Title: How a Microwave Oven Works?
1How a Microwave Oven Works?
2What are Microwaves?
- Microwaves are a form of electromagnetic energy,
like light waves or radio waves - Microwaves are used extensively in communications
- such as to relay long-distance telephone signals,
television programs and computer information
across the earth or to a satellite in space. - Good for transmitting information because it can
penetrate haze, light rain and snow, clouds, and
smoke. - Also used in radars and in detecting speeding
cars. - Microwave has become most familiar as the energy
source for cooking food.
3 Electromagnetic Spectrum
- Electromagnetic radiation exists in a range of
frequencies called the electromagnetic spectrum. - Each frequency has a specific wavelength and as
the frequency decreases, the actual length of the
wave gets longer.
Table 1 Frequency and Wavelength Range of Each
Radiation Type in the Electromagnetic Spectrum.
Radiation Type Frequency Range (Hz) Wavelength Range
Gamma rays above 3 x 1019 lt 10-12 m
X-rays 3 x 1017 - 3 x 1019 1 nm - 1 pm
Ultraviolet Radiation 7.5 x 1014 - 3 x 1017 400 nm - 1 nm
Visible Spectrum 3.8 x 1014 - 7.5 x 1014 750 nm - 380 nm
Infrared Radiation 1011 - 3.8 x 1014 25 um - 2.5 um
Microwaves 108 - 1012 1 mm - 25 um
Radio waves 104 - 108 gt1 mm
4History
- Invented accidentally by Dr. Percy LeBaron
Spencer - While testing a magnetron during work, he
discovered the candy bar in his pocket melted - Experimented with other food products (popcorn
and eggs), and realized microwaves can cook foods
quickly - At 1947, 1st commercial microwave oven produced
(called Radarange) - Mostly used by restaurants, railroad cars,
ocean liners and
military - Improvement and refinements made
by 1967, 1st domestic microwave oven
produced
5How the Oven Works
- Electricity from the wall outlet travels through
the power cord and enters the microwave oven
through a series of fuse and safety protection
circuits - These circuits include various fuses and thermal
protectors that are designed to deactivate the
oven in the event of an electrical short or if an
overheating condition occurs - When the oven door is closed, an electrical path
is also established through a series of safety
interlock switches
6- Sensing that all systems are set to go, the
signal activates triac, producing a voltage path
to the high-voltage transformer. - The high-voltage transformer along with a
special diode and capacitor arrangement increases
the typical household voltage from 115 volts to
3000 volts
7- The magnetron converts the high voltage in to the
microwave frequency for cooking - The microwave energy is transmitted into a
waveguide - The waveguide feeds the energy to the stirrer
blade and into the cooking area - When the door is opened, or the timer reaches
zero, the microwave energy stops.
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9Magnetron
Electrons from a hot filament would travel
radially to the outside ring if it were not for
the magnetic field. The magnetic force deflects
them as shown and they tend to sweep around the
circle. In doing so, they pump the natural
frequency of the cavities. The currents around
the resonant cavities cause them to radiate
electromagnetic energy at that resonant
frequency.
10How Foods Get Cooked
- The microwaves that penetrate the food have an
electric field that oscillates 2.45 billion times
a second, a frequency that is well absorbed by
polar liquid molecules such as water, sugars,
fats and other food molecules. - Water interacts with the microwave
- flipping its orientation back and forth very
rapidly - bumping into one another and producing heat,
cooking the food. - Glass, paper, ceramic, or plastic containers are
used in microwave cooking because the microwaves
pass through them - Metal reflects microwaves
- Unsafe to have metal pans/aluminum foil in oven,
may damage oven
11Health Hazards
- It is known that microwave radiation can heat
body tissue the same way it heats food. - Exposure to high levels of microwaves can cause a
painful burn - Ex. the lens of the eye exposure to high levels
of microwaves can cause cataracts. - Microwave oven used low level of microwaves,
within the region of non-ionizing radiation - Still uncertain in the effects of humans from
long term exposure to low level of microwaves - Still experimenting
- Best to stay a way (an arms length) in reducing
exposure to microwaves
12References
- 1. Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia.
- http//www.dal.ca/ehs/files/microwave.safety.pdf
- 2. Homepage of Central Valley Christian School.
- http//home.cvc.org/microwaves/
- 3. Nave, C. R. Hyperphysics. Georgia State
University. http//hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/h
base/waves/magnetron.html - 4. Microtech The Complete Microwave Oven Repair
and Information Network. - http//www.gallawa.com/microtech/index.html
- 5. Wright, Michael and Mukul Patel. Scientific
American How Things Work Today. New York
Marshall Editions Development Ltd., 2000.