
magnetic
circuit is
constantly
closed.
In the
plan view, Fig. 238,
is shown a
permanent magnet
and
keeper plate, T,
similar to those in
Figs.
236 and
237,
with the
burners H for the
gas
beneath the same
;
but the armature is
pivoted
at one end to one
pole
of the
magnet
and the other end
swings
toward and from the other
pole
of the
magnet.
The
spring
w acts
against
a lever arm that
projects
from the
armature,
and
the
supply
of heat has to be
partly
cut oif
by
a connection to the
swinging armature,
so as to lessen the heat
acting upon
the
keeper
plate
when the armature A has been attracted.
0.;N
FIG. 240. FIG. 241.
Fig.
239 is similar to
Fig.
238, except
that the
keeper
T is not
made use of and the armature itself
swings
into and out of the
range
of the intense action of the heat from the burner H.
Fig.
240 is a
diagram
similar to
Fig.
231, except
that in
place
of
using
a
spring
and
stops,
the armature is shown as connected
by
a
link,
to the crank of a
fly-wheel,
so that the
fly-wheel
will be revolved
as
rapidly
as the armature can be heated and cooled to the
necessary
extent. A
spring may
be used in
addition,
as in
Fig.
231. In
Fig.
241 the armatures A A are connected
by
a
link,
so
that one will be
heating
while the other is
cooling,
and the attrac-
tion exerted to move the cooled armature is availed of to draw
away
the heated armature instead of
using
a
spring.
THEKMO-MAGNETISM AND PT110-MAGNETISM. 429
Mr. Tesla has also devoted his attention to the
development
of
a
pyromagnetic generator
of
electricity
1
based
upon
the
following
laws :
First,
that
electricity
or electrical
energy
is
developed
in
any conducting body by subjecting
such
body
to a
varying mag-
netic influence
;
and
second,
that the
magnetic properties
of iron
or other
magnetic
substance
may
be
partially
or
entirely destroyed-
or caused to
disappear by raising
it to a certain
temperature,
but
restored and caused to
reappear by again lowering
its
tempera-
ture to a certain
degree.
These laws
may
be
applied
in the
pro-
duction of electrical currents in
many ways,
the
principle
of
which is in all cases the
same, viz.,
to
subject
a conductor to a
varying magnetic influence,
producing
such variations
by
the
ap-
plication
of
heat, or,
more
strictly speaking, by
the
application
or
action of a
varying temperature upon
the source of the
magnet-
ism. This
principle
of
operation may
be illustrated
by
a
simple
experiment
: Place end to
end,
and
preferably
in actual
contact,
a
permanently magnetized
steel bar and a
strip
or bar of soft iron.
Around the end of the iron bar or
plate
wind a coil of insulated wire.
Then
apply
to the iron between the coil and the steel bar a flame
or other source of heat which will be
capable
of
raising
that
por-
tion of the iron to an
orange
red,
or a
temperature
of about 600
centigrade.
"When this condition is
reached,
the iron somewhat
suddenly
loses its
magnetic properties,
if it be
very thin,
and the
same effect is
produced
as
though
the iron had been moved
away
from the
magnet
or the heated section had been removed. This
change
of
position, however,
is
accompanied by
a
shifting
of the
magnetic
lines, or,
in other
words, by
a variation in the
magnetic
influence to which the coil is
exposed,
and a current in the coil
is the result. Then remove the flame or in
any
other
way
reduce
the
temperature
of the iron. The
lowering
of its
temperature
is
accompanied by
a return of its
magnetic properties,
and another
change
of
magnetic
conditions
occurs, accompanied by
a current
in an
opposite
direction in the coil. The same
operation may
be
1. The chief
point
to be noted is that Mr. Tesla attacked this
problem
in a
way
which
was,
from the
standpoint
of
theory,
and that of an
engineer,
far
better than that from which some earlier trials in this direction started. The
enlargement
of these ideas will be found in Mr. Tesla's work on the
pyromag-
netic
generator,
treated in this
chapter.
The chief effort of the inventor was
to economize the
heat,
which was
accomplished by inclosing
the iron in a source
of heat well insulated,
and
by cooling
the iron
by
means of
steam, utilizing
the
steam over
again.
The construction also
permits
of more
rapid magnetic
changes per
unit of
time, meaning larger output.
430 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
repeated indefinitely,
the effect
upon
the coil
being
similar to
that which would follow from
moving
the
magnetized
bar to and
from the end of the iron bar or
plate.
The device illustrated below is a means of
obtaining
this
result,
the features of
novelty
in the invention
being, first,
the
employment
of an artificial
cooling
device, and, second,
inclosing
the source of heat and that
portion
of the
magnetic
circuit ex-
posed
to the heat and
artificially cooling
the heated
part.
These
improvements
are
applicable generally
to the
generators
constructed on the
plan
above described that is to
say,
we
may
use an artificial
cooling
device in
conjunction
with a variable or
varied or uniform source of heat.
Fig.
242 is a central vertical
longitudinal
section of the com-
FIG. 242. FIG. 243.
plete apparatus
and
Fig.
243 is a cross-section of the
magnetic
armature-core of the
generator.
Let A
represent
a
magnetized
core or
permanent magnet
the
poles
of which are
bridged by
an armature-core
composed
of a
casing
or shell B
inclosing
a number of hollow iron tubes c.
Around this core are wound the conductors E
E',
to form the
coils in which the currents are
developed.
In the circuits of
these coils are
current-consuming
devices,
as F F'.
n is a furnace or closed
fire-box,
through
which the central
portion
of the core B extends. Above the fire is a boiler
K,
con-
taining
water. The flue L from the fire-box
may
extend
up
through
the boiler.
G is a
water-supply pipe,
and H is the steam-exhaust
pipe,
which communicates with all the tubes c in the armature
B,
so
that steam
escaping
from the boiler will
pass through
the tubes.
THKRMO-MAONETISM AND P7RO-MA QNETISM. 431
In tlie steam-exhaust
pipe
H is a valve
v,
to which is connected
the lever
i,
by
the movement of which the valve is
opened
or closed. In such a case as this the heat of the fire
may
he
utilized for other
purposes
after as much of it as
may
be needed
has been
applied
to
heating
the core u. There are
special
ad-
vantages
in the
employment
of a
cooling device,
in that the
metal of the core B is not so
quickly
oxidized.
Moreover,
the
difference between the
temperature
of the
applied
heat and of
the
steam, air,
or whatever
gas
or fluid be
applied
as the
cooling
medium, may
be increased or decreased at
will, whereby
the
rapidity
of the
magnetic changes
or fluctuations
may
be
regulated.
CHAPTEK XXXVII.
ANTI-SPAKKING DYNAMO BRUSH AND COMMUTATOR.
IN direct current
dynamos
of
great
electromotive force
such,
for
instance,
as those used for arc
lighting
when one commuta-
tor bar or
plate
comes out of contact with the
collecting-brush
a
spark
is
apt
to
appear
on the commutator. This
spark may
be
due to the break of the
complete circuit,
or to a shunt of low
resistance formed
by
the brush between two or more commuta-
tor-bars. In the lirst case the
spark
is more
apparent,
as there is
at the moment when the circuit is broken a
discharge
of the
magnets through
the field
helices, producing
a
great spark
or
Hash which causes an
unsteady current, rapid
wear of the com-
mutator bars and
brushes,
and waste of
power.
The
sparking
may
be reduced
by
various
devices,
such as
providing
a
path
for
the current at the moment when the commutator
segment
or bar
leaves the
brush, by short-circuiting
the
field-helices, by
increas-
ing
the number of the
commutator-bars,
or
by
other similar
means
;
but all these devices are
expensive
or not
fully
available,
and seldom attain the
object
desired.
To
prevent
this
sparking
in a
simple manner,
Mr. Tesla some
years ago employed
with the commutator-bars and
intervening
insulating material, mica,
asbestos
paper
or other
insulating
and
incombustible
material, arranged
to bear on the surface of the
commutator,
near to and behind the brush.
In the
drawings, Fig.
244 is a section of a commutator with
an asbestos
insulating
device
;
and
Fig.
245 is a similar
view,
re-
presenting
two
plates
of mica
upon
the back of the brush.
In
Fig. 244,
c
represents
the commutator and
intervening
insulating
material
;
B
B,
the brushes, d d are sheets of asbestos
paper
or other suitable
non-conducting
material.
//
are
springs,
the
pressure
of which
may
be
adjusted by
means of the screws
V 9-
In
Fig.
245 a
simple arrangement
is shown with two
plates
of
mica or other material. It will be seen that whenever one com-
ANTLSPARKING BRUSHES AND
COMMUTATORS. 433
imitator
segment passes
out of contact with the
brush,
the forma-
tion of the arc will be
prevented by
the
intervening insulating
material
coming
in contact with the
insulating
material on the
brush.
Asbestos
paper
or cloth
impregnated
with
zinc-oxide, mag-
nesia, zirconia,
or other suitable
material, may
be
used,
as the
FIG. 244. FIG. 245.
paper
and cloth are
soft,
and serve at the same time to
wipe
and
polish
the commutator
;
but mica or
any
other suitable material
can be
employed, provided
the material be an insulator or a bad
conductor of
electricity.
A few
years
later Mr. Tesla turned his attention
again
to the
same
subject, as, perhaps,
was
very
natural in view of the fact
that the commutator had
always
been
prominent
in his
thoughts,
and that so much of his work was even aimed at
dispensing
with
it
entirely
as an
objectionable
and
unnecessary part
of
dynamos
and motors. In these later efforts to
remedy
commutator
troubles,
Mr. Tesla constructs a commutator and the collectors therefor in
two
parts mutually adapted
to one
another, and,
so far as the es-
sential features are
concerned,
alike in mechanical structure. Se-
lecting
as an illustration a commutator of
two
segments adapted
for use with an armature the coils or coil of which have but two
free
ends,
connected
respectively
to the
segments,
the
bearing-
surface is the face of a
disc,
and is formed of two metallic
quad-
rant
segments
and two
insulating segments
of the same
dimensions,
and the face of the disc is smoothed
off,
so that the metal
and
insulating segments
are flush. The
part
which takes the
place
of the usual
brushes,
or the
"
collector,"
is a disc of the
same character as the commutator and has a surface
similarly
formed with two
insulating
and two metallic
segments.
These
two
parts
are mounted with their faces in contact and in such
manner that the rotation of the armature causes the commutator
to turn
upon
the
collector, whereby
the currents induced in the
434 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
coils are taken off
by
the collector
segments
and thence
conveyed
off
by
suitable conductors
leading
from the collector
segments.
This is the
general plan
of the construction
adopted.
Aside from
certain
adjuncts,
the nature and functions of which are set forth
later,
this means of commutation will be seen to
possess many
im-
portant advantages.
In the first
place
the
short-circuiting
and the
breaking
of the armature coil connected to the
commutator-seg-
ments occur at the same
instant,
and from the nature of the con-
struction this will be done with the
greatest precision ; secondly,
the
duration
of both the break and of the short circuit will be reduced
to a minimum. The first results in a reduction which amounts
practically
to a
suppression
of the
spark,
since the break and
the short circuit
produce opposite
effects in the armature-coil.
The second has the effect of
diminishing
the destructive effect
of a
spark,
since this would be in a measure
proportional
to the
duration of the
spark;
while
lessening
the duration of the short
circuit
obviously
increases the
efficiency
of the machine.
FIG. 246.
FIG. 247.
The mechanical
advantages
will be better understood
by
re-
ferring
to the
accompanying diagrams,
in which
Fig.
246 is a
central
longitudinal
section of the end of a shaft with the im-
proved
commutator carried thereon.
Fig.
247 is a view of the
inner or
bearing
face of the collector.
Fig.
248 is an end view
from the armature side of a modified form of commutator.
Figs.
ANTI-SPARKING BRUSHES AND
COMMUTATORS.
435
249 and 250 are views of details of
Fig.
248.
Fig.
251 is a
longi-
tudinal central section of another
modification,
and
Fig.
252 is a
sectional view of the same. A is the end of the
armature-shaft
of a
dynamo-electric
machine or motor. A' is a sleeve of insu-
lating
material
around the
shaft,
secured in
place by
a screw a'.
FIG. 248
FIG. 249. FIG. 250.
The commutator
proper
is in the form of a disc which is made
up
of four
segments
n D' G
G',
similar to those shown in
Fig.
248.
Two of these
segments,
as D
D',
are of metal and are in electrical
connection with the ends of the coils on the armature. The
other two
segments
are of
insulating
material. The
segments
are
held in
place by
a
band, B,
of
insulating
material. The disc is
held in
place by
friction or
by screws, y' g', Fig. 248,
which
secure the disc
firmly
to the sleeve A'.
The collector is made in the same form as the commutator. It
is
composed
of the two metallic
segments
E E' and the two insu-
lating segments
r
F',
bound
together by
a
band,
c. The metallic
segments
E E' are of the same or
practically
the same width or
extent as the
insulating segments
or
spaces
of the commutator.
The collector is secured to a
sleeve, B', by
screws
g g,
and the sleeve
is
arranged
to turn
freely
on the shaft A. The end of the sleeve
B' is closed
by
a
plate, /, upon
which
presses
a
pivot-pointed
screw, /i, adjustable
in a
spring, H,
which acts to maintain the
collector in close contact with the commutator and to
compensate
for the
play
of the shaft. The collector is so fixed that it cannot
turn with the shaft. For
example,
the
diagram
shows a slotted
plate, K,
which is
designed
to be attached to a
stationary support,
and an arm
extending
from the collector and
carrying
a
clamping
screw, L, by
which the collector
may
be
adjusted
and set to the
desired
position.
Mr. Tesla
prefers
the form shown in
Figs.
246 and 247 to fit
436 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
the
insulating segments
of both commutator and collector
loosely
and to
provide
some means
as,
for
example, light springs,
e
e,
secured to the bands A'
B', respectively,
and
bearing against
the
segments
to exert a
light pressure upon
them and
keep
them in
close contact and to
compensate
for wear. The metal
segments
of the commutator
may
be moved forward
by loosening
the
screw a'.
The line wires are fed from the metal
segments
of the
collector,
being
secured thereto in
any
convenient
manner,
the
plan
of con-
nections
being
shown as
applied
to a modified form of the com-
mutator in
Fig.
251. The commutator and the collector in thus
presenting
two flat and smooth
bearing
surfaces
prevent
most ef-
fectually by
mechanical action the occurrence of
sparks.
The
insulating segments
are made of some hard material
capa-
ble of
being polished
and formed with
sharp edges.
Such mater-
ials as
glass, marble,
or
soapstone may
be
advantageously
used.
The metal
segments
are
preferably
of
copper
or brass
;
but
they
may
have a
facing
or
edge
of durable material such as
platinum
or the like where the
sparks
are liable to occur.
In
Fig.
248 a somewhat modified form of the invention is
shown,
a form
designed
to facilitate the construction and
replac-
FIG. 251. FIG. 252.
ing
of the
parts.
In this modification the commutator and col-
lector are made in
substantially
the same manner as
previously
described, except
that the bands B o are omitted. The four
seg-
ments of each
part, however,
are secured to their
respective
sleeves
by
screws
g' g',
and one
edge
of each
segment
is cut
away,
so that
small
plates
a b
may
be
slipped
into the
spaces
thus formed. Of
ANTI-SPARKINO BRUSHKS AND COMMUTATORS. 437
these
plates
a a are of
metal,
and are in contact with the metal
seg-
ments D
D', respectively.
The other
two,
b
&,
are of
glass
or mar-
ble,
and
they
are all better
square,
as shown in
Figs.
249 and
250,
so that
they may
be turned to
present
new
edges
should
any edge
become worn
by
use.
Light springs
d bear
upon
these
plates
and
press
those in the commutator toward those in the
collector,
and
insulating strips
c c are secured to the
periphery
of the discs
to
prevent
the blocks from
being
thrown out
by centrifugal
action.
These
plates
are,
of
course,
useful at those
edges
of the
segments
only
where
sparks
are liable to
occur, and,
as
they
are
easily
re-
placed, they
are of
great advantage.
It is considered best to coat
them with
platinum
or silver.
In
Figs.
251 and 252 is shown a construction
where,
instead of
solid
segments,
a fluid is
employed.
In this case the commuta-
tor and collector are made of two
insulating
discs,
s
T,
and in
lieu of the metal
segments
a
space
is cut out of each
part,
as at
K
K', corresponding
in
shape
and size to a metal
segment.
The
two
parts
are iitted
smoothly
and the collector T held
by
the
screw h and
spring
n
against
the commutator s. As in the other
cases,
the commutator revolves while the collector remains sta-
tionary.
The ends of the coils are connected to
binding-posts
$
-v,
which are in electrical connection with metal
plates
t 2 within
the recesses in the two
parts
s T. These chambers or recesses
are filled with
mercury,
and in the collector
part
are tubes w
w,
with screws w
w, carrying springs
x and
pistons x',
which com-
pensate
for the
expansion
and contraction of the
mercury
under
varying temperatures,
but which are
sufficiently strong
not to
yield
to the
pressure
of the fluid due to
centrifugal action,
and
which serve as
binding-posts.
In all the above cases the commutators are
adapted
fora
single
coil,
and the device is
particularly
suited to such
purposes.
The
number of
segments may
be
increased, however,
or more than
one commutator used with a
single
armature.
Although
the
bearing-surfaces
are shown as
planes
at
right angles
to the shaft
or
axis,
it is evident that in this
particular
the construction
'may
be
very greatly
modified.
CHAPTER XXXVIII.
AUXILIARY BKUSH REGULATION OF DIRECT CURRENT DYNAMOS.
AN
interesting
method devised
by
Mr. Tesla for the
regula-
tion of direct current
dynamos,
is that which lias come to be
known as the "third brush" method. In machines of this
type,
devised
by
him as far back as
1885,
he makes use of two main
brushes to which the ends of the field
magnet
coils are
connected,
an
auxiliary brush,
and a branch or shunt connection from an in-
termediate
point
of the iield wire to the
auxiliary
brush.
1
The relative
positions
of the
respective
brushes are
varied,
either
automatically
or
by hand,
so that the shunt becomes in-
operative
when the
auxiliary
brash has a certain
position upon
the commutator
;
but when the
auxiliary
brush is moved in its
relation to the main
brushes,
or the latter are moved in their
relation to the
auxiliary brush,
the electric condition is disturbed
and more or less of the current
through
the field-helices is
diverted
through
the shunt or a current is
passed
over the shunt
to the field-helices.
By varying
the relative
position upon
the
commutator of the
respective
brushes
automatically
in
propor-
tion to the
varying
electrical conditions of the
working-circuit,
the current
developed
can be
regulated
in
proportion
to the de-
mands in the
working-circuit.
Fig.
253 is a
diagram illustrating
the
invention, showing
one
core of the
field-magnets
with one helix wound in the same direc-
tion
throughout. Figs.
254 and 255 are
diagrams showing
one
core of the
field-magnets
with a
portion
of the helices wound in
opposite
directions.
Figs.
256 and 257 are
diagrams illustrating
1. The
compiler
has learned
partially
from statements made on several
occasions in
journals
and
partially by
personal inquiry
of Mr.
Tesla,
that a
great
deal of work in this
interesting
line is
unpublished.
In these inventions
as will be
seen,
the brushes are
automatically
shifted,
but in the broad method
barely suggested
here the
regulation
is effected without
any change
in the
position
of the brushes. This
auxiliary
brush
invention,
it will be remem-
bered,
was
very
much discussed a few
years ago,
and it
may
be of interest that
this work of Mr.
Tesla,
then unknown in this
field,
is now
brought
to
light
A UXILIARY BRU8U REG ULA TION. 439
the electric devices that
may
be
employed
for
automatically
adjusting
the
brushes,
and
Fig.
258 is a
diagram illustrating
the
positions
of the brushes when the machine is
being energized
at
the start.
a and 5 are the
positive
and
negative
brushes of the main or
working-circuit,
and c the
auxiliary
brush. The
working-circuit
i) extends from the brushes a and
b,
as
usual,
and contains elec-
tric
lamps
or other
devices, D',
either in series or in
multiple
arc.
M M'
represent
the
field-helices,
the ends of which are con-
nected to the main brushes a and 5. The branch or shunt wire
c' extends from the
auxiliary
brush c to the circuit of the field-
helices,
and is connected to the same at an intermediate
point,
v.
H
represents
the
commutator,
with the
plates
of
ordinary
con-
FIG. 253.
struction. When the
auxiliary
brush c
occupies
such a
position
upon
the commutator
that the electro-motive
force between the
brushes a and c is to the electro-motive
force between the brushes
c and b as the resistance of the circuit a M c' c A is to the resistance
of the circuit b M' c' c
B,
the
potentials
of the
points
x and Y will
be
equal,
and no current will flow over the
auxiliary
brush
;
but
when the brush c
occupies
a different
position
the
potentials
of
the
points
x and Y will be
different,
and a current will flow over
the
auxiliary
brush to and from the
commutator, according
to the
relative
position
of the brushes.
If,
for
instance,
the commu-
tator-space
between
the brushes
a and
c,
when the latter is at the
neutral
point,
is
diminished,
a current
will flow from the
point
Y
over the shunt c to the brush
J,
thus
strengthening
the current
in the
part
M',
and
partly
neutralizing
the current in
part
M
;
but
if the
space
between
the brushes a and c is
increased,
the cur-
440 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
rent will flow over the auxiliary brush in an
opposite direction,
and the current in M will be
strengthened,
and in M'
partly
neu-
tralized.
By combining
with the brushes
a, I,
and c
any
usual automatic
regulating mechanism,
the current
developed
can be
regulated
in
proportion
to the demands in the
working
circuit. The
parts
M
FIG. 254.
and M' of the Held wire
may
be wound in the same direction.
In this case
they
are
arranged
as shown in
Fig.
253
;
or the
part
M
may
be wound in the
opposite direction,
as shown in
Figs.
254 and 255.
It will be
apparent
that the
respective
cores of the
tield-rnag-
nets are
subjected
to
neutralizing
or
intensifying
effects of the
current in the shunt
through c',
and the
magnetism
of the cores
will be
partially
neutralized,
or the
points
of
greatest magnetism
shifted,
so that it will be more or less remote from or
approach-
ing
to the
armature,
and hence the
aggregate energizing
actions
of the field
magnets
on the armature will be
correspondingly
varied.
In the form indicated in
Fig.
253 the
regulation
is effected
by
shifting
the
point
of
greatest magnetism,
and in
Figs.
254 and
255 the same effect is
produced by
the action of the current in
the shunt
passing through
the
neutralizing
helix.
The relative
positions
of the
respective
brushes
may
be varied
by moving
the
auxiliary brush,
or the brush c
may
remain station-
ary
and the core P be connected to the main-brush holder
A,
so as to
adjust
the brushes a b in their relation to the brush c.
If, however,
an
adjustment
is
applied
to all the
brushes,
as seen
in
Fig. 257,
the solenoid should be connected to both a and
c,
so
as to move them toward or
away
from each other.
There are several known devices for
giving
motion in
propor-
A UXfLIARY BRUSH ItKG ULAT1ON. 441
tion to an electric current. In
Figs.
25i and 257 the
moving
cores are shown as convenient devices for
obtaining
the
required
extent of motion with
very slight changes
in the current
passing
through
the helices. It is understood that the
adjustment
of
the main brushes causes variations in the
strength
of the current
independently
of the relative
position
of those brushes to the
auxiliary
brush. In all cases the
adjustment
should be such that
no current flows over the
auxiliary
brush when the
dynamo
is
running
with its normal load.
In
Figs.
256 and 25 7 A A indicate the main-brush
holder,
carrying
the main
brushes,
and c the
auxiliary-brush holder,
carrying
the
auxiliary
brush. These brush-holders are movable
in arcs concentric with the centre of the commutator-shaft. An
iron
piston, p,
of the solenoid
s, Fig. 25(5,
is attached to the aux-
iliary-brush
holder c;. The
adjustment
is effected
by
means of a
spring
and screw or
tightener.
In
Fig.
257 instead of a
solenoid,
an iron tube
inclosing
a coil
is shown. The
piston
of the coil is attached to both brush-
holders A A and c. When the brushes are moved
directly by
electrical
devices,
as shown in
Figs.
25(5 and
257,
these are so
constructed that the force exerted for
adjusting
is
practically
uniform
through
the whole
length
of motion.
It is true that
auxiliary
brushes have been used in connection
with the helices of the
field-wire;
but in these instances the
FIG. 255.
helices receive the entire current
through
the
auxiliary
brush or
brushes,
and these brushes could not be taken off without break-
ing
the circuit
through
the field. These brushes
cause,
move-
over, heavy sparking
at the commutator.
In the
present
case the
auxiliary
brush causes
very
little or no
sparking,
and
can be taken off without
breaking
the circuit
through
the field-
442 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
helices. The
arrangement lias, besides,
the ad
vantage
of
facilitating
the self-excitation of the machine in all cases where the resis-
tance of the field-wire is
very great comparatively
to the resis-'
tance of the main circuit at the start for
instance,
on
arc-light
FIG. 256.
machines. In this case the
auxiliary
brush e is
placed
near
to,
or
better still in contact
with,
the brush
,
as shown in
Fig.
258.
In this manner the
part
M' is
completely
cut
out,
and as the
part
M has a
considerably
smaller resistance than the whole
length
of
the field-wire the machine excites
itself, whereupon
the
auxiliary
brush is shifted
automatically
to its normal
position.
In a further method devised
by
Mr.
Tesla,
one or more auxili-
ary
brushes are
employed, by
means of which a
portion
or the
whole of the field coils is shunted.
According
to the relative
po-
sition
upon
the commutator of the
respective
brushes more or
less current is caused to
pass through
the helices of the
field,
and
the current
developed by
the machine can be varied at will
by
varying
the relative
positions
of the brushes.
In
Fig. 259,
a and 1) are the
positive
and
negative
brushes of
the main
circuit,
and c an
auxiliary
brush. The main circuit D
FIG. 258.
extends from the brushes a and
b,
as
usual,
and contains the
helices M of the field wire and the electric
lamps
or other work-
ing
devices. The
auxiliary
brush c is connected to the
point
x
of the main circuit
by
means of the wire c' . H is a commutator
A UXILIART Bit USE REG ULATION. 443
of
ordinary
construction. It will have been seen from what was
said
already
that when the electro-motive force between the brushes
a and c is to the electromotive force between the brushes c
and b as the resistance of the circuit a M c' c A is to the resistance
of the circuit b c B c c'
D,
the
potentials
of the
points
a? and
y
will be
equal,
and no current will
pass
over the
auxiliary
brush
c;
but if that brush
occupies
a different
position relatnely
to the
main brushes the electric condition is
disturbed,
and current
will flow either from
y
to x or from a? to
y, according
to the rela-
tive
position
of the brushes. In the first case the current
through
the field-helices will be
partly
neutralized and the
magnetism
of
the field
magnets
will be diminished. In the second case the
current will be increased and the
magnets gain strength. By
combining
with the brushes a 1) c
any
automatic
regulating
mechanism,
the current
developed
can be
regulated
automatically
in
proportion
to the demands of the
working
circuit.
In
Figs.
264 and 265 some of the automatic means are
repre-
sented that
may
be used for
moving
the brushes. The core
P,
Fig.
264,
of the solenoid-helix s is connected with the brush c to
move the
same,
and in
Fig.
265 the core P is shown as within the
helix
s,
and connected with brushes a and
c,
so as to move the
same toward or from each
other, according
to the
strength
of the
current in the
helix,
the helix
being
within an iron
tube, s',
that
becomes
magnetized
and increases the action of the solenoid.
In
practice
it is sufficient to move
only
the
auxiliary
brush,
as
shown in
Fig.
264,
as the
regulation
is
very
sensitive to the
slightest changes
;
but the relative
position
of the
auxiliary
brush
to the main brushes
may
be varied
by moving
the main
brushes,
or both main and
auxiliary
brushes
may
be
moved,
as illustrated
in
Fig.
265. In the latter two
cases,
it will be
understood,
the
motion of the main brushes
relatively
to the neutral line of the
machine causes variations
in the
strength
of the current inde-
pendently
of their relative
position
to the
auxiliary
brush. In
all cases the
adjustment
may
be such that when the machine is
running
with the
ordinary
load,
no current fiows over the auxil-
iary
brush.
The field helices
may
be
connected,
as shown in
Fig.
25!>,
or a
part
of the field helices
may
be in the
outgoing
and the other
part
in the return
circuit,
and two
auxiliary
brushes
may
be
employed
as shown in
Figs.
261 and 262. Instead of
shunting
the whole
of the field
helices,
a
portion only
of such helices
maybe
shunted,
as shown
in
Figs.
260 and 262.
444 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
The
arrangement
shown in
Fig.
'2ti*2 is
advantageous,
as it dim-
inishes the
sparking upon
the
commutator,
the main circuit
being
closed
through
the
auxiliary
brushes at the moment of the break
of the circuit at the main brushes.
FIG. 259.
FIG. 261.
FIG. 262. FIG. 263.
The field helices
may
be wound in the same
direction,
or a
part
may
be wound in
opposite
directions.
The connection between the helices and the
auxiliary
brush or
brushes
may
be made
by
a wire of small
resistance,
or a resistance
may
be
interposed (R, Fig. 263,)
between the
point
./ and the
A UXILIARY BRUSH REG
ULATWN. 44~>
auxiliary
brush or brushes to divide the sensitiveness when the
'brushes are
adjusted.
The
accompanying
sketches also illustrate
improvements
made
by
Mr. Tesla in the mechanical devices used to effect the shift-
ing
of the
brushes,
in the use of an
auxiliary
brush.
Fig.
266 is
an elevation of the
regulator
with the frame
partly
in section
;
and
Fig.
267 is a section at the line a?
a?,
Fig.
266. c is the com-
mutator;
B and
B',
the
brush-holders,
B
carrying
the main
brushes a a'
,
and B' the
auxiliary
or shunt brushes b b. The
axis of the brush-holder B is
supported by
two
pivot-screws, JP />.
The other
brush-holder, B',
has a
sleeve, d,
and is movable
around the axis of the brush-holder B. In this
way
both brush-
holders can turn
very freely,
the friction of the
parts being
reduced to a minimum. Over the brush-holders is mounted the
solenoid
s,
which rests
upon
a forked
column,
c. This column
FIG. 264. Fro. 265.
also affords a
support
for the
pivots p p,
and is fastened
upon
a
solid bracket or
projection, p,
which extends from the base of
the
machine,
and is cast in one
piece
with the same. The
brush-holders B B' are connected
by
means of the links e e
and the
cross-piece
F to the iron core
i,
which slides
freely
in the
tube T of the solenoid. The iron core i has a
screw, s, by
means
of which it can be raised and
adjusted
in its
position relatively
to the
solenoid,
so that the
pull
exerted
upon
it
by
the solenoid
is
practically
uniform
through
the whole
length
of motion which
is
required
to effect the
regulation.
In order to effect the
adjustment
with
greater precision,
the core i is
provided
with a
small iron
screw,
s'. The core
being
first
brought very nearly
in the
required position relatively
to the solenoid
by
means of
the
screw
s,
the small screw s' is then
adjusted
until the
magnetic
attraction
upon
the core is the same when the core is in
any posi.
tion. A convenient
stop, ,
serves to limit the
upward
move-
ment of the iron core.
44(5 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
To check somewhat the movement of the core
i,
a
dash-pot, K,
is used. The
piston
L of the
dash-pot
is
provided
with a
vah^e,
v,
which
opens by
a downward
pressure
and allows an
easy-
downward movement of the iron core
i,
but closes and checks
the movement of the core when it is
pulled up by
the action
of the solenoid.
To balance the
opposing forces,
the
weight
of the
moving
parts,
and the
pull
exerted
by
the solenoid
upon
the iron
core,
the
weights
w w
may
be used. The
adjustment
is such that
when the solenoid is traversed
by
the normal current it is
just
strong enough
to balance the downward
pull
of the
parts.
The electrical circuit-connections are
substantially
the same as
FIG. 266
indicated in the
previous diagrams,
the solenoid
being
in series
with the circuit when the
translating
devices are in
series,
and in
shunt when the devices are in
multiple
arc. The
operation
of
the device is as follows : When
upon
a decrease of the resis-
tance of the circuit or for some other
reason,
the current is
increased,
the solenoid s
gains
in
strength
and
pulls up
the iron
core
i,
thus
shifting
the main brushes in the direction of rotation
and the
auxiliary
brushes in the
opposite way.
This diminishes
the
strength
of the current until the
opposing
forces are balanced
and the solenoid is traversed
by
the normal current
;
but if from
any
cause the current in the circuit is
diminished,
then the
weight
of the
moving parts
overcomes the
pull
of the
solenoid,
the iron
A UXILTARY BRU8II RKO ULATION. 447
core i
descends,
thus
shifting
the brashes the
opposite way
and
increasing
the current to the normal
strength.
The
dash-pot
connected to the iron core i
may
he of
ordinary
construction
;
but it is
better, especially
in machines for arc
lights,
to
provide
the
piston
of the
dash-pot
with a
valve,
as indicated in the dia-
grams.
This valve
permits
a
comparatively easy
downward move-
ment of the iron
core,
but checks its movement when it is drawn
up by
the solenoid. Such an
arrangement
has the
advantage
that a
great
number of
lights may
be
put
on without
diminishing
the
light-power
of the
lamps
in the
circuit,
as the brushes assume
at once the
proper position.
When
lights
are cut
out,
the dash-
pot
acts to retard the movement
;
but if the current is
considerably
increased the solenoid
gets abnormally strong
and the brushes
are shifted
instantly.
The
regulator being properly adjusted,
lights
or other devices
may
be
put
on or out with
scarcely any
perceptible
difference. It is obvious that instead of the
dash-pot
any
other
retarding
device
may
be used.
CHAPTER XXXIX.
IMPROVEMENT IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF DYNAMOS AND MOTORS.
THIS invention of Mr. Tesla is an
improvement
in the con-
struction of
dynamo
or
magneto
electric machines or
motors,
consisting
in a novel form of frame and field
magnet
which ren-
ders the machine more solid and
compact
as a
structure,
which
requires
fewer
parts,
and which involves less trouble and
expense
in its manufacture. It is
applicable
to
generators
and motors
generally,
not
only
to those which have
independent
circuits
adapted
for use in the Tesla
alternating
current
system,
but to
other continuous or
alternating
current machines of the
ordinary
type generally
used.
Fig.
268 shows the machine in side elevation.
Fig.
269 is a
vertical sectional view of the field
magnets
and frame and an end
view of the armature
;
and
Fig.
270 is a
plan
view of one of
the
parts
of the frame and the
armature,
a
portion
of the latter
being
cut
away.
The field
magnets
and frame are cast in two
parts.
These
parts
are identical in size and
shape,
and each consists of the solid
plates
or ends A
B,
from which
project inwardly
the cores c D and
the side bars or
bridge pieces,
E F. The
precise shape
of these
parts
is
largely
a matter of choice that is to
say,
each
casting,
as
shown,
forms an
approximately rectangular
frame
;
but it
might
obviously
be more or less
oval, round,
or
square,
without de-
parture
from the invention. It is also desirable to reduce the
width of the side
bars,
E
F,
at the center and to so
proportion
the
parts
that when the frame is
put together
the
spaces
between the
pole pieces
will be
practically equal
to the arcs which the sur-.
faces of the
poles occupy.
The
bearings
G for the armature shaft are cast in the side bars
E F. The field coils are either wound on the
pole pieces
or on a
form and then
slipped
on over the ends of the
pole pieces.
The lower
part
or
casting
is secured to the base after
being
finished off. The armature K on its shaft is then mounted in
IMPROVEMENTS IN DYNAMOS AND MOTORS. 449
the
bearings
of the lower
casting
and the other
part
of the frame
placed
in
position,
dowel
pins
L or
any
other means
being
used to
secure the two
parts
in
proper position.
FIG. 268.
FIG. 270.
In order to secure an easier
fit,
the side bars E
F,
and end
pieces,
A
B,
are so cast that slots M are formed when the two
parts
are
put together.
450 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
This machine
possesses
several
advantages.
For
example,
if we
magnetize
the cores
alternately,
as indicated
by
the characters y
s,
it will be seen that the
magnetic
circuit between the
poles
of
each
part
of a
casting
is
completed through
the solid iron side
bars. The
bearings
for the shaft are located at the neutral
points
of the
field,
so that the armature core is not affected
by
the
mag-
netic condition of the field.
The
improvement
is not restricted to the use of four
pole pieces,
as it is evident that each
pole piece
could be divided or more than
four formed
by
the
shape
of the
casting.
CHAPTER XI,
TKSLA DIRECT CURRENT ARC LIGHTING SYSTKM.
AT one
time,
soon after his arrival in
America,
Mr. Tesla was
greatly
interested in the
subject
of arc
lighting,
which then occu-
pied public
attention and
readily
enlisted the
support
of
capital.
He therefore worked out a
system
which was confided to a com-
pany
formed for its
exploitation,
and then
proceeded
to devote
his
energies
to the
perfection
of the details of his more celebrated
"
rotary
field" motor
system.
The Tesla arc
lighting apparatus
appeared
at a time when a
great many
other
lamps
and machines
were in the
market,
but it commanded notice
by
its
ingenuity.
Its chief
purpose
was to lessen the
manufacturing
cost and sim-
plify
the
processes
of
operation.
We will take
up
the
dynamo
first.
Fig.
271 is a
longitudinal
section,
and
Fig.
272 a cross section of the machine.
Fig.
273 is
a
top view,
and
Fig.
274 a side view of the
magnetic
frame.
Fig.
275 is an end view of the commutator
bars,
and
Fig.
276 is a
section of the shaft and commutator bars.
Fig.
277 is a
diagram
illustrating
the coils of the armature and the connections to the
commutator
plates.
The cores c c c c of the
field-magnets
are
tapering
in both
directions,
as
shown,
for the
purposes
of
concentrating
the
mag-
netism
upon
the middle of the
pole-pieces.
The
connecting-frame
F F of the
field-magnets
is in the form
indicated in the side
view, Fig.
274,
the lower
part being pro-
vided with the
spreading
curved cast
legs
e
e,
so that the machine
will rest
firmly upon
two
base-bars,
r r.
To the lower
pole,
s,
of the
field-magnet
M is
fastened, by
means of babbitt or other fusible
diamagnetic
material,
the base
B,
which is
provided
with
bearings
b for the armature-shaft H.
The base B has a
projection,
p,
which
supports
the brush-holders
and the
regulating
devices,
which are of a
special
character de-
vised
by
Mr. Tesla.
The armature is constructed with the view to reduce to a min-
453 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TEHLA.
imum the loss of
power
due to Foucault currents and to the
change
of
polarity,
and also to shorten as much as
possible
the
length
of the inactive wire wound
upon
the armature core.
It is well known that when the armature is revolved between
the
poles
of the
field-magnets,
currents are
generated
in the iron
body
of the armature which
develop heat,
and
consequently
cause
FIG. 271.
a waste of
power. Owing
to the mutual action of the lines of
force,
the
magnetic properties
of
iron,
and the
speed
of the dif-
ferent
portions
of the armature
core,
these currents are
generated
principally
on and near the surface of the armature
core,
dimin-
ishing
in
strength gradually
toward the centre of the core.
Their
quantity
is under some conditions
proportional
to the
length
of the iron
body
in the direction in which these currents
are
generated. By subdividing
the iron core
electrically
in this
direction,
the
generation
of these currents can be reduced to a
great
extent. For
instance,
if the
length
of the armature-core is
twelve
inches,
and
by
a suitable construction it is subdivided
electrically,
so that there are in the
generating
direction six inches
of iron and six inches of
intervening air-spaces
or
insulating
ma-
terial,
the waste currents will be reduced to
fifty per
cent.
As shown in the
diagrams,
the armature is constructed of thin
iron discs n D
D,
of various
diameters,
fastened
upon
the arma-
ture-shaft in a suitable manner and
arranged according
to their
sizes,
so that a series of iron
bodies,
i i
i,
is
formed,
each of which
diminishes in thickness from the centre toward the
periphery.
At both ends of the armature the
inwardly
curved discs d
d,
of
cast
iron,
are fastened to the armature shaft.
The armature core
being
constructed as
shown,
it will be
easily
seen that on those
portions
of the armature that are the most
remote from the
axis,
and where the currents are
principally
de-
veloped,
the
length
of iron in the
generating
direction is
only
a
DIRECT CURRKNT ARC LIGHTING SYSTEM. 453
small fraction of the total
length
of the armature
core,
and be-
sides this the iron
body
is subdivided in the
generating direction,
and therefore the Foueault currents are
greatly
reduced. Another
cause of
heating
is the
shifting
of the
poles
of the armature core.
In
consequence
of the subdivision of the iron in the armature
and the increased surface for
radiation,
the risk of
heating
is
lessened.
The iron discs D D D are insulated or coated with some insulat-
ing-paint,
a
very
careful insulation
being unnecessary,
as an
electrical contact between several discs can
only
occur at
places
where the
generated
currents are
comparatively
weak. An
armature core constructed in the manner described
may
be re-
volved between the
poles
of the field
magnets
without
showing
the
slightest
increase of
temperature.
The end
discs,
d
d,
which are of sufficient thickness
and,
for
the sake of
cheapness,
of
cast-iron,
are curved
inwardly,
as in-
dicated in the
drawings.
The extent of the curve is
dependent
on the amount of wire to be wound
upon
the armatures. In this
machine the wire is wound
upon
the armature in two
super-
imposed parts,
and the curve of the end
discs, dd,
is so calculated
that the first
part
that
is,
practically
half of the wire
just
fills
Fro. 273.
up
the hollow
space
to the line
xx;
or,
if the wire is wound in
any
other
manner,
the curve is such that when the whole of the
wire is
wound,
the outside mass of
wires, M>,
and the inside mass
of
wires, w',
are
equal
at each side of the
plane
x x. In this case
the
passive
or
electrically-inactive
wires are of the smallest
length practicable.
The
arrangement
has further the
advantage
454 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
that the total
lengths
of the
crossing
wires at the two sides of
the
plane
x x are
practically equal.
To
equalize
further the armature coils at both sides of the
plates
that are in contact with the
brushes,
the
winding
and con-
necting up
is effected in the
following
manner : The whole wire
is wound
upon
the armature-core in two
superimposed parts,
which are
thoroughly
insulated from each other. Each of these
two
parts
is
composed
of three
separated groups
of coils. The
first
group
of coils of the first
part
of wire
being
wound and
connected to the commutator-bars in the usual
manner,
this
group
is insulated and the second
group
wound
;
but the coils < -f this
second
group,
instead of
being
connected to the next
following
commutator
bars,
are connected to the
directly opposite
bars of
the commutator. The second
group
is then insulated and the
third
group
wound,
the coils of this
group being
connected to
those bars to which
they
would be connected in the usual
way.
The wires are then
thoroughly
insulated and the second
part
of
wire is wound and connected in the same manner.
Suppose,
for
instance,
that there are
twenty-four
coils that
is,
twelve in each
part
and
consequently twenty-four
commutator
plates.
There will be in each
part
three
groups,
each
containing
four
coils,
and the coils will be connected as follows:
Groups.
Commutator J><ir*\
( First 15
First
part
of wire I Second 17 21
(
Third 913
(
First 1317
Second
part
of wire < Second 5 9
(
Third 21 1
In
constructing
the armature core and
winding
and
connecting
the coils in the manner
indicated,
the
passive
or
electrically
in-
DIRECT CURRENT ARC LIGHTING SYSTEM. 455
active wire is reduced to a
minimum,
and the coils at each
side of the
plates
that are in contact with the brushes are
prac-
tically equal.
In this
way
the electrical
efficiency
of the ma-
chine is increased.
The commutator
plates
t are shown as outside the
bearing
b of
FIG. 275. FIG. 276.
the armature shaft. The shaft H is tubular and
split
at the end
portion,
and the wires are carried
through
the same in the usual
manner and connected to the
respective
commutator
plates.
The
commutator
plates
are
upon
a
cylinder,
w,
and
insulated,
and this
cylinder
is
properly placed
and then secured
by expanding*
the
split
end of the shaft
by
a
tapering
screw
plug,
v.
FIG. 277.
The arc
lamps
invented
by
Mr. Tesla for use on the circuits
from the above
described
dynamo
are those in which the
separa-
tion and feed of the carbon electrodes or their
equivalents
is ac-
complished by
means of
electro-magnets
or solenoids in connection
with suitable clutch
mechanism,
and were
designed
for the
purpose
4o6 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
of
remedying
certain faults common to arc
lamps.
He
proposed
to
prevent
the
frequent
vibrations of the movable
carbon
"point"
and
flickering
of the
light arising therefrom;
to
prevent
the
falling
into contact of the carbons
;
to
dispense
with
the dash
pot,
clock
work,
or
gearing
and similar
devices;
to ren-
der the
lamp extremely sensitive,
and to feed the carbon almost
imperceptibly,
and
thereby
obtain a
very steady
and uniform
light.
In that class of
lamps
where the
regulation
of the arc is effected
by
forces
acting
in
opposition
on a
free,
movable rod or lever di-
rectly
connected with the
electrode,
all or some of the forces
being dependent
on the
strength
of the
current, any change
in
the electrical condition of the circuit causes a vibration and a cor-
responding
flicker in the
light.
This
difficulty
is most
apparent
when there are
only
a few
lamps
in circuit. To lessen this diffi-
culty lamps
have been constructed in which the lever or
armature,
after the
establishing
of the
arc,
is
kept
in a fixed
position
and
cannot vibrate
during
the feed
operation,
the feed mechanism
acting independently ;
but in these
lamps,
when a
clamp
is em-
ployed,
it
frequently
occurs that the carbons come into contact
and the
light
is
momentarily extinguished,
and
frequently parts
of the circuit are
injured.
In both these classes of
lamps
it has
been
customary
to use dash
pot,
clock
work,
or
equivalent
retard-
ing
devices
;
but these are often unreliable and
objectionable,
and
increase the cost of construction.
Mr. Tesla combines two
electro-magnets
one of low resis-
tance in the main or
lamp circuit,
and the other of
comparatively
high
resistance in a shunt around the arc a movable armature
lever,
and a
special
feed
mechanism,
the
parts being arranged
so
that in the normal
working position
of the armature lever the
same is
kept
almost
rigidly
in one
position,
and is not affected
even
by
considerable
changes
in the electric circuit
;
but if the
carbons fall into contact the armature will be actuated
by
the
magnets
so as to move the lever and start the
arc,
and hold the
carbons until the arc
lengthens
and the armature lever returns to
the normal
position.
After this the carbon rod holder is released
by
the action of the feed
mechanism,
so as to feed the carbon and
restore the arc to its normal
length.
Fig.
278 is an elevation of the mechanism made use of in
this arc
lamp. Fig.
279 is a
plan
view.
Fig.
280 is an ele-
vation of the
balancing
lever and
spring; Fig.
281 is a de-
DIRECT CURRENT ARC LIGHTING 8YSTKM. 4f>7
taclied
plan
view of the
pole pieces
and armatures
upon
the
friction
clamp,
and
Fig.
282 is a section of the
clamping
tube.
M is a helix of coarse wire in a circuit from the lower carbon
holder to the
negative binding
screw . N is a helix of fine wire
in a shunt between the
positive binding
screw
-\-
and the
negative binding
screw . The
upper
carbon holder s is a
paral-
lel rod
sliding through
the
plates
s' s
2
of the frame of the
lamp,
and hence the electric current
passes
from the
positive binding
FIG. 279,
FIG. 281.
FIG. 280.
post _j_ through
the
plate
s
2
,
carbon
holder
s,
and
upper
carbon
to the lower
carbon,
and thence
by
the holder and a metallic
connection to the helix M.
The carbon holders are of the usual
character,
and to insure
electric connections
the
springs
I are made use of to
grasp
the
upper
carbon
holding
rod
s,
but to allow the rod to slide
freely
through
the same. These
springs
/
may
be
adjusted
in their
pressure by
the screw
m,
and the
spring
/
may
be sustained
upon
4.->s INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
any
suitable
support. They
are shown as connected with the
upper
end of the core of the
magnet
N.
Around the
carbon-holding
rod
s,
between the
plates
s' s
2
?
there is a
tube, R,
which forms a
clamp.
This tube is counter-
bored,
as seen in the section
Fig. 282,
so that it bears
upon
the
rod s at its
upper
end and near the
middle,
and at the lower end of
this tubular
clamp
K there are armature
segments
r of soft iron.
A frame or
arm, n, extending, preferably,
from the core N
2
, sup-
ports
the lever A
by
a
fulcrum-pin,
o. This lever A has a
hole,
through
which the
upper
end of the tubular
clamp
E
passes
freely,
and from the lever A is a
link, q,
to the lever
2,
which
lever is
pivoted
at
y
to a
ring upon
one of the columns s
8
. This
lever t has an
opening
or bow
surrounding
the tubular
clamp
K,
and there are
pins
or
pivotal
connections w between the lever
t and this
clamp R,
and a
spring, r,
serves to
support
or
suspend
the
weight
of the
parts
and balance
them,
or
nearly
so. This
spring
is
adjustable.
At one end of the lever A is a soft-iron armature
block, ,
over
the core M' of the helix
M,
and there is a
limiting screw, c, pass-
ing through
this armature block
,
and at the other end of the
lever A is a soft iron armature
block, 5,
with the end
tapering
or
wedge shaped,
and the same comes close to and in line with the
lateral
projection
e on the core N
2
. The lower ends of the cores
M' N
2
are made with
laterally projecting pole-pieces
M
3
N
3
, respect-
ively,
and these
pole-pieces
are concave at their outer
ends,
and
are at
opposite
sides of the armature
segments
; at the lower end
of the tubular
clamp
R.
The
operation
of these devices is as follows : In the condition
of
inaction,
the
upper
carbon rests
upon
the lower
one,
and when
the electric current is turned on it
passes freely, by
the frame
and
spring /, through
the rods and carbons to the coarse wire and
helix
M,
and to the
negative binding post
v and the core M'
thereby
is
energized.
The
pole piece
M
3
attracts the armature
r,
and
by
the lateral
pressure
causes the
clamp
R to
grasp
the rod
s',
and
the lever A is
simultaneously
moved from the
position
shown
by
dotted
lines,
Fig.
278,
to the normal
position
shown in full
lines,
and in so
doing
the link
q
and lever t are
raised,
lifting
the
clamp
R and
s, separating
the carbons and
forming
the arc. The
mag-
netism of the
pole piece
e tends to hold the lever A
level,
or
nearly so,
the core N
2
beingenergized by
the current in the shunt
which contains the helix N. In this
position
the lever A is not
DIRECT CUKRKNT ABC LIGHTING SYSTEM. 4.V.)
moved
by any ordinary
variation in the
current,
because the arm-
ature b is
strongly
attracted
by
the
magnetism
of
<?,
and these
parts
are close to each
other,
and the
magnetism
of e acts at
right
angles
to the
magnetism
of the core M'.
If, now,
the arc becomes
too
long,
the current
through
the helix M is
lessened,
and the
mag-
netism of the core N
3
is increased
by
the
greater
current
passing
through
the
shunt,
and this core N
3
, attracting
the
segmental
arm-
ature
/,
lessens the hold of the
clamp
R
upon
the rod
s,
allowing
the latter to slide and lessen the
length
of the
arc,
which
instantly
restores the
magnetic equilibrium
and causes the
clamp
R to hold
the rod s. If it
happens
that the carbons fall into
contact,
then
the
magnetism
of N
2
is lessened so much that the attraction of
the
magnet
M will be sufficient to move the armature a and lever
A so that the armature b
passes
above the normal
position,
so as
to
separate
the carbons
instantly;
but when the carbons burn
away,
a
greater
amount of current will
pass through
the shunt
until the attraction of the core N
2
will overcome the attraction of
the core M' and
bring
the armature lever A
again
into the normal
horizontal
position,
and this occurs before the feed can take
place.
The
segmental
armature
pieces
'/ are shown as
nearly
semicircular.
They
are
square
or of
any
other desired
shape,
the ends of the
pole pieces
M
3
,
N
3
being
made to
correspond
in
shape.
In a modification of this
lamp,
Mr. Tesla
provided
means for
automatically withdrawing
a
lamp
from the
circuit,
or
cutting
it out
when,
from a failure of the
feed,
the arc reached an
abnormal
length
;
and also means for
automatically reinserting
such
lamp
in the circuit when the rod
drops
and the carbons
come into contact.
Fig.
283 is an elevation of the
lamp
with the case in section.
Fig.
284 is a sectional
plan
at the line x .r.
Fig.
285 is an ele-
vation, partly
in
section,
of the
lamp
at
right angles
to
Fig.
283.
Fig.
286 is a sectional
plan
at the line
y y
of
Fig.
283.
Fig.
287
is a section of the
clamp
in about full size.
Fig.
288 is a de-
tached section
illustrating
the connection of the
spring
to the
lever that carries the
pivots
of the
clamp,
and
Fig.
289 is a
diagram
showing
the circuit-connections
of the
lamp.
In
Fig. 283,
M
represents
the main and N the shunt
magnet,
both
securely
fastened to the base
A,
which with its side
columns,
s
s,
are cast in one
piece
of brass or other
diamagnetic
material. To
the
magnets
are soldered or otherwise
fastened the brass washers
or discs a a a a. Similar
washers,
b
&,
of fibre or other insii-
460 IKVKNTIOXS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
lating material,
serve to insulate the wires from the brass washers.
The
magnets
M and N are made
very flat,
so that their width
exceeds three times their
thickness,
or even more. In this
way
a
comparatively
small number of convolutions is sufficient to
pro-
duce the
required magnetism,
while a
greater
surface is offered
for
cooling
off the wires.
FIG. 284. FIG. 287. FIG. 288.
The
upper pole pieces,
///
,
of the
magnets
are
curved,
as in-
dicated in the
drawings, Fig.
283. The lower
pole pieces/// /i',
are
brought
near
together, tapering
toward the armature
g,
as
shown in
Figs.
284 and 286. The
object
of this
taper
is to con-
centrate the
greatest
amount of the
developed magnetism upon
the
armature,
and also to allow the
pull
to be exerted
always upon
the middle of the armature
y.
This armature
yisa piece
of iron
DIRECT CURRKNT ARC LIGHTING SYSTEM. 461
in the
shape
of a hollow
cylinder, having
on each side a
segment
cut
away,
the width of which is
equal
to the width of the
pole
pieces
m' n'.
The armature is soldered or otherwise fastened to the
clamp
/-,
which is formed of a brass
tube, provided
with
gripping-jaws
e
Fig.
287. These
jaws
are arcs of a circle of the diameter of the
rod
R,
and are made of hardened German silver. The
guides
/"/', through
which the
carbon-holding
rod E
slides,
are made of
the same material. This has the
advantage
of
reducing greatly
the
wear and corrosion of the
parts coming
in frictional contact with
the
rod,
which
frequently
causes trouble. The
jaws
e e are
fastened to the inside of the tube
r,
so that one is a little lower
than the other. The
object
of this is to
provide
a
greater open-
ing
for the
passage
of the rod when the same is released
by
the
clamp.
The
clamp
r is
supported
on
bearings
w
w, Figs. 283,
285 and
287,
which are
just
in the middle between the
jaws
e e.
The
bearings
w w are carried
by
a
lever, t,
one end of which
rests
upon
an
adjustable support, -,
of the side
columns, s,
the
other end
being
connected
by
means of the link e' to the arma-
ture-lever L. The armature-lever L is a flat
piece
of iron in
|sj
shape, having
its ends curved so as to
correspond
to the form of
the
upper pole-pieces
of the
magnets
M and N. It is
hung upon
the
pivots
v
v, Fig.
284,
which are in the
jaw
x of the
top plate
B. This
plate
B,
with the
jaw,
is cast in one
piece
and screwed to the side
columns,
s
s,
that extend
up
from the
base A. To
partly
balance the
overweight
of the
moving parts,
a
spring,
', Figs.
284 and
288,
is fastened to the
top plate, B,
and hooked to the lever t. The hook o is toward one side of the
lever or bent a little
sidewise,
as seen in
Fig.
288.
By
this means
a
slight tendency
is
given
to
swing
the armature toward the
pole-piece
m' of the main
magnet.
The
binding-posts
K K' are screwed to the base A. A manual
switch,
for
short-circuiting
the
lamp
when the carbons are re-
newed,
is also fastened to the base. This switch is of
ordinary
character,
and is not shown in the
drawings.
The rod E is
electrically
connected to the
lamp-frame by
means
of a flexible conductor or otherwise. The
lamp-case
receives a
removable
cover,
s
2
,
to inclose the
parts.
The electrical connections
are as indicated
diagrammatically
in
Fig.
289. The wire in the main
magnet
consists of two
parts,
a?' and
p'.
These two
parts may
be in two
separated
coils or in
4(52 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TKSLA.
one
single helix,
as shown in the
drawings.
The
part
,//
being
normally
in
circuit, is,
with the fine wire
upon
the
shunt-magnet,
wound and traversed
by
the current in the same
direction,
so as
to tend to
produce
similar
poles,
N N or s
s,
on the
corresponding
pole-pieces
of the
magnets
M and N. The
part p'
is
only
in cir-
cuit when the
lamp
is cut
out,
and then the current
being
in the
opposite
direction
produces
in the main
magnet, magnetism
of
the
opposite polarity.
The
operation
is as follows : At the start the carbons are to
be in
contact,
and the current
passes
from the
positive binding-
post
K to the
lamp-frame, carbon-holder, upper
and lower
carbon,
insulated return-wire in one of the side
rods,
and from there
through
the
part
x' of the wire on the main
magnet
to the
nega-
Fro. 289.
tive
binding-post. Upon
the
passage
of the current the main
magnet
is
energized
and attracts the
clamping-armature g, swing-
ing
the
clamp
and
gripping
the rod
by
means of the
gripping
jaws
e e. At the same time the armature lever L is
pulled
down
and the carbons are
separated.
In
pulling
down the armature lever
L the main
magnet
is assisted
by
the
shunt-magnet
N,
the latter
being magnetized by magnetic
induction from the
magnet
M.
Tt will be seen that the armatures L and
g
are
practically
the
keepers
for the
magnets
M and
N,
and
owing
to this fact both
magnets
with either one of the armatures L and
g may
be con-
sidered as one horseshoe
magnet,
which we
might
term a
"
com-
pound magnet."
The whole of the soft-iron
parts M,
m'
t g,
n'
y
N and i, form a
compound magnet.
DIRECT CURRENT ARC LIGHTING SYXTKM. 4fc]
The carbons
being separated,
the fine wire receives a
portion
of the current.
Now,
the
magnetic
induction from the
magnet
M is such as to
produce opposite poles
on the
corresponding
ends
of the
magnet
N
;
but the current
traversing
the helices tends to
produce
similar
poles
on the
corresponding
ends of both
magnets,
and therefore as soon as the fine wire is traversed
by
sufficient
current the
magnetism
of the whole
compound magnet
is dimin-
ished.
With
regard
to the armature
g
and the
operation
of the
lamp,
the
pole
77i
'
may
be considered as the
"
clamping
"
and the
pole
///
as the
"
releasing
"
pole.
As the carbons burn
away,
the fine wire receives more current
and the
magnetism
diminishes in
proportion.
This causes the
armature lever L to
swing
and the armature
g
to descend
grad-
ually
under the
weight
of the
moving parts
until the
end/>, Fig.
283,
strikes a
stop
on the
top plate,
B. The
adjustment
is such
that when this takes
place
the rod K is
yet gripped securely by
the
jaws
ee. The further downward movement of the armature
lever
being prevented,
the arc becomes
longer
as the carbons are
consumed,
and the
compound magnet
is weakened more and
more until the
clamping
armature
g
releases the hold of the
gripping-jaws
e e
upon
the rod
R,
and the rod is allowed to
drop
a
little,
thus
shortening
the arc. The fine wire now
receiving
less
current,
the
magnetism
increases,
and the rod is
clamped
again
and
slightly
raised,
if
necessary.
This
clamping
and re-
leasing
of the rod continues until the carbons are consumed. In
practice
the feed is so sensitive that for the
greatest part
of the
time the movement of the rod cannot be detected without some
actual measurement.
During
the normal
operation
of the
lamp
the armature lever L remains
practically stationary,
in the
posi-
tion show
T
n in
Fig.
283.
Should it
happen that, owing
to an
imperfection
in
it,
the rod
and the carbons
drop
too
far,
so as to make the arc too
short,
or
even
bring
the carbons in
contact,
a
very
small amount of cur-
rent
passes through
the fine
wire,
and the
compound magnet
becomes
sufficiently strong
to act as at the start in
pulling
the
armature lever L down and
separating
the c'arbons to a
greater
distance.
It occurs often in
practical
work that the rod sticks in the
guides.
In this case the arc reaches a
great length,
until it
finally
breaks. Then the
light goes
out,
and
frequently
the fine wire is
464 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA
TESLA,
injured.
To
prevent
such an accident Mr. Tesla
provides
this
lamp
with an automatic cut-out which
operates
as follows :
When,
upon
a failure of the
feed,
the arc reaches a certain
predeter-
mined
length,
such an amount of current is diverted
through
the fine wire that the
polarity
of the
compound magnet
is re-
versed. The
clamping
armature
g
is now moved
against
the
shunt
magnet
N until it strikes the
releasing pole
n'. As soon
as the contact is
established,
the current
passes
from the
positive
binding post
over the
clamp />,
armature
g,
insulated shunt
mag-
net,
and the helix
p' upon
the main
magnet
M to the
negative
binding post.
In this case the current
passes
in the
opposite
di-
rection and
changes
the
polarity
of the
magnet M,
at the same
time
maintaining by magnetic
induction in the core of the shunt
magnet
the
required magnetism
without reversal of
polarity,
and
the armature
g
remains
against
the shunt
magnet pole
n'. The
lamp
is thus cut out as
long
as the carbons are
separated.
The
cut out
may
be used in this form without
any
further
improve-
ment
;
but Mr. Tesla
arranges
it so that if the rod
drops
and the
carbons come in contact the arc is started
again.
For this
pur-
pose
he
proportions
the resistance of
part j!/
and the number of
the convolutions of the wire
upon
the main
magnet
so that when
the carbons come in contact a sufficient amount of current is di-
verted
through
the carbons and the
part
x' to
destroy
or neutral-
ize the
magnetism
of the
compound magnet,
Then the arma-
ture
g, having
a
slight tendency
to
approach
to the
clamping pole
m'
t
comes out of contact with the
releasing pole
n'. As soon as
this
happens,
the current
through
the
part j?'
is
interrupted,
and
the whole current
passes through
the
part
x. The
magnet
M is
now
strongly magnetized,
the armature
g
is
attracted,
and the
rod
clamped.
At the same time the armature lever L is
pulled
down out of its normal
position
and the arc started. In this
way
the
lamp
cuts itself out
automatically
when the arc
gets
too
long,
and reinserts itself
automatically
in the circuit if the carbons
drop
together.
CHAPTER XLI.
IMPROVEMENT IN
"UNIPOLAR" GENERATORS.
ANOTHER
interesting
class of
apparatus
to which Mr. Tesla has
directed his
attention,
is that of
"
unipolar
"
generators,
in which a
disc or a
cylindrical
conductor is mounted between
magnetic
poles adapted
to
produce
an
approximately
uniform field. In
the disc armature machines the currents induced in the
rotating
conductor flow from the centre to the
periphery,
or
conversely,
according
to the direction of rotation or the lines of force as de-
termined
by
the
signs
of the
magnetic poles,
and these currents
are taken off
usually by
connections or brushes
applied
to the
disc at
points
on its
periphery
and near its centre. In the case
of the
cylindrical
armature
machine,
the currents
developed
in
the
cylinder
are taken off
.by
brushes
applied
to the sides of the
cylinder
at its ends.
In order to
develop economically
an electromotive force avail-
able for
practicable purposes,
it is
necessary
either to rotate the
conductor at a
very high
rate of
speed
or to use a disc of
large
diameter or a
cylinder
of
great length ;
but in either case it be-
comes difficult to secure and maintain a
good
electrical connection
between the
collecting
brushes and the
conductor, owing
to the
high peripheral speed.
It has been
proposed
to
couple
two or more discs
together
in
series,
with the
object
of
obtaining
a
higher
electro-motive force
;
but with the connections heretofore used and
using
other condi-
tions of
speed
and dimension of disc
necessary
to
securing good
practicable results,
this
difficulty
is still felt to be a serious
obstacle to the use of this kind of
generator.
These
objections
Mr. Tesla has
sought
to avoid
by constructing
a machine with
two
fields,
each
having
a
rotary
conductor mounted between its
poles.
The same
principle
is involved in the case of both forms
of machine above
described,
but the
description
now
given
is
confined to the disc
type,
which Mr. Tesla is inclined to favor for
that machine. The discs are formed with
flanges,
after tho
466 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
manner of
pulleys,
and are connected
together by
flexible con-
ducting
bands or belts.
The machine is built in such manner that the direction of
magnetism
or order of the
poles
in one tield of force is
opposite
to that in the
other,
so that rotation of the discs in the same di-
rection
develops
a current in one from centre to circumference
and in the other from circumference to centre. Contacts
applied
therefore to the shafts
upon
which the discs are mounted form
the terminals of a circuit the electro-motive force in which is the
sum of the electro-motive forces of the two dises.
It will be obvious that if the direction of
magnetism
in both
Fro. 290. FIG. 291.
fields be the
same,
the same result as above will be obtained
by
driving
the discs in
opposite
directions and
crossing
the connect-
ing
belts. In this
way
the
difficulty
of
securing
and
maintaining
good
contact with the
peripheries
of the discs is avoided and a
cheap
and durable machine made which is useful for
many pur-
poses
such as for an exciter for
alternating
current
generators,
for a
motor,
and for
any
other
purpose
for which
dynamo
ma-
chines are used.
Fig.
290 is a side
view, partly
in
section,
of this machine.
Fig.
291 is a vertical section of the same at
right angles
to the
shafts.
UNIPOLAR
GENERATORS. 467
In order to form a frame with two fields of
force,
a
support,
A,
is cast with two
pole pieces
u B'
integral
with it. To this are
joined by
bolts E a
casting D,
with two similar and
corresponding
pole pieces
c c'. The
pole pieces
B B' are wound and connected
to
produce
a field of force of
given polarity,
and the
pole
pieces
c c' are wound so as to
produce
a field of
opposite po-
larity.
The
driving
shafts F G
pass through
the
poles
and are
journaled
in
insulating bearings
in the
casting
A
u,
as shown.
H K are the discs or
generating
conductors.
They
are com-
posed
of
copper,
brass,
or iron and are
keyed
or secured to their re-
spective
shafts.
They
are
provided
with broad
peripheral flanges
j. It is of course obvious that the discs
may
be insulated from their
shafts,
if so desired. A flexible metallic belt L is
passed
over the
flanges
of the two
discs, and,
if
desired,
maybe
used to drive one
of the discs. It is
better, however,
to use this belt
merely
as a
conductor,
and for this
purpose
sheet
steel, copper,
or other suit-
able metal is used. Each shaft is
provided
with a
driving pulley
M,
by
which
power
is
imparted
from a
driving
shaft.
N N are the terminals. For the sake of clearness
they
are shown
as
provided
with
springs p,
that bear
upon
the ends of the shafts.
This
machine,
if
self-exciting,
would have
copper
bands around
its
poles ;
or conductors of
any
kind such as wires shown in
thexlrawings may
be used.
It is
thought appropriate by
the
compiler
to
append
here some
notes on
unipolar dynamos,
written
by
Mr.
Tesla,
on a recent oc-
casion.
It is characteristic
of fundamental
discoveries,
of
great
achieve-
ments of
intellect,
that
they
retain an undiminished
power upon
the
imagination
of the thinker. The memorable
experiment
of
Faraday
with a disc
rotating
between the two
poles
of a
magnet,
which has borne
such
magnificent
fruit,
has
long passed
into
every-day experience
; yet
there are certain features about this
embryo
of the
present dynamos
and motors which even
to-day
appear
to us
striking,
and are
worthy
of the most careful
study.
Consider,
for
instance,
the case of a disc of iron or other metal
1. Article
by
Mr.
Tesla,
contributed
to The Electrical
Engineer,
N.
Y.,
Sept. 2,
1891.
468 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
revolving
between the two
opposite poles
of a
magnet,
and the
polar
surfaces
completely covering
both sides of the
disc,
and
assume the current to be taken off or
conveyed
to the same
by
contacts
uniformly
from all
points
of the
periphery
of the disc.
Take first the case of a motor. In all
ordinary
motors the
opera-
tion is
dependent upon
some
shifting
or
change
of the resultant
of the
magnetic
attraction exerted
upon
the
armature,
this
pro-
cess
being
effected either
by
some mechanical contrivance on the
motor or
by
the action of currents of the
proper
character. We
may explain
the
operation
of such a motor
just
as we can that of
a water-wheel. But in the above
example
of the disc surrounded
completely by
the
polar surfaces,
there is no
shifting
of the
mag-
netic
action,
no
change
whatever,
as far as we
know,
and
yet
rotation ensues.
Here, then, ordinary
considerations do not
apply ;
we cannot even
give
a
superficial explanation,
as in ordi-
nary
motors,
and the
operation
will be clear to us
only
when we
shall have
recognized
the
very
nature of the forces
concerned,
and fathomed the
mystery
of the invisible
connecting
mechan-
ism.
Considered as a
dynamo machine,
the disc is an
equally
inter-
esting object
of
study.
In addition to its
peculiarity
of
giving
currents of one direction without the
employment
of commutat-
ing
devices,
such a machine differs from
ordinary dynamos
in
that there is no reaction between armature and field. The arma-
ture current tends to set
up
a
magnetization
at
right angles
to
that of the field
current,
but since the current is taken off uni-
formly
from all
points
of the
periphery,
and
since,
to be
exact,
the external circuit
may
also be
arranged perfectly symmetrical
to the field
magnet,
no reaction can occur.
This, however,
is
true
only
as
long
as the
magnets
are
weakly energized,
for when
the
magnets
are more or less
saturated,
both
magnetizations
at
right angles seemingly
interfere with each other.
For the above reason alone it would
appear
that the
output
of
such a machine
should,
for the same
weight,
be much
greater
than that of
any
other machine in which the armature current
tends to
demagnetize
the field. The
extraordinary output
of the
Forbes
unipolar dynamo
and the
experience
of the writer con-
firm this view.
Again,
the
facility
with which such a machine
may
be made to
excite itself is
striking,
but this
may
be due besides to the ab-
sence of armature reaction to the
perfect
smoothness of the cur-
rent and non-existence of self-induction.
UNIPOLAR GENERATORS. 469
If the
poles
do not cover the disc
completely
on both
sides,
then,
of
course,
unless the disc be
properly subdivided,
the
machine will be
very
inefficient.
Again,
in this case there are
points worthy
of notice. If the disc be rotated and the field
current
interrupted,
the current
through
the armature will con-
tinue to flow and the field
magnets
will lose their
strength
com-
paratively slowly.
The reason for this will at once
appear
when
we consider the direction of the currents set
up
in the disc.
Referring
to the
diagram Fig. 292,
d
represents
the disc with
the
sliding
contacts B B' on the shaft and
periphery.
N and s
represent
the two
poles
of a
magnet.
If the
pole
N be
above,
as
indicated in the
diagram,
the disc
being supposed
to be in the
Fio. 292.
plane
of the
paper,
and
rotating
in the direction of the arrow
D,
the current set
up
in the disc will flow from the centre to the
periphery,
as indicated
by
the arrow A. Since the
magnetic
ac-
tion is more or less confined to the
space
between the
poles
N
s,
the other
portions
of the disc
may
be considered inactive. The
current set
up
will therefore not
wholly pass through
the external
circuit
F,
but will close
through
the disc
itself,
and
generally,
if
the
disposition
be in
any way
similar to the one
illustrated, by
far
the
greater portion
of the current
generated
will not
appear
ex-
ternally,
as the circuit F is
practically
short-circuited
by
the inac-
tive
portions
of the disc. The direction of the
resulting
currents
in the latter
may
be assumed to be as indicated
by
the dotted
470
INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
lines and arrows HI and n
/
and tlie direction of the
energizing
field current
being
indicated
by
the arrows a b c
d,
an
inspection
of
the
figure
shows that one of the two branches of the
eddy current-,
that
is,
A B' m
B,
will tend to
demagnetize
the
field,
while the
other
branch,
that
is,
A B' n
B,
will have the
opposite
effect.
Therefore,
the branch A B' m
B,
that
is,
the one which is
approach-
ing
the
field,
will
repel
the lines of the
same,
while branch A B'
n
B,
that
is,
the one
leaving
the
field,
will
gather
the lines of
force
upon
itself.
In
consequence
of this there will be a constant
tendency
to
reduce the current flow in the
path
A B' m
B,
while on the other
hand no such
opposition
will exist in
path
A B' n
B,
and the effect
of the latter branch or
path
will be more or less
preponderating
over that of the former. The
joint
effect of both the assumed
branch currents
might
be
represented by
that of one
single
cur-
rent of the same direction as that
energizing
the field. In other
words,
the
eddy
currents
circulating
in the disc will
energize
the
field
magnet.
This is a result
quite contrary
to what we
might
be led to
suppose
at
first,
for we would
naturally expect
that the
resulting
effect of the armature currents would be such as to
oppose
the field
current,
as
generally
occurs when a
primary
and
secondary
conductor are
placed
in inductive relations to each
other. But it must be remembered that this results from the
peculiar
disposition
in this
case, namely,
two
paths being
afforded
to the
current,
and the latter
selecting
that
path
which offers the
least
opposition
to its flow. From this we see that the
eddy
currents
flowing
in the disc
partly energize
the
field,
and for this
reason when the field current is
interrupted
the currents in the
disc will continue to
flow,
and the field
magnet
will lose its
strength
with
comparative
slowness and
may
even retain a cer-
tain
strength
as
long
as the rotation of the disc is continued.
The result
will,
of
course, largely depend
on the resistance
and
geometrical
dimensions of the
path
of the
resulting eddy
current and on the
speed
of rotation
;
these
elements, namely,
determine the retardation of this current and its
position
relative
to the field. For a certain
speed
there would be a maximum
energizing
action
;
then at
higher speeds,
it would
gradually
fall
off to zero and
finally
reverse,
that
is,
the resultant
eddy
current
effect would be to weaken the field. The reaction would be
best demonstrated
experimentally by arranging
the fields N
s,
N'
s', freely
movable on an axis concentric with the shaft of the
UNIPOLAR GENERATORS. 471
disc. If the latter were rotated as before in the direction of the
arrow
D,
the field would be
dragged
in the same direction with a
torque, which, up
to a certain
point,
would
go
on
increasing
with
the
speed
of
rotation,
then fall
off, and, passing through zero,
finally
become
negative
;
that
is,
the field would
begin
to rotate
in
opposite
direction to the disc. In
experiments
with alternate
current motors in which the field was shifted
by
currents of
differing phase,
this
interesting
result was observed. For
very
low
speeds
of rotation of the field the motor would show a
torque
of 900 Ibs. or
more,
measured on a
pulley
12 inches
in diameter. When the
speed
of rotation of the
poles
was
increased,
the
torque
would
diminish,
would
finally go
down to
zero,
become
negative,
and then the armature would
begin
to
rotate in
opposite
direction to the field.
To return to the
principal subject ;
assume the conditions to be
such that the
eddy
currents
generated by
the rotation of the disc
strengthen
the
field,
and
suppose
the latter
gradually
removed
while the disc is
kept rotating
at an increased rate. The
current,
once
started, may
then be sufficient to maintain itself and even
increase in
strength,
and then we have the case of Sir William
Thomson's "current accumulator." But from the above con-
siderations it would seem that for the success of the
experi-
ment the
employment
of a disc not subdivided
1
would be es-
sential,
for if there should be a radial
subdivision,
the
eddy
cur-
rents could not form and the self
-exciting
action would cease. If
such a
radially
subdivided disc were used it would be
necessary
to connect the
spokes by
a
conducting
rim or in
any proper
manner so as to form a
symmetrical system
of closed circuits.
The action of the
eddy
currents
may
be utilized to excite a ma-
chine of
any
construction. For
instance,
in
Figs.
293 and 294 an
arrangement
is shown
by
which a machine with a disc armature
might
be excited. Here a number of
magnets,
N
s,
N
s,
are
placed radially
on each side of a metal disc D
carrying
on its rim
a set of insulated
coils,
c c. The
magnets
form two
separate
fields,
an internal and an external
one,
the solid disc
rotating
in the
1. Mr. Tesla here refers to an
interesting
article which
appeared
in
July,
1865,
in the Phil.
Magazine, by
Sir W. Thomson,
in which Sir
William,
speaking
of his
"
uniform electric current accumulator,"
assumes that for
self-excitation it is desirable to subdivide the disc into an infinite number of in-
finitely
thin
spokes,
in order to
prevent
diffusion of the current. Mr. Tesla
shows that diffusion is
absolutely necessary
for the excitation
and that when
the disc is subdivided no excitation can occur.
472 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
field nearest the
axis,
and the coils in the field further from it.
Assume the
magnets slightly energized
at the start
; they
could be
strengthened by
the action of the
eddy
currents in the solid disc
so as to afford a
stronger
field for the
peripheral
coils.
Although
there is no doubt that under
proper
conditions a machine
might
be excited in this or a similar
manner,
there
being
sufficient ex-
perimental
evidence to warrant such an
assertion,
such a mode of
excitation would be wasteful.
But a
unipolar dynamo
or
motor,
such as shown in
Fig. 292,
may
be excited in an efficient manner
by simply properly
subdi-
viding
the disc or
cylinder
in which the currents are set
up,
and
it is
practicable
to do
away
with the field coils which are
usually
employed.
Such a
plan
is illustrated in
Fig.
295. The disc or
FIG. 293. FIG. 294.
cylinder
D is
supposed
to be
arranged
to rotate between the two
poles
N and s of a'
magnet,
which
completely
cover it on both
sides,
the contours of the disc and
poles being represented by
the
circles d and d
1
respectively,
the
upper pole being
omitted for
the sake of clearness. The cores of the
magnet
are
supposed
to
be
hollow,
the shaft c of the disc
passing through
them. If the
unmarked
pole
be
below,
and the disc be rotated screw
fashion,
the current will
be,
as
before,
from the centre to the
periphery,
and
may
be taken off
by
suitable
sliding contacts,
B
B',
on the
shaft and
periphery respectively.
In this
arrangement
the cur-
rent
flowing through
the disc and external circuit will have no
appreciable
effect on the field
magnet.
But let us now
suppose
the disc to be subdivided
spirally,
as
UNIPOLAR
GENERATORS.
478
indicated
by
the full or dotted
lines,
Fig.
295. The difference of
potential
between a
point
on the shaft and a
point
on the
peri-
phery
will remain
unchanged,
in
sign
as well as in
amount. The
only
difference will be that the resistance of the disc will be
aug-
mented and that there will be a
greater
fall of
potential
from a
point
on the shaft to a
point
on the
periphery
when the same cur-
rent is
traversing
the external circuit. But since the current is
forced to follow the lines of
subdivision,
we see that it will tend
either to
energize
or
de-energize
the
field,
and this will
depend,
other
things being equal, upon
the direction of the lines of sub-
division. If the subdivision be as indicated
by
the full lines in
Fig. 295,
it is evident that if the current is of the same direction
as
before,
that
is,
from centre to
periphery,
its effect will be to
strengthen
the field
magnet; whereas,
if the subdivision be as in-
FIG. 295. FIG. 296.
dicated
by
the dotted
lines,
the current
generated
will tend to
weaken the
magnet.
In the former case the machine will be
capable
of
exciting
itself when the disc is rotated in the direction
of arrow D
;
in the latter case the direction of rotation must be
reversed. Two such discs
may
be
combined, however,
as indi-
cated,
the two discs
rotating
in
opposite fields,
and in the same
or
opposite
direction.
Similar
disposition may,
of
course,
be made in a
type
of
machine in
which,
instead of a
disc,
a
cylinder
is rotated. In
such
unipolar machines,
in the manner
indicated,
the usual field
coils and
poles may
be omitted and the machine
may
be made to
consist
only
of a
cylinder
or of two discs
enveloped by
a metal
casting.
Instead of
subdividing
the disc or
cylinder spirally,
as indicated
in
Fig. 295,
it is more convenient to
interpose
one or more turns
474 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
between the disc and the contact
ring
on the
periphery,
as illus-
trated in
Fig.
296.
A Forbes
dynamo may,
for
instance,
be excited in such a man-
ner. In the
experience
of the writer it has been found that in-
stead of
taking
the current from two such discs
by sliding
contacts,
as
usual,
a flexible
conducting
belt
may
be
employed
to
advantage.
The discs are in such case
provided
with
large
flanges, affording
a
very great
contact surface. The belt should
be made to bear on the
flanges
with
spring pressure
to take
up
the
expansion.
Several machines with belt contact were con-
structed
by
the writer two
years ago,
and worked
satisfactorily ;
but for want of time the work in that direction has been
tempor-
arily suspended.
A number of features
pointed
out above have
also been used
by
the writer in connection with some
types
of
alternating
current motors.
PART IV.
APPENDIX.-EARLY PHASE MOTORS AND THE
TESLA MECHANICAL AND ELEC-
TRICAL OSCILLATOR.
CHAPTER XLII.
MR. TESLA'S PERSONAL EXHIBIT AT THE WORLD'S FAIR.
WHILE the exhibits of firms
engaged
in the manufacture of
electrical
apparatus
of
every description
at the
Chicago
World's
Fair,
afforded the visitor
ample opportunity
for
gaining
an ex-
cellent
knowledge
of the state of the
art,
there were also numbers
of exhibits which
brought
out in
strong
relief the work of the
individual
inventor,
which lies at the foundation of
much,
if not
all,
industrial or mechanical achievement. Prominent
among
such
personal
exhibits was that of Mr.
Tesla,
whose
apparatus
occupied part
of the
space
of the
Westinghouse Company,
in
Electricity Building.
This
apparatus represented
the results of work and
thought
covering
a
period
of ten
years.
It embraced a
large
number of
different
alternating
motors and Mr. Tesla's earlier
high
fre-
quency apparatus.
The motor exhibit consisted of a
variety
of
fields and armatures for
two,
three and
multiphase circuits,
and
gave
a fair idea of the
gradual
evolution of the fundamental idea
of the
rotating magnetic
field. The
high frequency
exhibit in-
cluded Mr. Tesla's earlier machines and
disruptive discharge
coils
and
high frequency transformers,
which he used in his investi-
gations
and some of which are referred to in his
papers printed
in this volume.
Fig.
297 shows a view of
part
of the exhibits
containing
the
motor
apparatus. Among
these is shown at A a
large ring
in-
tended to exhibit the
phenomena
of the
rotating magnetic
field.
The field
produced
was
very powerful
and exhibited
striking
effects, revolving copper
balls and
eggs
and bodies of various
shapes
at considerable distances and at
great speeds.
This
ring
was wound for
two-phase
circuits,
and the
winding
was so dis-
tributed that a
practically
uniform field was obtained. This
ring
was
prepared
for Mr. Tesla's exhibit
by
Mr. C. F.
Scott,
elec-
trician of the
Westinghouse
Electric and
Manufacturing
Com-
pany.
478 INVENTION* OF NIKOLA 7/:s/..|.
PERSONAL EXHIBIT AT THE WORLD?8 FAIR. 479
A smaller
ring,
shown at
B,
was
arranged
like the one exhibited
at A but
designed especially
to exhibit the rotation of an
armature in a
rotating
field. In connection with these two
rings
there was an
interesting
exhibit shown
by
Mr. Tesla which
consisted of a
magnet
with a
coil,
the
magnet being arranged
to
rotate in
bearings.
With this
magnet
he first demonstrated the
identity
between a
rotating
field and a
rotating magnet ;
the
latter,
when
rotating,
exhibited the same
phenomena
as the
rings
when
they
were
energized by
currents of
differing phase.
Another
prominent
exhibit was a model illustrated at c which is a two-
phase motor,
as well as an induction motor and transformer. It
consists of a
large
outer
ring
of laminated iron wound with
two
superimposed, separated windings
which can be connected
in a
variety
of
ways.
This is one of the first models used
by
Mr. Tesla as an induction motor and
rotating
transformer. The
armature was either a steel or
wrought
iron disc with a closed
coil. When the motor was
operated
from a two
phase generator
the
windings
were connected in two
groups,
as usual. When
used as an induction
motor,
the current induced in one of the
windings
of the
ring
was
passed through
the other
winding
on
the
ring
and so the motor
operated
with
only
two wires. When
iised as a transformer the outer
winding served,
for
instance,
as
a
secondary
and the inner as a
primary.
The model shown at
D is one of the earliest
rotating
field
motors, consisting
of a thin
iron
ring
wound with two sets of coils and an armature
consisting
of a series of steel discs
partly
cut
away
and
arranged
on a small
arbor.
At E is shown one of the first
rotating
field or induction motors
used for the
regulation
of an arc
lamp
and for other
purposes.
It
comprises
a
ring
of discs with two sets of coils
having
different
self-inductions,
one set
being
of German silver and the other of
copper
wire. The armature is wound with two closed-circuited
coils at
right angles
to each other. To the armature shaft are
fastened levers and other devices to effect the
regulation.
At F
is shown a model of a
magnetic lag
motor
;
this embodies a cast-
ing
with
pole projections protruding
from two coils between
which is
arranged
to rotate a smooth iron
body.
When an alter-
nating
current is sent
through
the two coils the
pole projections
of the field and armature within it are
similarly magnetized,
and
upon
the cessation or reversal of the current the armature and
field
repel
each other and rotation
is
produced
in this
way.
480 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TESLA.
Another
interesting
exhibit,
shown at
G,
is an
early
model of a
two field motor
energized by
currents of different
phase.
There
are two
independent
fields of laminated iron
joined by
brass'
bolts
;
in each field is mounted an
armature,
both armatures be-
ing
on the same shaft. The armatures were
originally
so ar-
ranged
as to be
placed
in
any position relatively
to each
other,
and the fields also were
arranged
to be connected in a number
of
ways.
The motor has served for the exhibition of a number
of features
;
among
other
things,
it has been used as a
dynamo
for the
production
of currents of
any frequency
between wide
limits. In this case the
field,
instead of
being energized by
di-
rect
current,
was
energized by
currents
differing
in
phase,
which
FIG. 298.
produced
a rotation of the field
;
the armature was then rotated
in the same or in
opposite
direction to the movement of the
field;
and so
any
number of alternations of the currents induced in the
armature,
from a small to a
high
number,
determined
by
the
frequency
of the
energizing
field coils and the
speed
of the arma-
ture,
was obtained.
The models
H, i, j, represent
a
variety
of
rotating field, synchron-
ous motors which are of
special
value in
long
distance transmis-
sion work. The
principle
embodied in these motors was enunci-
ated
by
Mr. Tesla in his lecture before the American Institute of
Electrical
Engineers,
in
May,
1888
1
. It involves the
production
1. See Part
I, Chap. Ill, page
9.
PERSONAL
EXHIBIT AT TllK
WORLD'S FAIR.
481
of the
rotating
field in one of the elements of the motor
by
cur
rents
differing
in
phase
and
energizing
the other element
by
direct currents. The armatures are of the two and three
phase
type.
K is a model of a motor shown in an
enlarged
view in
Fig.
298. This
machine,
together
with that shown in
Fig. 299,
was
exhibited at the same
lecture,
in
May,
1888.
They
were
the first
rotating
field motors which were
independently tested,
having
for that
purpose
been
placed
in the hands of Prof. An-
thony
in the winter of
188T-88. From these tests it was shown
that the
efficiency
and
output
of these motors was
quite
satisfac-
tory
in
every respect.
It was intended to exhibit the model shown in
Fig. 299,
but it
was unavailable for that
purpose owing
to the fact that it was
FIG. 299.
some time
ago
handed over to the care of Prof.
Ayrton
in
Eng-
land. This model was
originally provided
with twelve
independ-
ent coils
;
this
number,
as Mr. Tesla
pointed
out in his first lec-
ture, being
divisible
by
two and
three,
was selected in order to make
various connections for two and
three-phase operations,
and
during
Mr. Tesla's
experiments
was used in
many ways
with from two to
six
phases.
The
model, Fig.
298,
consists of a
magnetic
frame of
laminated iron with four
polar projections
between which an arm-
ature is
supported
on brass bolts
passing through
the frame. A
great variety
of armatures was used in connection with these two
and other fields. Some of the armatures are shown in front on
the
table, Fig.
297,
and several are also shown
enlarged
in
Figs.
300 to 310. An
interesting
exhibit is that shown at
L, Fig.
297..
This is an armature of hardened steel which was used in a demon-
482 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
stration before the
Society
of Arts in
Boston, by
Prof.
Anthony.
Another curious exhibit is shown
enlarged
in
Fig.
301. This
consists of thick discs of
wrought
iron
placed lengthwise,
with a-
mass of
copper
cast around them. The discs were
arranged
longitudinally
to afford an easier
starting by
reason of the induced
current formed in the iron
discs,
which differed in
phase
from
those in the
copper.
This armature would start with a
single
cir-
cuit and run in
synchronism,
and
represents
one of the earliest
types
of such an armature.
Fig.
305 is another
striking
exhibit.
FIG. 303. FIG. 304. FIG. 305.
FIG. 306 FIG. 307 FIG. 308.
FIG. 309. FIG. 310.
This is one of the earliest
types
of an armature with holes beneath
the
periphery,
in which
copper
conductors are imbedded. The
armature has
eight
closed circuits and was used in
many
different
ways. Fig.
304 is a
type
of
synchronous
armature
consisting
of
a block of soft steel wound with a coil closed
upon
itself. This
armature was used in connection with the field shown in
Fig.
298
and
gave
excellent results.
Fig.
302
represents
a
synchronous
armature with a
large
coil
around a
body
of iron. There is another
very
small coil at
right
angles
to the first. This small coil was used for the
purpose
of
PERSONAL EXHIBIT AT THE
WORLD'S FAIR. 483
increasing
the
starting torque
and was found
very
effective in
this
connection.
Figs.
306 and 308 show a favorite construction
of armature
;
the iron
body
is made
up
of two sets of discs cut
away
and
placed
at
right angles
to each
other,
the interstices be-
ing
wound with coils. The one shown in
Fig.
308 is
provided
with an
additional
groove
on each of the
projections
formed
by
the
discs,
for the
purpose
of
increasing
the
starting torque by
a
wire wound in these
projections.
Fig.
307 is a form of armature
similarly constructed,
but with four
independent
coils wound
upon
the four
projections.
This armature was used to reduce the
speed
of the motor with reference to that of the
generator. Fig.
300 is still another armature with a
great
number of
independent
circuits closed
upon themselves,
so that all the dead
points
on
the armature are done
away with,
and the armature has a
large
starting torque. Fig.
303 is another
type
of armature for a four-
pole
motor but with coils wound
upon
a smooth surface. A
number of these armatures have hollow
shafts,
as
they
have been
used in
many ways. Figs.
309 and 310
represent
armatures to
which either
alternating
or direct current was
conveyed by
means of
sliding rings. Fig.
309 consists of a soft iron
body
with a
single
coil wound around
it,
the ends of the coil
being
connected to two
sliding rings
to
which,
usually,
direct current
was
conveyed.
The armature shown in
Fig.
310 has three insu-
lated
rings
on a shaft and was used in connection with two or
three
phase
circuits.
All these models shown
represent early work,
and the en-
larged engravings
are made from
photographs
taken
early
in
1888. There is a
great
number of other models which were ex-
hibited,
but which are not
brought
out
sharply
in the
engraving,
Fig.
297. For
example
at M is a model of a motor
comprising
an armature with a hollow shaft wound with two or three coils for
two or
three-phase
circuits
;
the armature was
arranged
to be sta-
tionary
and the
generating
circuits were connected
directly
to
the
generator.
Around the armature is
arranged
to rotate on
its shaft a
casting forming
six closed circuits. On the outside
this
casting
was turned smooth and the belt was
placed
on it for
driving
with
any
desired
appliance.
This also is a
very early
model.
On the left side of the table there are seen a
large variety
of
models, N, o, P, etc.,
with fields of various
shapes.
Each of these
models involves some distinct idea and
they
all
represent gradual
484 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
development chiefly interesting
as
showing
Mr. Tesla's efforts to
adapt
his
system
to the
existing high frequencies.
On the
right
side of the
table,
at
s, T,
are
shown,
on
separate
supports, larger
and more
perfected
armatures of commercial
motors,
and in the
space
around the table a
variety
of motors and
generators supplying
currents to them was exhibited.
The
high frequency
exhibit embraced Mr. Tesla's first
original
apparatus
used in his
investigations.
There was exhibited a
glass
tube with one
layer
of silk-covered wire wound at the
top
and a
copper
ribbon on the inside. This was the first
disruptive
discharge
coil constructed
by
him. At u is shown the
disruptive
FIG. 811.
discharge
coil exhibited
by
him in his lecture before the Ameri-
can Institute of Electrical
Engineers,
in
May,
1891.
1
At v and w
are shown some of the first
high frequency
transformers. A
number of various fields and armatures of small models of
high
frequency apparatus
as shown at x and
Y,
and others not visible
in the
picture,
were exhibited. In the annexed
space
the
dynamo
then used
by
Mr. Tesla at Columbia
College
was exhibited
;
also
another form of
high frequency dynamo
used.
In this
space
also was
arranged
a
battery
of
Leyden jars
and
his
large disruptive discharge
coil which was used for
exhibiting
1. See Part
II,
Chap. XXVI.,
page
145.
PERSONAL EXHIBIT AT THE WORLD'8
FAIR. 485
the
light phenomena
in the
adjoining
dark room. The coil was
operated
at
only
a small fraction of its
capacity,
as the
necessary
condensers and transformers could not be had and as Mr. Tesla's
stay
was limited to one week
; notwithstanding,
the
phenomena
were of a
striking
character. In the room were
arranged
two
large plates placed
at a distance of about
eighteen
feet from each
other. Between them were
placed
two
long
tables with all sorts
of
phosphorescent
bulbs and tubes
; many
of these were
prepared
with
great
care and marked
legibly
with the names which would
shine with
phosphorescent glow. Among
them were some with
the names of
Helmholtz, Faraday, Maxwell, Henry,
Franklin)
etc. Mr. Tesla had also not
forgotten
the
greatest living poet
of
his own
country, Zmaj
Jovan
;
two or three were
prepared
with
inscriptions,
like
"
Welcome, Electricians,"
and
produced
a beau-
tiful effect. Each
represented
some
phase
of this work and stood
for some individual
experiment
of
importance.
Outside the room
was the small
battery
seen in
Fig.
311,
for the exhibition of some
of the
impedance
and other
phenomena
of interest.
Thus,
for
instance,
a thick
copper
bar bent in arched form was
provided
with
clamps
for the attachment of
lamps,
and a number of
lamps
were
kept
at incandescence on the bar
;
there was also a little mo-
tor shown on the table
operated by
the
disruptive discharge.
As will be remembered
by
those who visited the
Exposition,
the
Westinghouse Company
made a fine exhibit of the various
commercial motors of the Tesla
system,
while the twelve
genera-
tors in
Machinery
Hall were of the
two-phase type
constructed
for
distributing light
and
power.
Mr.
Tesla,
also exhibited
some models of his oscillators.
CHAPTER XLIII.
THE TESLA MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS.
ON the
evening
of
Friday, August 25, 1893,
Mr. Tesla de-
livered a lecture on his mechanical and electrical
oscillators,
be-
fore the members of the Electrical
Congress,
in the hall
adjoin-
ing
the
Agricultural Building,
at the World's
Fair, Chicago.
Be
r
sides the
apparatus
in the
room,
he
employed
an air
compressor,
which was driven
by
an electric motor.
Mr. Tesla was introduced
by
Dr. Elisha
Gray,
and
began by
stating
that the
problem
he had set out to solve was to
construct,
first,
a mechanism which would
produce
oscillations of a
per-
fectly
constant
period independent
of the
pressure
of steam or
air
applied,
within the widest
limits,
and also
independent
of
frictional losses and load.
Secondly,
to
produce
electric cur-
rents of a
perfectly
constant
period independently
of the work-
ing
conditions,
and to
produce
these currents with mechanism
which should be reliable and
positive
in its action without resort-
ing
to
spark gaps
and breaks. This he
successfully accomplished
in his
apparatus,
and with this
apparatus, now,
scientific men will
be
provided
with the necessaries for
carrying
on
investigations
with
alternating
currents with
great precision.
These two in-
ventions Mr. Tesla
called, quite appropriately,
a mechanical and
an electrical
oscillator,
respectively.
The former is
substantially
constructed in the
following way.
There is a
piston
in a
cylinder
made to
reciprocate automatically
by proper dispositions
of
parts,
similar to a
reciprocating
tool.
Mr. Tesla
pointed
out that he had done a
great
deal of work in
perfecting
his
apparatus
so that it would work
efficiently
at such
high frequency
of
reciprocation
as he
contemplated,
but he did not
dwell on the
many
difficulties encountered. He
exhibited,
how-
ever,
the
pieces
of a steel arbor which had been
actually
torn
apart
while
vibrating against
a minute air cushion.
With the
piston
above referred to there is associated in one of
his models in an
independent
chamber an air
spring,
or dash
pot,
MECUANICAL AND ELECTRICAL
OSCILLATORS. 487
or else he obtains the
spring
within the chambers of the oscillator
itself. To
appreciate
the
beauty
of this it is
only necessary
to
say
that in that
disposition,
as he showed
it,
no matter what the
rigidity
of the
spring
and no matter what the
weight
of the mov-
ing parts,
in other
words,
no matter what the
period
of
vibrations,
the vibrations of the
spring
are
always
isochronous with the
ap-
plied pressure.
Owing
to
this,
the results obtained with these
vibrations are
truly
wonderful. Mr. Tesla
provides
for an air
spring
of tremendous
rigidity,
and he is enabled to vibrate
big
weights
at an enormous
rate,
considering
the
inertia, owing
to the
recoil of the
spring. Thus,
for
instance,
in one of these
experi-
ments,
he vibrates a
weight
of
approximately
20
pounds
at the
rate of about 80
per
second and with a stroke of about
f- inch,
but
by shortening
the stroke the
weight
could be vibrated
many
hun-
dred
times,
and has
been,
in other
experiments.
To start the
vibrations,
a
powerful
blow is
struck,
but the ad-
justment
can be so made that
only
a minute effort is
required
to
start, and,
even without
any special provision
it will start
by
merely turning
on the
pressure suddenly.
The vibration
being,
of
course, isochronous, any change
of
pressure merely produces
a
shortening
or
lengthening
of the stroke. Mr. Tesla showed a
number of
very
clear
drawings, illustrating
the construction of
the
apparatus
from which its
working
was
plainly
discernible.
Special provisions
are made so as to
equalize
the
pressure
within the dash
pot
and the outer
atmosphere.
For this
purpose
the inside chambers of the dash
pot
are
arranged
to communi-
cate with the outer
atmosphere
so that no matter how the
tempera-
ture of the enclosed air
might vary,
it still retains the same mean
density
as the outer
atmosphere,
and
by
this means a
spring
of
constant
rigidity
is obtained.
Now,
of
course,
the
pressure
of
the
atmosphere may vary,
and this would
vary
the
rigidity
of the
spring,
and
consequently
the
period
of
vibration,
and this feature
constitutes one of the
great
beauties of the
apparatus ; for,
as Mr.
Tesla
pointed out,
this mechanical
system
acts
exactly
like a
string tightly
stretched between two
points,
and with fixed
nodes,
so that
slight changes
of the tension do not in the least alter the
period
of oscillation.
The
applications
of such an
apparatus are,
of
course,
numer-
ous and obvious. The first
is,
of
course,
to
produce
electric
currents,
and
by
a number of models and
apparatus
on the lecture
platform,
Mr. Tesla showed how this could be carried out in
488 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TESLA.
practice by combining
an electric
generator
with his oscillator.
He
pointed
out what conditions must be observed in order that
the
period
of vibration of the electrical
system might
not disturb-
the mechanical oscillation in such a
way
as to alter the
periodicity,
but
merely
to shorten the stroke. He combines a condenser
with a
self-induction,
and
gives
to the electrical
system
the same
period
as that at which the machine itself
oscillates,
so that both
together
then fall in
step
and electrical and mechanical resonance
is
obtained,
and maintained
absolutely
unvaried.
IsText he showed a model of a motor with delicate
wheelwork,
which was driven
by
these currents at a constant
speed,
no mat-
ter what the air
pressure applied was,
so that this motor could
be
employed
as a clock. He also showed a clock so constructed
that it could be attached to one of the
oscillators,
and would
keep absolutely
correct time. Another curious and
interesting
feature which Mr. Tesla
pointed
out was
that,
instead of con-
trolling
the motion of the
reciprocating piston by
means of a
spring,
so as to obtain isochronous
vibration,
he was
actually
able
to control the mechanical motion
by
the natural vibration of the
electro-magnetic system,
and he said that the case was a
very
simple one,
and was
quite analogous
to that of a
pendulum.
Thus, supposing
we had a
pendulum
of
great weight, preferably,
which would be .maintained in vibration
by force, periodically
applied ;
now that
force,
no matter how it
might vary, although
it would oscillate the
pendulum,
would have no control over its
period.
Mr. Tesla also described a
very interesting phenomenon
which
he illustrated
by
an
experiment. By
means of this new
appara-
tus,
he is able to
produce
an
alternating
current in which the
E. M. F. of the
impulses
in one direction
preponderates
over that
of those in the
other,
so that there is
produced
the effect of a
direct current. In fact he
expressed
the
hope
that these cur-
rents would be
capable
of
application
in
many instances,
serving
as direct currents. The
principle
involved in this
preponderat-
ing
E. M. F. he
explains
in this
way
:
Suppose
a conductor is
moved into the
magnetic
field and then
suddenly
withdrawn. If
the current is not
retarded,
then the work
performed
will be a
mere fractional one
;
but if the current is
retarded,
then the
magnetic
field acts as a
spring. Imagine
that the motion of the
conductor is arrested
by
the current
generated,
and that at the
instant when it
stops
to move into the
field,
there is still the
MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS. 489
maximum current
flowing
in the conductor
;
then this current
will,
according
to Lenz's
law,
drive the conductor out of the field
again,
and if the conductor has no
resistance,
then it would leave
the field with the
velocity
it entered it. Now it is clear that
if,
instead of
simply
depending
on the current to drive the conduc-
tor out of the
field,
the
mechanically applied
force is so timed
that it
helps
the conductor to
get
out of the
field,
then it
might
leave the field with
higher velocity
than it entered
it,
and
thus one
impulse
is made to
preponderate
in E. M. r. over the
other.
With a current of this
nature,
Mr. Tesla
energized magnets
strongly,
and
performed many interesting experiments bearing
out the fact that one of the current
impulses preponderates.
Among
them was one in which he attached to his oscillator a
ring
magnet
with a small air
gap
between the
poles.
This
magnet
was
oscillated
up
and down 80 times a second. A
copper disc,
when
inserted within the air
gap
of the
ring magnet,
was
brought
into
rapid
rotation. Mr. Tesla remarked that this
experiment
also
seemed to demonstrate that the lines of flow of current
through
a metallic mass are disturbed
by
the
presence
of a
magnet
in a
manner
quite independently
of the so-called Hall effect. He
showed also a
very interesting
method of
making
a connection
with the
oscillating magnet.
This was
accomplished by attaching
to the
magnet
small insulated steel
rods,
and
connecting
to these
rods the ends of the
energizing
coil. As the
magnet
was
vibrated,
stationary
nodes were
produced
in the steel
rods,
and at these
points
the terminals of a direct current source were attached.
Mr. Tesla also
pointed
out that one of the uses of
currents,
such
as those
produced
in his
apparatus,
would be to select
any given
one of a number of devices connected to the same circuit
by pick-
ing
out the vibration
by
resonance. There is indeed little doubt
that with Mr. Tesla's
devices,
harmonic and
synchronous
tele-
graphy
will receive a fresh
impetus,
and vast
possibilities
are
again opened up.
Mr. Tesla was
very
much elated over his latest
achievements,
and said that he
hoped
that in the hands of
practical,
as well as
scientific
men,
the devices described
by
him would
yield important
results. He laid
special
stress on the
facility
now afforded for
investigating
the effect of mechanical vibration in all
directions,
and also showed that he had observed a number of facts in con-
nection with iron cores.
490 INVENTIONS
OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
The
engraving, Fig.
312, shows,
in
perspective,
one of the
forms of
apparatus
used
by
Mr. Tesla in his earlier
investigations
in this field of
work,
and its interior construction is made
plain,
by
the sectional view shown in
Fig.
313. It will be noted that the
piston
P is fitted into the hollow of a
cylinder
c which is
provided
with channel
ports
o
o,
and
i, extending
all around the inside
surface. In this
particular apparatus
there are two channels o o
for the outlet of the
working
fluid and
one, i,
for the
inlet.
The
piston
P is
provided
with two slots s s' at a
carefully
deter-
mined
distance,
one from the other. The tubes T T which are
serewed into the holes drilled into the
piston,
establish communi-
cation between the slots s s' and chambers on each side of the
piston,
each of these chambers
connecting
with the slot which is
remote from it. The
piston
P is screwed
tightly'
on a shaft A
MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS. 491
which
passes through fitting
boxes at the end of the
cylinder
c.
The boxes
project
to a
carefully
determined distance into the hol-
low of the
cylinder c,
thus
determining
the
length
of the stroke.
Surrounding
the whole is a
jacket
j. This
jacket
acts
chiefly
to
diminish the sound
produced by
the oscillator and as a
jacket
when
the oscillator is driven
by steam,
in which case a somewhat differ-
ent
arrangement
of the
magnets
is
employed.
The
apparatus
here
illustrated was intended for demonstration
purposes,
air
being
used as most convenient for this
purpose.
A
magnetic
frame .M
M is fastened so as to
closely
surround the
oscillator and is
provided
with
energizing
coils which establish
FIG. 313.
two
strong magnetic
fields on
opposite
sides. The
magnetic
frame
is made
up
of thin sheet iron. In the
intensely
concentrated
field thus
produced,
there are
arranged
two
pairs
of coils H H
sup-
ported
in metallic frames which are screwed on the shaft A of
the
piston
and have additional
bearings
in the boxes B B on each
side. The whole is mounted on a metallic base
resting
on two
wooden blocks.
The
operation
of the device is as follows : The
working
fluid
being
admitted
through
an inlet
pipe
to the slot i and the
piston
being supposed
to be in the
position
indicated,
it is
sufficient,
though
not
necessary,
to
give
a
gentle
tap
on one of the shaft
492 INVENTIONS OF NIKOLA TE8LA.
ends
protruding
from the boxes B. Assume that the motion im-
parted
be such as to move the
piston
to the left
(when looking
at
the
diagram)
then the air rushes
through
the slot s' and tube T
into the chamber to the left. The
pressure
now drives the
pie-
ton towards the
right and, owing
to its
inertia,
it overshoots the
position
of
equilibrium
and allows the air to rush
through
the
slot s and tube T into the chamber to the
right,
while the com-
munication to the left hand chamber is cut
off,
the air of the
latter chamber
escaping through
the outlet o on the left. On
the return stroke a similar
operation
takes
place
on the
right
hand side. This oscillation is maintained
continuously
and the
apparatus performs
vibrations from a
scarcely perceptible quiver
amounting
to no more than
l
of an
inch, up
to vibrations of a little
over
|
of an
inch, according
to the air
pressure
and load. It is
indeed
interesting
to see how an incandescent
lamp
is
kept
burn-
ing
with the
apparatus showing
a
scarcely perceptible quiver.
To
perfect
the mechanical
part
of the
apparatus
so that oscil-
lations are maintained
economically
was one
thing,
and Mr. Tesla
hinted in his lecture at the
great
difficulties he had first encoun-
tered to
accomplish
this. But to
produce
oscillations which would
be of constant
period
was another task of no mean
proportions.
As
already pointed
out,
Mr. Tesla obtains the
constancy
of
period
in three distinct
ways. Thus,
he
provides properly
calculated
chambers,
as in the case
illustrated,
in the oscillator itself
;
or he as-
sociates with the oscillator an air
spring
of constant resilience. But
the most
interesting
of
all, perhaps,
is the maintenance of the con-
stancy
of oscillation
by
the reaction of the
electromagnetic part
of
the combination. Mr. Tesla winds his
coils, by preference,
for
high
tension and associates with them a
condenser, making
the natural
period
of the combination
fairly approximating
to the
average period
at which the
piston
would oscillate without
any particular provision
being
made for the
constancy
of
period
under
varying pressure
and load. As the
piston
with the coils is
perfectly
free to
move,
it is
extremely susceptible
to the influence of the natural vibra-
tion set
up
in the circuits of the coils H H. The mechanical effici-
ency
of the
apparatus
is
very high owing
to the fact that friction
is reduced to a minimum and the
weights
which are moved are
small
;
the
output
of the oscillator is therefore a
very large
one.
Theoretically considered,
when the various
advantages
which
Mr. Tesla holds out are
examined,
it is
surprising, considering
the
simplicity
of the
arrangement,
that
nothing
was done in this
MECHANICAL AND ELECTRICAL OSCILLATORS. 493
direction before. No doubt
many inventors,
at one time or
other,
have entertained the idea of
generating
currents
by
at-
taching
a coil or a
magnetic
core to the
piston
of a steam
engine,
or
generating
currents
by
the vibrations of a
tuning fork,
or
similar
devices,
but the
disadvantages
of such
arrangements
from
an
engineering standpoint
must be obvious. Mr.
Tesla, however,
in the
introductory
remarks of his
lecture, pointed
out how
by
a
series of conclusions he was driven to take
up
this new line of
work
by
the
necessity
of
producing
currents of constant
period
and as a result of his endeavors to maintain electrical oscillation
in the most
simple
and economical manner.
INDEX.
Alternate Current Electrostatic
Apparatus
392
Alternating
Current Generators
for
High Frequency..
152, 374,
224
Alternating
Motors and Trans-
formers 7
American Institute Electrical
Engineers
Lecture 145
Anthony,
W.
A.,
Tests of Tesla
Motors 8
Apparatus
for
Producing High
Vacua 276
Arc
Lighting,
Tesla
Direct,
Sys-
tem 451
Auxiliary
Brush
Regulation
... 438
Biography,
Tesla 4
Brush.
Anti-Sparking
432
"
Third,
Regulation
438
Phenomena in
High
Vacuum 226
Carborundum Button for Tesla
Lamps
140,
253
Commutator, Anti-Sparking.
. . . 432
Combination of
Synchronizing
and
Torque
Motor 94
Condensers with Plates in Oil. . 418
Conversion with
Disruptive
Dis-
charge 193,204,
303
Current or
Dynamic Electricity
Phenomena
, . . . 327
Direct Current Arc
Lighting
451
Dischargers,
Forms of 305
Disruptive Discharge
Coil . .
207,
221
Disruptive Discharge
Phenom-
ena... .. 212
Dynamos, Improved
Direct Cur-
rent 448
Early
Phase Motors 477
Effects with
High Frequency
and
High
Potential Currents. 119
Electrical
Congress Lecture,
Chicago
486
Electric Resonance 340
Electric
Discharges
in Vacuum
Tubes 396
Electrolytic Registering
Meter. 420
Eye,
Observations on the 294
Flames, Electrostatic,
Non-Con-
suming
166,272
Forbes
Unipolar
Generator.
468,
474
Franklin Institute Lecture 294
Generators,
Pyromagnetic
429
High Potential, High Frequency
:
Brush Phenomena in
High
Vacuum 226
Carborundum Buttons..
140,
253
Disruptive Discharge
Pheno-
mena 212
Flames, Electrostatic,
Non-
Consuming 166,
272
Impedance,
Novel Phenom-
ena
194,
338
Lighting Lamps Through
Body
359
Luminous Effects with
Gases 368
' '
Massage
"
with Currents 394
Motor with
Single
Wire.
234,
330
"No Wire
"
Motors 235
Oil Insulation of Induction
Coils
173,
221
INDEX.
495
High
Potential. Continued.
Ozone,
Production of 171
Phosphorescence
367
Physiological
Effects...
162,
394
Resonance 340
Spinning
Filament . 168
Streaming Discharges
of
High
Tension Coil. .
..155,
163
Telegraphy
without Wires 346
Impedance,
Novel Phenomena.
194,
338
Improvements
in
Unipolar
Gen-
erators 465
Improved
Direct Current
Dyna-
mos and Motors 448
Induction Motors 92
Institution Electrical
Engineers
Lecture 189
Lamps
and Motor
operated
on
a
Single
Wire 330
Lamps
with
Single Straight
Fiber 183
Lamps containing only
a Gas. . 188
Lamps
with
Refractory
But-
ton
177, 239,
360
Lamps
for
Simple Phosphore-
scence...
187, 282,
364
Lecture,
Tesla before :
American Institute Elec-
trical
Engineers
145
Royal
Institution 124
Institution Electrical
Eng-
ineers 189
Franklin Institute and Nat-
ional Electric
Light
Asso-
ciation 294
Electrical
Congress,Chicago
486
Lighting Lamps Through
the
Body
359
Light
Phenomena with
High
Frequencies.
349
Luminous Effects with Gases at
Low Pressure 368
"
Magnetic Lag
"
Motor 67
"Massage"
with Currents of
High Frequency
394
Mechanical and Electrical Oscil-
lators 486
Method of
obtaining
Direct from
Alternating
currents 409
Method of
obtaining
Difference
of Phase
by Magnetic
Shield-
ing 71
Motors :
With Circuits of
Different
Resistance
79
With Closed
Conductors. . . 9
Combination of
Synchroniz-
ing
and
Torque
94
With Condenser in Arma-
ture Circuit
100
With Condenser in one of
the Field Circuits 106
With
Coinciding
Maxima of
Magnetic
Effect in Arma-
ture and Field
83
With "Current
Lag
"
Arti-
ficially
Secured
58
Early
Phase
477
With
Equal Magnetic
Ener-
gies
in Field and Arma-
ture 81
Or
Generator,
obtaining
De-
sired
Speed
of 36
Improved
Direct Current. . . 448
Induction 92
' '
Magnetic Lag
"
67
"No Wire" 235
With Phase Difference in
Magnetization
of Inner
and Outer Parts of Core.. 88
Regulator
for
Rotary
Cur-
rent 45
Single Circuit, Self-starting
Synchronizing
.... 50
Single
Phase 76
With
Single
Wire to Genera-
tor
234,
330
Synchronizing
9
Thermo-Magnetic
424
Utilizing
Continuous Cur-
rent Generators . . 31
National Electric
Light
Asso-
ciation Lecture 294
"
No Wire
"
Motor 285
Observations on the
Eye.
294
Oil,
Condensers with Plates in . 418
Oil Insulation of Induction Coils
173,
221
Oscillators,
Mechanical and
Electrical...
.. 486
INDEX.
Ozone,
Production of 171
Phenomena Produced
by
Elec-
trostatic Force 319
Phosphorescence
and
Sulphide
of Zinc 367
Physiological
Effects of
High
Frequency 162,
394
Polyphase Systems
26
Polyphase
Transformer 109
Pyromagnetic
Generators 429
Regulator
for
Rotary
Current
Motors 45
Resonance, Electric,
Phenom-
ena of 340
' '
Resultant Attraction
"
7
Rotating
Field Transformers. . . 9
Rotating Magnetic
Field
.9
Royal
Institution Lecture 124
Scope
of Lectures 119
Single
Phase Motor 76
Single
Circuit, Self-Starting
Synchronizing
Motors 50
Spinning
Filament Effects 168
Streaming Discharges
of
High
Tension Coil
155,
163
Synchronizing
Motors
9
Telegraphy
without Wires. . . . 346
Transformer with Shield be-
tween
Primary
and Second-
ary
113
Thermo-Magnetic
Motors 424
Thomson,
J. J.,
on Vacuum
Tubes
397,402,
406
j
Thomson,
Sir
W.,
Current Ac-
cumulator
471
Transformers :
Alternating
7'
Magnetic
Shield 113
Polyphase,
109
Rotating
Field 9
Tubes :
Coated with
Yttria,
etc 187
Coated with
Sulphide
of
Zinc,
etc
290,
367
Unipolar
Generators 465
Unipolar Generator, Forbes,468,
474
Yttria,
Coated Tubes 187
Zinc,
Tubes Coated with Sul-
phide
of
367