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pentode

A pentode is a vacuum tube that uses five active elements: a cathode, a plate (anode), and three grids. The grids are the control grid (g1), the screen grid (g2), and the suppressor grid (g3). In a typical pentode, g3 is connected to the cathode, forming a suppressor function that reduces the influence of secondary electrons emitted from the plate. The screen grid (g2) is held at a positive voltage to reduce the Miller effect and to direct the electron stream toward the plate, improving gain and frequency response. The control grid (g1) modulates the plate current by varying the electric field between the cathode and plate.

Operation and behavior: when a heater warms the cathode, electrons are emitted and attracted to the plate.

Applications and history: pentodes were developed as an improvement over earlier tetrodes, offering higher gain and

Variants and notes: pentodes differ from beam tetrodes, which achieve similar performance with different internal geometry.

A
negative
or
positive
voltage
on
g1
regulates
how
many
electrons
reach
the
plate,
controlling
current.
g2,
kept
at
a
positive
potential,
helps
determine
the
tube’s
gain
and
stabilizes
operation
by
shielding
the
plate
from
voltage
changes
on
g1.
g3,
tied
to
the
cathode,
suppresses
secondary
emission
from
the
plate
that
would
otherwise
modulate
current,
yielding
higher
gain
and
more
linear
response
at
higher
voltages.
better
high-voltage
performance
for
radio
receivers,
audio
amplifiers,
and
other
vacuum-tube
circuits.
They
remain
associated
with
vintage
audio
gear
and
certain
RF
and
high-voltage
applications,
though
many
roles
have
shifted
to
solid-state
devices
or
different
tube
types.
Notable
consumer
pentodes
include
small-signal
pentodes
used
in
preamplifiers
and
power
pentodes
used
in
output
stages,
such
as
EL-series
tubes,
which
exemplify
the
modern
power
pentode
design.
The
pentode’s
characteristic
five-element
structure
provides
high
gain
and
favorable
high-frequency
behavior,
at
the
cost
of
more
complex
biasing
and
higher
operating
voltages.