Navigation:: Home >> Radio history >> this page History of the Radio ReceiverThe radio receiver has undergone considerable development since the first radio signals were received. Today there is a great interest in vintage radio receivers, valve technology and the way in which radio has developed since the earliest days of wireless. In 1895 Marconi demonstrated the first viable radio system, now over 100 years later the radios that are in use today bear no resemblance to the early equipment that was used. The equipment that was used in the 19th Century was crude and very insensitive, nowadays receivers are very sensitive and they offer many facilities. They are also used in a wide variety of applications from broadcast reception, through cellular telecommunications to satellite links and much more. To be able to operate in all these diverse areas, receiver technology has changed beyond all recognition. These developments represent the work of many people from the earliest days of wireless right up to the modern day. Some of these people have their names entered the technology history books, but the majority were just ordinary engineers or radio enthusiasts who remain unknown. Wireless beginnings Hertz used a number of variations of the basic equipment. Essentially the transmitter consisted of a circuit in which a spark was made to jump across a gap. A second circuit with similar dimensions but with a smaller gap was placed within a metre or so of the first circuit. When a spark was made to jump across the gap in the transmitter circuit, a smaller but simultaneous spark would be seen to jump across the gap in the second. Naturally the range of this arrangement was very limited, mainly because the receiving circuit had to pick up a large amount of energy for the spark to jump across the gap. Coherers The first person to use the phenomenon to detect radio waves was a Frenchman named Edouard Branly. He discovered that the resistance of a glass tube filled with metal filings fell from a few megohms to a few hundred ohms when placed close to a discharge. A short mechanical shock then restored the coherer to it high resistance state. Once Branly had developed the basic idea, Oliver Lodge popularised it when he gave a lecture in 1898 in honour of Hertz who had recently died.. Lodge also made improvements to the device. Usually the coherer was made to operate a bell so that when a spark or discharge took place the bell rang. A self-restoring feature was also introduced. The current flowing through the coherer was made to operate a small tapper that restored the coherer as well as ringing the bell. This meant at it was ready for the next discharge almost immediately. Guglielmo Marconi As an indication of the way in which his developments were progressing he managed to span the Bristol Channel, and later he managed to send a message across the English Channel. During this experiment the signals were picked up at his factory in Chelmsford. This was considerably further than anyone had expected the signals could travel, and it made Marconi think that it would be possible to span the Atlantic. Although Marconi's company did not have the funds to support a venture of this size, undeterred he set about the task, building stations in Britain and America and after many difficulties he managed to make contact in December 1901. This was an enormous achievement and it made headlines in the newspapers, but the sensitivity of the receiver proved to be the limiting factor. This set Ambrose Fleming, professor at University College London and consultant to Marconi thinking about the ways in which improvements could be made. Fleming's Valve Surprisingly, Edison could not find a use for this interesting phenomenon. Fleming who had seen the effect demonstrated by Edison wondered if it could be used to detect radio waves. He set his assistant to set up an experiment to discover if it could be used, and to their delight it did. He called it his oscillation valve because it acted in the same way as water valve in only allowing flow in one direction. The idea behind Fleming's Oscillation Valve Crystal detectors Around this time work on other types of detectors started to be undertaken and it resulted in what was later known as the cat's whisker. It consisted of a crystal of a material such as galena with a small springy piece of wire brought up against it. The detector was constructed to that the wire contact could be moved to different points on the crystal, and thereby obtain the best point for rectifying the signal and the best detection. These detectors soon gained the name cat's whiskers as a result of their construction. They were never very reliable and the whisker needed to be moved periodically to enable it to detect the signal properly. However they were very much cheaper than valves and gained widespread acceptance. It is interesting to note that the cat's whisker was the first semiconductor device. The materials that were used were semiconductors, and cat's whisker formed a very crude point contact diode. Triodes With the discovery that triode valves could amplify signals it was soon noticed that they would also oscillate. This was a mixed blessing. It was a great disadvantage because these early valves were very difficult to stabilise when used for signals above a few kilohertz. However the fact that valves could be used as oscillators was exploited in generating signals. Previously high frequency signals had been difficult to generate. If steady signals were required, electromechanical techniques had to be used, and these had obvious frequency limitations. With the use of valves it was possible to make relatively compact electronic oscillators. TRF Receivers To be able to achieve sufficient gain, more than one valve was needed, and as their cost was very high, people looked at making the most efficient use of them. One way that proved very successful was introduced in 1913 and involved the use of positive feedback in the form of a regenerative detector. This gave significant improvements in the levels of gain that could be achieved. The idea These regenerative receivers proved to be very successful. The amount of feedback could be adjusted to the point of oscillation, and this greatly increased the gain and selectivity, enabling this type of receiver to out-perform all other forms. War developments Originally it was thought that small amount of gas in the envelope was key to their operation. However an American named Langmuir disproved this and as a result a new generation totally evacuated "hard" valves were introduced. Not only was the operation of valves improved by the complete evacuation, but it also allowed the heaters to have coatings applied to them to improve their emission. In the old "soft" valves the gasses in the envelope contaminated the coatings making them unusable. The other problem with valves was their susceptibility to oscillation. One of the main reasons for this was the level of capacitance between the grid and anode. A number of attempts were made to reduce this. H.J. Round undertook some work on this and in 1916 he produced a number valves with the grid connection taken out of the top of the envelope away from the anode connection. This proved to give a major improvement, but the final solution did not come until the 1920s. Although the TRF receiver represented a major improvement in performance over what had been available before, it still fell short of the needs for some of the new applications. To enable receiver technology to meet the needs placed upon it a number of new ideas started to surface. One of these was a new form of direct conversion receiver. Here an internal or local oscillator was used to beat with the incoming signal to produce and audible signal that could be amplified by an audio amplifier. Although the basic principle of the direct conversion had been known about for many years many considered the system was wasteful of valves because the oscillator and mixer did not contribute to the gain of the set. Even in military circles this was a consideration because of the size and cost of the valves and their associated batteries. The problem was solved by one of Britain's leading wireless engineers, a man named H J Round. He developed a receiver he called an autodyne in which the same valve was used as a mixer and an oscillator, Whilst the set used fewer valves it was difficult to optimise the circuit for both the mixer and oscillator functions. To make the next leap forward in receiver technology a new type of set was needed. The superhet The idea for developing a receiver with a fixed intermediate frequency amplifier and filter is credited to Edwin Armstrong. Working for the American Expeditionary Force in Europe, Armstrong thought that if the incoming signals were mixed with a variable frequency oscillator, a low frequency fix tuned amplifier could be used. Like Levy's idea this would enable the valves to operate at a lower frequency where they would be more efficient. It also meant that a fix tuned amplifier could be used and this would be capable of providing much greater degrees of selectivity than a variable one. This is because several stages could be cascaded relatively easily and the tuning preset before use. Armstrong's original receiver consisted of a total of eight valves. In the set the signal was converted from its incoming frequency down to a fixed intermediate frequency stage. By altering the frequency of the local oscillator the frequency of the received signal was changed. The low intermediate frequency stage allowed greater levels of gain, as in the case of Levy's set because the low frequencies allowed greater levels of gain and stability. Also having a fixed frequency intermediate stage allowed the filters to be more selective. Several tuned circuits could be cascaded to improve selectivity, and being on a fixed frequency they did not all need to be changed in line with one another. The filters could be preset and left correctly tuned. The new superhet gave an impressive performance, but its development came at the end of the war. With its use of a large number of valves it was only viable for use in specialist applications, many of which were no longer required after the cessation of hostilities. Accordingly Armstrong's discovery was rarely used for a number of years. Interestingly, Armstrong was not the only person working on the idea of a superhet. Meissner in Germany took out a patent for the idea six months before Armstrong, but as Meissner did not prove the idea in practice and did not build a superhet radio, the idea is credited to Armstrong. Superhet gains acceptance 1934 Marconiphone superhet receiver The use of superhets by domestic users forced further developments to be made. Originally these sets were very cumbersome and sometimes difficult to use. Ganged tuning capacitors were also introduced to enable the local oscillator and the radio frequency stages to be tuned by one control. Many other refinements were added enabling them to be made more cheaply and easier to use. The need for the increased performance of the superhet was first felt in America and by the late 1920s most sets were superhets. However in Europe the number of broadcast stations did not start to rise as rapidly until later. Even so by the mid 1930s virtually all sets in Europe as well were using the superhet principle. 1936 Murphy superhet receiver Valve technology improved again with the introduction of further electrodes into the envelope. In 1926 the tetrode valve was introduced. This valve had a second grid placed between the normal control grid and the anode. This had the effect of reducing the capacitance causing the feedback, and enabled valves to operate far more reliably than they had done before. Three years later the tetrode was improved by the introduction of the pentode. In this type of valve, yet another grid called the suppressor grid was introduced. This overcame a discontinuity in the curve of the tetrode, and enabled further improvements in their performance. Further refinements Transistors introduced Although transistors gained a wide level of acceptance for broadcast sets, their introduction was a little slower in the professional market. The performance of the early transistors was much lower than that of valves, and this meant that high performance sets were not so easy to design. Nevertheless as transistor performance improved and field effect transistors were introduced, semiconductor technology soon started to overtake that of valves. This was particularly true of the size and weight characteristics. Further developments in semiconductor technology lead to the introduction of the integrated circuit. This enabled radio receiver technology to move forwards even further. The fact that integrated circuits enabled high performance circuits to be built for less cost, and significant amounts of space could be saved both gave advantages. As a result of these developments new techniques could be introduced. One of these was the frequency synthesizer that was used to generate the local oscillator signal for the receiver. By using a synthesizer it was possible to generate a very accurate and stable local oscillator signal. Also the ability of synthesizers to be controlled by microprocessors meant that many new facilities could be introduced apart fromt he significant performance improvements offered by synthesizers. 21st Century Whilst today's radios are miracles of modern technology, filled with low power high performance integrated circuits crammed into the smallest spaces, the basic principle of the radio is usually the superhet, the same idea which was developed by Edwin Armstrong back in 1918.
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