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.