Reference is made to application with docket no. 2003P08148DE filed in parallel, which provides a more detailed description of processes for producing a lamp with a getter strip.
The invention relates to an electric lamp with outer bulb and with an inner vessel, in particular a discharge vessel, arranged therein, a getter material being held on a support body inside the outer bulb. It deals in particular with discharge lamps, such as metal halide lamps, but also with incandescent halogen lamps.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,825,127 has disclosed a process for producing a cap strip for discharge lamps, in which the cap strip is a support strip comprising a material which is to be introduced into the lamp, in particular mercury and/or getter material as a coating. The only application area envisaged for cap strips of this type in that document is as the discharge vessel of a low-pressure mercury lamp. In this case, the cap strip is often secured in the vicinity of an electrode, cf. in this respect also U.S. Pat. No. 6,043,603. A support strip with getter is also referred to as a getter strip.
An example of an incandescent halogen lamp with a getter in the outer bulb is to be found in CA-A 1,310,058.
Getters are usually used on a disk as a base in the outer bulbs of high-pressure discharge lamps in order to absorb impurities. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,327,042 uses a Zr getter on an iron sheet base which is securely welded to the frame. In the case of discharge vessels which are closed on two sides in an outer bulb which is closed on two sides, getters are usually secured in the pinch of the outer bulb using a piece of wire or at the outer supply conductor or at a sheet-metal shell placed around the pinch of the discharge vessel, cf. in this respect Technisch wissenschaftliche Abhandlungen der OSRAM-Gesellschaft, Vol. 12, Springer-Verlag, Berlin 1986, pp. 11 to 14.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an electric lamp with outer bulb and with an inner vessel, in particular a discharge vessel, arranged therein, a getter material being held on a support body inside the outer bulb which lamp allows simple, inexpensive and space-saving securing of a getter in the outer bulb. A further object is to provide a support body which is particularly well adapted and in particular is especially suited for this purpose.
This object is achieved by the feature that the support body is a support strip to which the getter material is applied, the support strip being curved in such a way that it is automatically held in the outer bulb without the need for any auxiliary means. Particularly advantageous configurations are to be found in the dependent claims.
The electric lamp according to the invention has an outer bulb and an inner vessel which is arranged therein and is closed off in a vacuum-tight manner, generally a discharge vessel. It is usually held in the outer bulb by means of a frame. However, the lamp may also be an incandescent halogen lamp with an outer bulb. A getter material is held on a support body in the outer bulb, the support body being a support strip to which the getter material is applied as a layer, as is known per se from U.S. Pat. No. 5,825,127. According to the invention, however, the support strip itself is used directly as a holding mechanism, with the support strip being bent in such a way that it is automatically held in the outer bulb without the need for any auxiliary means.
The invention may be realized in various ways; in one embodiment, the support strip consists of flexible material. In this case, a simple holding mechanism can be produced by the discharge vessel having at least one pinch, with the support strip being wrapped around at least part of the pinch. If the inner vessel, which is generally a discharge vessel, has at least one fused seal, the support strip is wrapped around at least part of the fused seal.
In a second embodiment, the support strip consists of elastic, resilient material, in particular of spring steel. With this condition, it is possible for the support strip to be held on the inner surface of the outer bulb by spring forces alone.
Reliable holding is achieved if the support strip is clamped into notches in the inner surface of the outer bulb.
One alternative is for the support strip to be bent in such a way that it has at least three bearing points against the inner surface of the outer bulb.
A further embodiment requires the support strip to be perforated and to be secured to the discharge vessel in a clamping fashion by bending at the perforated locations. In this case, of course, the support strip may additionally be resilient or at least flexible.
Particularly secure holding of the support strip in the outer bulb is achieved by virtue of the outer bulb being provided with a bulge which assists with secure holding of the support strip.
A particularly preferred embodiment, in which the advantages of the novel concept manifest themselves particularly clearly, is an arrangement in which the discharge vessel is closed off by sealing parts at opposite ends, with the outer bulb only partially surrounding the discharge vessel and ending in the region of the sealing parts at the latest.
One typical application is metal halide lamps and incandescent halogen lamps.
The invention is to be explained in more detail below with reference to a plurality of exemplary embodiments, in which:
One possible form of production is described, for example, in US 2002/063 529, US 2002/067 115 or U.S. Pat. No. 5,128,589. A variant with a complete outer bulb is indicated, for example, in CA 2 042 143. The concept of the invention can be used for all these designs.
A further production method is described below with reference to
Instead of an indentation 15 as an inwardly facing bulge as the lateral boundary, it is also possible to use an outwardly facing bulge (52) in which the support strip is guided on account of the two-part lateral delimitation, cf.
A similar concept can also be used for a lamp with a fused seal 28.
Another concept is shown in
A second variant shown in
A further embodiment uses a perforated support strip 41 for securing to the discharge vessel 42, so that the bends in the support strip can be better matched to the shape of the H-shaped pinch 21.
The stamped holes have the advantage that they can be formed over a greater proportion of the width of the metal sheet than the slots. On the other hand, the slots, the length of which is greater than the width of the getter-containing ribbon 49, have the advantage that it is impossible for any getter material, for example zirconium oxide, to flake off or crumble away when the metal sheet is being bent.
Of course, this technique can also be used for discharge vessels which are closed on one side, in particular pinched. This may be accommodated in an outer bulb which is closed on one side. Accordingly, the technique can also be used for a discharge vessel which is closed on two sides in an outer bulb closed on one side.
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103 25 552 | Jun 2003 | DE | national |
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