How does a diode valve work based on this sentence

diodes

In a diode valve, the anode would not emit electrons when heated so when the polarity of the voltage across the tube was reversed, no current flowed. Notice how the solid state transistor works in a similar way.

  1. Why does the anode not emit electrons?

  2. Why does no current flow when the polarity of reversed? Why reverse the polarity?

  3. What is a solid state transistor? Just a normal transistor?

  4. What do they mean by solid state?

Best Answer

The statement is a bit misleading. In vacuum tube diode the cathode is heated but the anode is not. That means the cathode emits electrons but the anode does not.

So if you apply a positive voltage to the anode and a negative voltage to the cathode the electrons emitted by the cathode move towards the anode and a current flows.

However if you apply a negative voltage to the anode and a positive voltage to the cathode no current flows because the (unheated) anode doesn't emit any electrons.

The comparison with a transistor seems odd, because a transistor is not like a diode. It's more like a triode. The obvious comparison is with a semiconductor diode, though this works by a completely different mechanism.