Molecular Seive for making vacuum tubes

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The discussion centers on the use of vacuum systems in manufacturing image tubes, specifically the role of vac-ion pumps achieving pressures of -12 power torr and the use of molecular sieves for roughing to 10 microns. The molecular sieve, filled with zeolite and cooled with liquid nitrogen, adsorbs water molecules from the air, but there is uncertainty about whether it also adsorbs other gas molecules like nitrogen. The main purpose of cool traps is to capture oil molecules leaking from roughing oil pumps, which can damage the cathode properties of the tubes. The proposed process sequence involves using a mechanical pump, isolating the system, employing the molecular sieve, and finally using the vac-ion pump to reach ultra-low pressures. This sequence is critical to maintaining the integrity of the vacuum environment necessary for optimal tube performance.
Y2keddie
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im trying to jog my memory back 30years when I worked with vacuum tubes. I worked with manufacturing of image tubes. I remember the vacuum systems used vac-ion pumps to achieve -12 power torr. I alsoo remember first using a molecular seive for roughing,pumping to 10 microns.
The seive was a canister filled with a zeonolite which was cooled with liquid nitrogen.
I believe it worked as an adosorbtion process where water molecules would adhere to the zenolite surface thus removing water molecules from air in the beginning stages of vacuum.
What my memory is fuzzy about: is the seive used just for water,or other gas molecules?
 
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My recall is not that good. I’m guessing the process sequence was:

Use Mechanical pump ( to 10 microns).
Isolate
Then molecular Seive (to ?? Torr) The decrease in pressure would indicate the oil molecules had decreased?
Isolate
Then Vac Ion pump to 10x-14 torr

That would make sense. The oil contaminants would destroy the tubes cathode properties.
 
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