This invention relates to electrodeless high intensity discharge (EHID) lamps and more particularly to field applicators for such lamps.
Electrodeless high intensity discharge (EHID) lamps, in general, include an electrodeless discharge vessel containing a volatilizable fill material and a starting gas. The discharge vessel is mounted in a reflectorized fixture which is designed for coupling high frequency power to the discharge vessel. The high frequency produces a light-emitting plasma discharge within the discharge vessel. The applied electric field is generally colinear with the axis of the lamp capsule and produces a substantially linear discharge within the discharge vessel. The fixture for coupling high frequency energy to the discharge vessel typically includes a planar transmission line, such as a microstrip transmission line, with electric field applicators, such as helices, cups or loops, positioned at opposite ends of the discharge vessel. The microstrip transmission line couples high frequency power to the electric field applicators with a 180° phase shift. The discharge vessel is typically positioned in a gap in the substrate of the microstrip transmission line and is spaced above the plane of the substrate by a few millimeters, so the axis of the discharge vessel is colinear with the axes of the field applicators.
The electric field applicators used to deliver radio frequency (RF), or more particularly ultra-high frequency (UHF), power to the discharge vessel are separate units which for certain applications must be incorporated within the reflector used for harvesting the light from the EHID lamp. External tuning elements or elements embedding into the applicator must be used to deliver power to the lamp during all phases of glow-to-arc transition and plasma impedance swings. Openings need to be created in the reflector to accomodate the applicators thereby reducing the amount of reflective surface and the efficiency of the reflector to gather light, and in some cases weakening the physical integrity of the reflector. Applicators within the reflector volume also cause shadowing effects which are particularly acute in low-wattage EHID lamps where the size of the applicators is increased in proportion to the size of the discharge vessels.
It is an object of the present invention to obviate the disadvantages of the prior art.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an EHID lamp that has an integrated field applicator which provides for optical control of the emitted light in addition to applying RF power to the discharge vessel.
In accordance with an object of the invention, there is provided an EHID lamp, comprising a field applicator, a means for coupling RF power to the field applicator, and a discharge vessel; the discharge vessel being disposed within the field applicator and containing a discharge medium; the field applicator being comprised of a solid, transparent or translucent dielectric material and having an optical control surface and a conductive coating that substantially covers its external surfaces.
In accordance with one embodiment of the invention, the field applicator is rotationally symmetric and has a front face and a curved surface, the front face has a transparent conductive coating, the curved surface has a reflective coating that forms an optical reflector having a focal point, and the discharge vessel is located at the focal point.
In accordance with a second embodiment of the invention, the field applicator is cylindrical and has a central axis, an internal cavity, a base, a front face, and a transparent window, the discharge vessel is formed in the front face and sealed by the transparent window, the internal cavity extends from an open end in the base to a closed end below the discharge vessel and has a conductive coating, and the discharge vessel and the internal cavity are coaxial with the central axis.
For a better understanding of the present invention, together with other and further objects, advantages and capabilities thereof, reference is made to the following disclosure and appended claims taken in conjunction with the above-described drawings.
The EHID lamp of this invention combines functions served by otherwise individual components and thus has the potential for reducing parts count, improving RF coupling to the plasma, reducing shadowing (which causes dark fields in the projected images), and improving reliability. In particular, the optical function of the reflector is integrated with the field applicator so that the field applicator not only brings RF power to the discharge vessel but it also has optical control surfaces for directing the light emitted from the discharge vessel. In addition, because the discharge vessel is contained within a substantial mass of dielectric material, there is the potential for improved thermal transfer from the discharge chamber walls to the exterior environment which may permit operating the plasma at higher energy densities.
The impedance match in the EHID lamp can be achieved in several ways. In the case of the resonant cavity structures described herein, the position and geometry of the power coupling probe or loop (electrical vs. magnetic coupling) can be designed to provide critical coupling so that the impedance is matched for a specific excitation frequency and/or condition (warm-up, steady-state, etc.). Additionally, the resonator can be utilized as a tuning element in the power source oscillator such that the operating frequency is determined by the frequency at which critical coupling is achieved. In this way the impedance match and power transfer is well behaved during run-up and steady-state. The resonator can be further designed so the unloaded “Q”, viz. with the plama off, is very high which supports ignition of the gas within the discharge chamber. When the plasma is on, loaded “Q” is reduced due to the presence of the dissipative plasma.
Referring to
The tuning element 9 forms the center conductor of a dielectrically loaded re-entrant coaxial resonator (TEM mode). The resonant frequency is determined by the metalized boundary, the dielectric loading and the effective capacitance that loads the gap between the center conductor and the outer wall of the applicator in which the discharge vessel is contained. The tuning element, or slug, may be made from metal, metalized ceramic or cermet and adjusted in length and position within the bore 14 to provide best operation for individual lamps. The impedance match will depend on the choice of chemical filling and the amount of mercury in the lamp since these determine the local electrical properties of the plasma (resistive and reactive parts).
The curved outer surface 12 of the dielectric applicator 16 is coated to provide an optically reflective surface and a boundary for the contained electromagnetic fields. This coating must be optically reflective and electrically conductive to establish the boundary conditions for the RF resonator. The coating can be a simple metallic coating such as silver, aluminium, rhodium or other highly reflective metals. The coating may also be a multi-layer dielectric coating to provide even a higher optical reflectance. In this case, the dielectric coating would be overcoated with a metal such as copper, aluminum, silver or gold. Discharge vessel 4 is positioned near the focal point of the optical reflector (e.g., an elliptical or parabolic reflector) formed by the metalized outer surface 12 so that the emitted light may be gathered and directed out the front face 10 of the lamp as show by arrows 11. The front face 10 is coated with a transparent conductor, such an indium-tin-oxide (ITO) coating, to reduce electromagnetic interference (EMI). The conductive coatings on the front face 10 and the curved outer surface 12 combine to substantially cover the external surfaces of the field applicator. The bore 14 also may have a conductive coating except in the region where the discharge vessel 4 is located.
The lamp 2 is probed to find the appropriate mode to excite the contents of the discharge vessel 4. RF power at the appropriate frequency is used to excite the fill within the cavity to luminescence. The resonant frequency is determined by the dimensions, the dielectric constant of the material and the capacitance of the gap. (similar to a foreshortened coaxial resonator/reentrant cavity resonator operating in TEM mode, See, e.g., T. Koryu Ishii, (1995) Handbook of Microwave Technology: Components & Devices, Academic Press, Inc., p. 68.) Determination of resonant frequency can be accomplished by measuring the input impedance of the structure using a network analyzer, or other similar measurement methods.
RF power source 8 is coupled to the dielectric applicator 16 through coaxial connector 6 and coupling loop 20 which is embedded in the dielectric material. The coaxial connector 6 has a grounded shield that is electrically connected to the metalized outer surface 12, the transparent conductor coated on the front face 10, and the conductive coating in the bore 14, if present. A coupling loop is shown which couples to the magnetic field (
As shown with greater magnification in
The matching network may be printed on solid dielectric, or shaped into a cone or series of fingers or other geometric conducting structures having a complex impedance at operating frequency. The impedance may include capacitive and inductive reactance parts. In the simplest case the tuning is accomplished via tuning element 9, the operating frequency, and the geometry and position of the coupling probe or loop. The resonant structure is used as part of the power source (oscillator) to determine the frequency so that the impedance is always matched. Alternatively a fixed frequency operation with a separate matching network electrically connected to the coaxial connector transition can be implemented.
A second embodiment of the present invention is shown in
A third embodiment of an EHID lamp 50 according to the present invention is shown in
The discharge chamber 54 is sealed with flat, transparent window 55, preferably comprised of sapphire, that has been coated with a transparent conductor such as ITO and is electrically connected to the metalized surfaces and the ground shield of coaxial connector 52. In combination, the discharge chamber 54 and transparent window 55 form a discharge vessel that can be filled with a discharge medium. Power is coupled into the lamp by coaxial connector 52 and probe 53 which is embedded in the dielectric material and electrically connected to the center conductor of coaxial conductor 52. The metalized dielectric applicator 56 forms a coaxial resonator with the discharge chamber 54 located in the vicinity of field maxima. More particularly, a dielectrically loaded coaxial transmission line is formed which is short-circuited at one end and terminated in the discharge vessel at the other end. The resonant frequency is determined by the electrical length of the transmission line and the impedance presented by the discharge vessel.
Preferably, the entire dielectric applicator 56 is comprised of polycrystalline alumina. However, in a first alternate embodiment shown in
With regard to
While there have been shown and described what are at present considered to be the preferred embodiments of the invention, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be made herein without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/160,094, filed Mar. 13, 2009 and PCT Application No. PCT/US2010/026776 filed Mar. 10, 2010, the entire contents of both of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2010/026776 | 3/10/2010 | WO | 00 | 8/1/2011 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/104919 | 9/16/2010 | WO | A |
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WO 2009063205 | May 2009 | WO |
Entry |
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International Search Report for PCT/US2010/026776, completed on Oct. 22, 2010 and mailed on Oct. 22, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120217871 A1 | Aug 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61160094 | Mar 2009 | US |