Background of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates t'o microwave heating apparatus and particularly to
high power heating apparatus for processing material moved by conveyor through a microwave
chamber.
[0002] Heretofore, it is known to provide in industry a continuous process system for heating
and drying subject material moved on a conveyor through a microwave chamber that is
sealed and evacuated and into which microwave energy is launched: These systems are
now of large physical size and launch many kilowatts of continuous microwave energy
into the chamber from a multitude of sources. A system of this sort is described in
U.S. patent #4,045,639 which issued to Nicolas Meisel, et al on August 30, 1977. The
function of such apparatus is to feed microwave energy continuously into the process
material with as uniform distribution of the energy as can be achieved, while the
material is moved through the chamber on a conveyor. Large systems of this sort may
use six or more magnetrons, each operating continuously and producing many kilowatts
of power. Hence, the total microwave power launched into the chamber is large and
may be in the range of 50 to 100 kilowatts continuous power.
[0003] Operating at such high power levels clearly requires the use of high power sources
in order to avoid having an excessively large number of sources. Magnetrons of such
high power have a narrow limitation on the allowable amount of power that may reenter
them, either as a reflection of the magnetrons' own output or as "cross-talk" from
other magnetrons in the system. It has been suggested by some to use circulators to
avoid this problem; however, circulators are relatively expensive and they do not
solve other problems that accompany high power delivery into a microwave chamber.
Also, where vacuum drying is carried on simultaneously with microwave heating, it
is very difficult to prevent ionization of gas in the chamber by the microwave electric
fields. Ionization permits arcing that wastes the microwave energy and, it can also
degrade the quality of the process material and is generally destructive of the apparatus.
[0004] It has been suggested to use arc detectors within the chamber that detect the occurrance
of an arc and quickly interrupt microwave power to minimize the harm that is done
by the arcing. However, frequent interruptions make the heating process very inefficient
and in the processing of some materials the interruptions are not at all acceptable.
[0005] Some of the objects of the present invention are to overcome these-problems of uniform
high power, continuous heating, reflection into the magnetrons, as well as cross-talk.
Another object is to reduce ionization and arcing problems where microwaves are used
within an evacuated chamber.
Summary of the Invention
[0006] The uniform distribution of continuous high microwave p wer into the process material
is accomplished by launching, preferably at regular places along the inside of the
chamber, defined beams of circularly polarized microwave radiation, each beam being
directed to illuminate a prescribed portion of the process material or a prescribed
area through which the process material is moved. Microwave beams are weaker near
their edges than at the center and so they are overlapped to compensate for this and
provide illumination that is essentially uniform across the width of the path of the
process material. Overlapping may also be effective to compensate for non-uniform
distribution of the process material on the conveyor. Thus, the illumination does
not depend upon the use of mode stirrers or turntables or any other equipment designed
to reflect the microwave energy about the chamber and it does not depend particularly
upon the geometry of the chamber. It permits the chamber to be designed in view of
the pressure or vacuum conditions of operation. For example, it permits a long cylindrical
chamber which is the preferred shape for withstanding vacuum and still provide for
the continuous processing of the subject materials on a conveyor belt.
[0007] In the past where microwave heating has been accomplished in a cylindrical chamber,
the process material was not directly illuminated by microwave energy launched into
the chambers. As a consequence, the tendancy was to concentrate the microwave energy
near the walls of the cylindrical chamber and there would be a deficiency of energy
along the cylinder axis (along the center of the conveyor). Thus, material carried
through the chamber on the conveyor would be heated more along the edges of the conveyor
than at the center. Where the process of microwave heating occurs while at the same
time vacuum drying occurs, the vacuum pressure produced in the chamber is often in
the range in which ionization by the microwave electric fields and arcing are very
difficult to prevent. In the present invention a structure is provided so that the
peak values of electric fields of the microwave energy at a window where the microwave
energy enters the chamber from the ambient pressure exterior are severly limited.
Experience as well as theory show that high intensity microwave electric fields are
produced at the "bottle neck" where the microwave is transmitted from the ambient
exterior region through some sort of microwave transparent, pressure withstanding
window, into the evacuated interior of the chamber. Elsewhere, within the chamber,
the intensity of the electric fields is usually much lower and ionization problems
are reduced.
[0008] In an embodiment of the present invention described herein, a cylindrical microwave
chamber is provided through which a conveyor belt moves the process material at about
the center ' of the cylinder. Opposite the material along the walls of the chamber,
at regularly spaced places, separate beacons launch beams of microwave energy into
the chamber, directed toward the process material. Each beacon beam illuminates a
prescribed area of the conveyor belt and the beams overlap particularly along the
center of the belt so as to produce a uniform or an intentionally "tailored" heating
pattern. The configuration of each beam is formed by a dielectric lens that intercepts
the microwave energy just before-it enters the chamber through the window and focuses
and directs the beam toward the conveyor.
[0009] In order to reduce arcing in the microwave chamber, it is necessary to minimize the
intensity of the microwave electric fields
and,thereby minimize ionization within the chamber, which occurs when the chamber is
evacuated, as in a heating-drying operation. This is done by launching beams of microwave
energy that is circularly polarized and in the TE mode over substantially the whole
area of the relatively large window through which the microwave beam is launched into
the chamber.
[0010] In order to heat uniformally and avoid those problems in prior systems where heating
is excessive at the edges of the conveyor and deficient at the center, the radiation
is formed by the lens and launched directly at the process material, impinging upon
the material at the "first pass". Another design feature that contributes to uniform
heating is to provide separate microwave power sources for the beacons that are not
mutually coherent.
[0011] In the preferred embodiment, each of the individual beams is generated outside of
the chamber,shaped by the lens and launched into the chamber through a transparent
window at the chamber wall. Thus, there are a multitude of lenses and transparent
windows arranged along the chamber wall through each of which a formed beam of circularly
polarized microwave radiation is launched directly toward the process material. The
window is a half wave length of the microwave in thickness to minimize reflections
from the window.
[0012] In order to minimize the likelihood of ionization around the window on the inside
of the chamber, the area of the window is made as large as practical, the beam launched
through it is predominantly TE mode waves rather than TM mode waves and is essentially
a single mode beam rather than a mixture of modes
'and the single mode is circularly polarized. One advantage of circular polarization
is that twice as much power is transmitted as for a plane polarized beam for a given
peak value of the microwave electric field.
[0013] It is an advantage in some embodiments of the present invention to provide a dielectric
lens or prism near the dielectric window. This allows the beacon apparatus that produces
the circularly-polarized, single-mode TE beam spread over the entire area of the relatively
large window to be vertically oriented above the chamber (and above the conveyor),with
the beacon magnetron upright and not "tipped". Magnetron performance and life is best
when operated upright. Furthermore this orientation of the beacon apparatus and the
magnetron therein is often preferred from the standpoint of: total floor area required
for the heating apparatus; ease and convenience of maintenance; and cost of manufacture.
[0014] Vertical orientation of the beacons on top of the cylindrical chamber also facilitates
changing the axis of a beacon so that the beam therefrom can be directed to one side
or the other of vertical and so pointed as needed at oneregion or another of the conveyor.
The vertical orientation of beacons can be along the axial plane of symmetry of the
cylindrical chamber and conveyor therein; or the beacons can be set off to either
side of that plane by the effect of a prism lens, and send skewed beams toward the
conveyor. The skewed beam does not define a figure of revolution and does not illuminate
the conveyor uniformally everywhere it strikes, but equal skewed beams from opposite
sides of that plane can balance each other and even provide combined illumination
that is uniform across the conveyor.
[0015] It is an object of the present invention to provide high power microwave apparatus
for continuously heating process material uniformly throughout even when the material
is spread over a relatively large surface.
[0016] It is another object to provide such apparatus wherein some of the difficulties and
problems of the past are avoided.
[0017] It is another object to provide apparatus for microwave heating and vacuum drying
wherein some of the.problems of prior apparatus of this sort are avoided.
[0018] It is a further object to provide microwave heating and drying apparatus wherein
problems of arcing are reduced or avoided.
[0019] It is another object to provide microwave heating and drying apparatus wherein the
problems of reflection into the source of microwave energy, cross-talk, uniform high
power continuous heating, inoization and arcing are reduced and/or avoided.
[0020] It is another object to provide a microwave lens for shaping and/or directing and
focusing a pattern of microwave energy launched into microwave heating apparatus.
[0021] It is a further object to provide improved microwave heating apparatus.
Description of the Drawings
[0022]
Figure 1 is a cross section of continuous process microwave heating and vacuum drying
apparatus for treating a process material;
Figure 2 shows the same apparatus in cross section taken longitudinally through the
apparatus;
Figures 3 and 4 show in detail the structure 6 for converting linearly polarized radiation
to circularly polarized radiation, and:
Figure 5 is a side cross section view of structure for providing a dielectric prism
lens adjacent to the outside of the chamber window for directing and/or shaping or
focusing the circularly polarized microwave radiation as a skewed beam .toward the
conveyor.
Figure 6 is the top view of the dielectric prism lens structure 8;
Figure 7 is the top view of the layers of dielectric showing construction of the prism
lens; and
Figures 8 and 9 are a side cross section view and top view of the layers of dielectric
for another lens configuration for forming a direct focused beam that is not skewed
as the beam formed by the lens shown by Figures 5, 6 and 7.
Description of An Embodiment of the Invention
[0023] Turning first to the Figures 1 and 2, there is shown a section of cylindrical microwave
chamber. The chamber is defined by the chamber wall 12 that is electrically conductive.
It is cylindrical in shape, because that shape is intrinsically strong and best able
to withstand the pressures produced on the chamber when it is evacuated as, for example,
in a microwave heating and vacuum drying process. Within the chamber is a conveyor
belt 21, a section of which is shown in the Figures, positioned substantially at the
center of the chamber and exterding longitudinally therethrough. The conveyor belt
carries the process material 22 usually distributed evenly along and across the belt.
[0024] Only a section of the complete chamber is shown in these Figures. It is the section
where the process material is illuninated by the high power directional microwave
beams to heat the material. There are well known structures and techniques for vacuum
sealing the ends of such a cylindrical chamber. for mounting and powering a conveyor
system within the chamber and for feeding the orocess material on-to and off-of the
conveyor belt. Also, there are many known techniques for sealing the chamber against
leakage of microwave energy from the chamber that could be hazardous and/or wasteful.
In as much as none of those techniques are the particular subject of the present invention,
they are not described herein.
[0025] Along the section of the cylindrical chamber disclosed in the drawings, all on the
same side of the conveyor belt 21, six beams of microwave energy are launched into
the chamber, each beam coming from a different beacon and directed to a specific area
of the belt (presuming the belt to be stationary for the moment). The spatial arrangement
of the beams is regular; they are uniformly spaced longitudinally along the belt in
pairs, each pair including the left beam and the right beam (as viewed in the direction
of the moving belt - Fig. 1). Thus, the arrangement of the beams along the chamber
is symmetrical about the plane defined by line 23 shown in Figure 1.
[0026] The microwave radiation contained within each beam is preferably of substantially
uniform intcnsity across the beam and is circularly polarized. Furthermore, where
the beams enter the cylindrical chamber, defined by walls 12, through an opening 13
in the chamber, the beam substantially completely fills that opening. As shown in
Figures 1 and 2, the beams are defined by broken lines and are denoted 24, 26 and
23 along the left side of the chamber 25, 27 and 29 along the right side of the chamber.
Each beam preferably overlaps the adjacent beams and so insures that along this microwave
heating section of the chamber substantially the whole area of the conveyor belt 21
is illuminated by the-beacons. Furthermore, by overlapping the beams, the tendency
is to compensate for the reduced intensity of radiation at the edges of the beams.
[0027] The uniform arrangement of equal beams is preferred. If unequal beams are used and/or
the beam spacing is not regular, particular heating effect chould be achieved; however
the problem becomes complicated. The particular embodiment described herein suggests
using equal beams 'all of the same intensity and size, uniformly spaced along the
chamber and overlapping where they illuminate the conveyor belt just enough to insure
complete illumination along and from side to side thereof in the microwave heating
section of the apparatus. Furthermore, each of the beams is from a different beacon
or source wherein the microwave energy is generated, converted to a linearly polarized
TE mode, then converted to circular polarization, spread, redirected and launched
into the chamber. The separate beacons or sources, denoted 34, 36 and 38 on the left
side and 35, 37 and 39 on the right (one for each beam), may be constructed substantially
identical to each other as a matter of convenience.
[0028] The process material is cdrried through the microwave heating section shown in Figures
1 and 2 on the conveyor belt and heated by the direct radiation of the beams. Thus,
the process material is primarily heated by the first pass of microwave energy from
the microwave sources and there is no primary dependance upon reflections of the microwave
energy within the chamber to direct it to the process material. Hence, there is no
need of microwave mcde stirrers within the chamber. In the preferred embodiment, each
beam is derived from a different beacon or source and there is no phase coherence
between the beams so, ag;tin, there is no need for mode stirrers within the chamber.
In the preferred embodiment there is no direct radiation from one beacon into another
beacon and since the beacon radiation is circularly polarized, a negligible amount
of radiation from a beacon that may reflect within the chamber will re-enter the beacon
it came from.
[0029] Thus, reentrant, cross-talk and moding problems that have occurrad with prior systems
are avoided.
Beacons
[0030] The beams 24 through 29 are produced by beacons or sources 34 through 39 respectively.
These beacons may be constructed substantially all the same and so only one of them,
beacon 34 is described in detail herein below.
[0031] The beacon generator consists of a microwave power source and polarization convertor
and a microwave beam forming assembly which includes a sealed transparent dielectric
window in the chamber and a dielectric lens. The microwave power source is magnet:ron
1. The coaxial output section 2 from the magnetron feeds a standard wave guide section
3, also called a launcher, that launches the microwave energy into the polarizing
and beam forming portions of the beacon generator.
[0032] The polarizing section of the beacon includes a quarter wave length transformer section
5 between the launcher 3 and the polarization converter 6. The converter 6 consists
of a square waveguide and means, denoted 7, within the square waveguide for converting
linearly polarized radiation from the launcher into circularly polarized radiation.
Thus, the microwave radiation flowing out of the convertor 6 is circularly polarized
and flows into the beam forming section of the beacon at the square top end of conical
wave guide coupling 8 that transforms to the conical shape at the bottom end thereof
and contains a dielectric lens 9 at the wide circular bottom end thereof. The lens
is immediately adjacent and above the dielectric window 10 that is larger diameter
than the lens and seals to holder 19 that, in turr, seals to cylindrical channel 11,
connected directly to an opering 13 in the wall of the chamber 12. Suitable flanges
at 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18 connect these various parts and sections together as shown
in the Figures. All of these flanges must provide contiguous conductive connections
between the parts to insure ideal operation without arcing or leakage of microwave
energy or mode transformation. In addition, flange 18 must seal against the vacuum
within the chamber when the equipment is used for vacuum drying and microwave heating
and, as mentioned above, the window must be sealed to its holder 19.
[0033] The curve 9a of the dielectric lens, the electrical thickness of the dielectric window
10 and the dimensions of the cylindrical chimney 11 are all designed to produce the
particular beam direction and shape that is desired. More particularly, it is - generally
desired that the beam 24 from beacon 34 be directed to uniformly illuminate an area
of the conveyor 21 that begins at the outside edge 21a of the conveyor and extends
across the conveyor past the center at 21b. Similarly, beacon 35 produces - the beam
25 that uniformly illuminates the conveyor from the opposite edge 21c somewhat past
the middle at 21b; and so at the middle, the two beams 24 and 25 overlap to some extent.
This insures complete illumination from side 21a to side 21b of the conveyor.
[0034] Beacon 35 can be constructed identical to beacon 34, but would be a mirror image
of it, as viewed in Figure 1. Thus, these beacons tend to produce beams directed radially
inward from the edge of the cylindrical chamber 12 toward the center of the chamber
and the subsequent pairs of beacons, 36 and 37 and 38 and 39 do the same. Clearly,
beacons 34, 36 and 38 can be constructed identical to each other and beacons 35, 37
and.39 can be constructed identical to each other and the even numbered beacons are
mirror images of the odd numbered beacons.
[0035] Figures 3 and 4 show details of construction of the polarization converter 6. It
consists of a square wave guide sertion 6a in which are mounted dielectric plates
7a and 7b contiguous to each other across a diagonal of the square. These plates are
longitudinally staggered along the length of the square wave guide. They are the same
length, (L1 plus L2) and one is staggered ahead of the other by the dimensions L2.
L1 is of such a length that:

where

and m is greater than n.
[0036] The dielectric prism lens 9 may be constructed as illustrated by Figures 5, 6 and
7. The experimentally shaped curve 9a of this lens is established by a stack of dielectric
plages 9a to 9j, shown in the side cross section view by Figures 5 and a plan view
by Figures 7. The purpose of the dielectric lens in the beacon is to form and direct
the beam launched from the conical wave guide 8, skewed toward the center of the chamber.
[0037] This prism lens structure is clearly not a figure of revolution about the beacon
axis 30. It is symmetrical with . respect to the plane through the beacon axis, perpendicular
to the chamber axis. The thickness of this lens varies around the edge or periphery
of the stack. Thus, it is generally prism- shaped. It is thicker at the inside edge
toward the chamber plane of symmetry 23, than at its edge away from plane 23. The
effect of this lens is to form or focus the beam so that it is directional and direct
it to one side of the beacon axis 30, toward the center 21b of the conveyor in the
chamber.
[0038] The dielectric lens is immediately adjacent dielectric window 10. The thickness D
10 of the window is one half wave length of the microwave radiation in the dielectric
material of which tte window is made. Hence, D
10 is expressed as follows:

where K = relative dielectric permiability of the material The conical wave guide
connects to the dielectric window by flange 17 and the window connects to the cylindrical
chimney 11 by flange 18. At flange 18 the window seals to the chimney by an 0-ring
gasket vacuum seal 20 and so the interior of the chamber is vacuum sealed from the
exterior ambient and is also sealed from the beacon structure.
[0039] Between the flanges 17 and 18, completely enclosing the dielectric window, the holder
19 provides electrical continuity between the wide end of the conical wave guide and
the cylindrical chimney 11.- Thus,.microwave currents conducted by the conical wave
guide 8, holder 19 and chimney 11 bound the propagating fields of the microwave energy
that flows into the cylindrical treatment chamber 12, and is launched as the beam
24. By this construction, the beam of microwave radiation is substartially all in
a single TE mode, circularly polarized and fully blankets the dielectric window. As
a consequence of these conditions; the instantaneous peak value of the microwave electric
field at the dielectric window on the vacuum side (the chamber side) is maintained
low. It is maintained sufficiently low that is does not cause ionization of the gas
inside the chamber even at the low operating pressures desirable for vacuum drying.
[0040] Another dielectric lens structure is shown by Figures 8 and 9. This structure is
symmetrical with respect to all planes through the beacon axis 30. It defines a figure
of revolution about the axis 30 and so the axis of the pattern of radiation that defines
the beam issuing from this lens is a continuation of the axis 30. This lens is spherical
and has no prism. Using this lens to direct the beam toward the center of the conveyor
may require that the beacon be located or oriented with its axis toward the center
of the conveyor and so the beacon axis would be substantially axial with respect to
the cylindrical chamber in which the center of the conveyor is at the center of the
chamber cylinder.
[0041] Beacons each with a lens constructed as in Figures 8 and 9 are preferably all in
line along the cylindrical chamber directly above the conveyor and so all such beacons
would have the beacon axis in the symmetrical plane 23 of the cylindrical chamber.
This lens is made up of a stack of dielectric plates 31a,.b, c and d each being ring-shaped.
The outer peripheries of these plates are all about the same and their inner peripheries
are successively larger and so the stack defines the dielectric lens curve 32 and
focuses the radiation into a rather narrow highly directional beam directed along
the beacon axis 30.
[0042] The embodiment of the invention described hereinabove includes and incoroorates all
of the features of the invention and this embodiment is capable of microwave heating
of materials in a continuous process, while, at the same time, (or at least in the
same chamber), exposing the materials to a low pressure for vacuum drying. Thus, the
apparatus is suitable for microwave heating and vacuum drying and many of t.he features
of construction provide an advantage for both heating by microwave and vacuum drying.
However, it should be kept in mind that some of these features can be applied in other
equipments intended onlv for microwave heating and in processes that are not continuous,
all without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the
appended claims.
Claim 1. Microwave heating apparatus for heating a subject material in a process comprising,
(a) a microwave energy enclosure containing the subject material,
(b) a source of circularly polarized microwave energy, and
(c) means for launching said circularly polarized microwave energy into the enclosure
as a directional beam directed to illuminate the subject material.
Claim 2. Apparatus as in Claim 1 wherein there are a plurality of said beams of circularly
polarized radiation launched into the enclosure, all as directional beams and all
directly illuminating the subject material.
Claim 3. Apparatus as in Claim 2 wherein, a separate source of circularly polarized
microwave energy is provided for each of said beams.
Claim 4. Apparatus as in Claim 3 wherein, for each beam a separate means for launching
circularly polarized microwave energy into the enclosure is provided.
Claim 5. Apparatus as in Claim 4 wherein, said plurality of beams overlap where they
illuminate the subject material.
Claim 6. Apparatus as in Claim 5 wherein, said separate means for launching said'beams
are uniformly space from each other on the inside wall of the enclosure
Claim 7. Apparatus as in Claim 1, wherein,
(a) said means for launching includes a window in the wall of said enclosurectransparent
to said microwave energy and
(b) said circularly polarized microwave energy is transmitted through said window
as a substantially single TE mode.
Claim 8. Apparatus as in Claim 7 wherein, the intensity of said microwave energy transmitted
through said window is substantially uniform over the whole area of the window.
Claim 9. Apparatus as in Claim 8 wherein, said microwave energy launched through said
window is circularly polarized and highly directional.
Claim 10. Apparatus as in Claim 9 wherein, the window is of uniform thickness throughout
and is circular as viewed perpendicular to the plane of the window.
Claim 11. Apparatus as in Claim 1 wherein, a plurality of such beams are so launched
and directed into the enclosure to illuminate the subject material and said plurality
of beams overlap where they illuminate the subject material.
Claim 12. Apparatus as in Claim 1 wherein,
(a) a material conveyor is provided in the enclosure,
(b) the material is carried in the enclosure on the conveyor, and
(c) the conveyor carries the material through the beam.
Claim 13. Apparatus as in Claim 12 wherein, a plurality of such beams are so launched
and directed into the enclosure to illuminate the subject material and said plurality
of beams overlap where they illuminate the subject material.
Claim 14. Apparatus as in Claim 3 wherein,
(a) the enclosure defines an elongated space,
(b) the conveyor moves the material from one end to the other end longitudinally through
said elongated space and
(c) the beam illuminates at least a portion of the conveyor,
(d) whereby substanitally all material carried by the conveyor is illuminated by the
beam.
Claim 15. Apparatus as in Claim 14 wherein a plurality of such beams are so launched
and directed.into the enclosure to illuminate the subject material and said plurality
of beams overlap where they illuminate the subject material.
Claim 16. Apparatus as in Claim 15 wherein, said separate means for launching said
beams are uniformly spaced from each other on the inside wall of the enclosure.
Claim 17. Apparatus as in Claim 16 wherein,
(a) said means for launching includes a window in the wall of said enclosure transparent
to said microwave energy and
(b) said circularly polarized microwave energy is transmitted through said window
in a substantially single TE mode.
Claim 18. Apparatus as in Claim 17 wherein, the intensity of said microwave energy
transmitted through said window is substantially uniform over the whole area of the
window.
Claim 19. Apparatus as in Claim 18 wherein, said microwave energy launched through
said window is circularly polarized and highly directional.
Claim 20. Apparatus as in Claim 19 wherein, the window is of uniform thickness throughout
and is circular as viewed perpendicular to the plane of the window.
Claim 21. Apparatus as in Claim 1 wherein a dielectric lens situated in the path of
the beam near the region of entry of the beam into the enclosure is provided for modifying
the beam.
Claim 22. Apparatus as in Claim 21 wherein the lens modifies the beam pattern.
Claim 23. Apparatus as in Claim 21 wherein the lens modifies the beam direction.
Claim 24. In microwave heating apparatus for heating a subject material in a process
wherein a microwave energy enclosure contains the subject material and microwave energy
is launched into the enclosure as a directional beam, the improvement comprising,
(a) a microwave radiation lens that intercepts the energy before it illuminates the
subject material and focuse the energy toward the subject material as a beam,
(b) the lens including a body of dielectric material that varies in its dimension
in the beam direction across the body transverse to the beam direction.
Claim 25. Apparatus as in Claim 24 wherein said body dimension is thickness and is
greatest at an edge of the body, the edge being at the outer periphery thereof.
Claim 26. Apparatus as in Claim 25 wherein the thickness is less at the geometric
center of the dielectric body than at an edge thereof.
Claim 27. Apparatus as in Claim 25 wherein the thickness is less at another edge than
at the geometric center thereof.
Claim 28. Apparatus as in Claim 24 wherein the dielectric body is comprised of a plurality
of individual layers of dielectric material of different peripheral dimensions, stacked
up, one upon another.
Claim 29. Apparatus as in Claim 24 wherein the thickness is less at the geometric
center of the dielectric body than at any place along the periphery thereof.
Claim 30. Apparatus as in Claim 29 wherein the dielectric body is comprised of a plurality
of individual layers of dielectric material, stacked up, one upon another, the direction
of the stack being substantially parallel to the direction of the microwave energy
intercepted by the lens and at least some of the layers are ring shaped.