1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is related to a elongated microwave powered lamp, generally described as an electrodeless lamp wherein a plasma material is excited by radio frequencies, namely in the microwave frequency range, to emit light.
2. Description of the Prior Art
This kind of electrodeless lamp is generally known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,013,976 A, U.S. Pat. No. 4,189,661 A and U.S. Pat. No. 4,266,167 A.
A lamp of this kind was described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,586,115 A (Zimmerman et al.), wherein a lighting system includes tubular transparent enclosures filled with a radiation responsive fluorescent material on its interior wall surface, and containing a gas responsive to radio frequency electromagnetic radiation to activate said fluorescent material. Generating means for generating radio frequency electromagnetic energy were provided, transmitting said radio frequency electromagnetic energy through coaxial cables connected to a single coaxial antenna of said generating means for each of said enclosures.
U.S. Pat. No. 7,095,163 B2 (Longo) is referred to a lamp without electrodes comprising one bulb having inside a material capable of being excited by means of microwaves irradiation, a recess formed in walls of the bulbs, accessible from the outside and a source of microwaves radiation inserted into said recess, namely one or two antennas energized by an antenna lead connected to means for exciting the microwave source.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,731,074 B2 (Suzuki) discloses an electrodeless lamp equipment comprising a microwave-generating source and a microwave chamber receiving the microwaves from antennas energized through appropriate and respective waveguides connecting the generating source and an antenna end. Said antennas are located at the ends of an elongated bulb to better extend the lighting power along the whole bulb.
It should be noted that, in the last examples of prior art, the multiple antennas do not cooperate to with each other along the whole length of an elongated bulb, to obtain the best possible interaction between antennas and the plasma material inside the bulb, whereas the use of a single antenna for an elongated lamp would be simpler.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,216,322 A and U.S. Pat. No. 5,114,372 A disclose a method for producing a gas discharge light source for emitting an electromagnetic radiation using includes a gas discharge tube filled with at least one discharge gas material and having a device for generating a gas discharge.
The latter device (FIG. 4 of both documents) includes a tubular metallic waveguide having a predetermined diameter D and therefore apt to transport microwaves having wavelength smaller than 1.706 D. Slits are formed along the metallic tube for allowing microwaves to leak toward a discharge tube; again there must be a narrow relationship between the shape of the slits and the microwave wavelength for allowing the radiation to leak outside the waveguide.
It is apparent that such an arrangement can hardly be used as a lamp, wherein different bulbs and different microwave wavelengths may be used with the same source and the same microwave tubular waveguide. Also, it cannot implement bulbs with variable curvature, without breaking the bulb during the insertion of the rigid tube.
The technical problems underlying the present invention is to provide a microwave energized lamp allowing to obviate to the drawbacks mentioned with reference to the prior art.
Such problem is solved by a elongated microwave powered lamp including:
According to the invention, the microwaves from a single antenna leak outside the outer conductor through said spaced holes, allowing to distribute the microwave power along a bulb with a greater length, or along a series of bulbs forming a continuous bulb profile.
This kind of lamp may be arranged for the production of a visible, UV, or IR, pulsed or continuous radiation, within either a spectral or wide band wavelength range, especially with high lighting or heating powers in a safe and reliable way, without losing the compactness and the efficiency of the microwaves lamps directly excited by a microwave antenna, just varying power and wavelength of the generated microwaves then transmitted through said coaxial antenna.
In the drawings and for all the embodiments herein described, a microwave energized lamp is generally indicated as 1. It comprises at least an elongated bulb 2 defined by a continuous external thick wall, of a material substantially transparent to the visible, UV, IR radiation, and to the MW radiation as well, e.g. glass, possibly a heat resistant glass suitable for lamp bulbs.
The elongated bulb 2 defines a closed chamber containing a microwaves irradiation excitable material, which may be a gas, a vapour, a dust, or a liquid, capable of emitting radiation by activation with other electromagnetic radiation and/or owing to hits between neutral or ionized particles (plasma atoms or molecules). The material can be put in with either a certain rate of vacuum or at a pressure higher than the atmospheric. A mixture of gases or vapors, or only a single atomic or molecular species can be used.
In general terms, the bulb 2 may have any shape, e.g. a tubular shape comprising two opposite bulb ends 21, 22. In the embodiment of
This kind of coaxial antenna is substantially obtained from a coaxial cable having an inner wire conductor forming the core of the cable, an outer tubular conductor surrounding the inner wire conductor, a tubular insulator layer made of a dielectric material placed between the inner wire conductor and the outer tubular conductor to electrically separate them. Conventionally, this kind of antenna is flexible and it can be bent or curved.
The antenna lead 91 is instead embodied by a section of coaxial cable connected to said microwave source, comprising both the inner and the outer conductors.
The coaxial antenna, could have in principle any length to cope with different shapes and lengths of the bulb 2. It is noted that, in all the embodiments of the invention, the coaxial antenna is placed outside the bulb 2, i.e. in an outer space with respect to the bulb 2.
It should be noted that the coaxial antenna 5 may have any length and any kind of linear shape. For the sake of clarity, the coaxial antenna 5 of
Further, the coaxial antenna 5 has a length and a shape to be placed in a close relationship with said bulb 2, but being placed in any case outside the bulb itself, to allow the microwave excitation of the plasma material.
According to the invention, the coaxial antenna 5 is provided with spaced holes 6 formed through its outer tubular conductor along the length thereof, from which the microwaves are generated. In this connection, said holes 6 are faced to the bulb 2.
The holes 6 can be arranged in any shape and/or disposition. In particular, the holes 6 may be circular ports or annular apertures, to radially irradiate microwaves from the coaxial antenna.
With reference to
In particular, a regular distribution may serve to uniformly distribute a microwave power alon a long distance coaxial antenna. Otherwise, the holes may be spaced and possibly concentrated to reach the best irradiation efficiency for the bulb or bulbs.
It is apparent that this kind of arrangement allows lengthening the bulb, so as to obtain a very elongated lamp 1.
With reference to
In this embodiment, the coaxial antenna 5 is inserted inside the open channel 4, possibly with spacers (not shown) arranged so as to leave a toroidal channel between the bulb walls and the coaxial antenna 5. In particular, the coaxial antenna 5 is inserted through one of the open channel end apertures 41. In this preferred embodiment, the open channel 4 is coaxial to the elongated tubular bulb 2, achieving with the coaxial antenna 5 a symmetrical arrangement around the longitudinal axis.
The coaxial antenna 5 of the present embodiment has annular holes 6, spaced at regular intervals along the open channel 4, so as to irradiate the bulb 2 from the inner core thereof in a uniform manner. It is intended that the distribution of the holes may not be uniform for special purposes.
According to the embodiment of
Again, the coaxial antenna 5 is inserted inside the open channel 4, possibly with spacers (not shown) arranged so as to leave a toroidal channel between the bulb walls and the coaxial antenna 5. In particular, the antenna 5 is inserted through one of the open channel end apertures 41 at a side bulb 2. In this preferred embodiment, the open channel 4 is coaxial to the elongated tubular bulb 2, achieving with the the coaxial antenna 5 a symmetrical arrangement around the longitudinal axis.
The coaxial antenna 5 of the present embodiment has annular holes 6 through the outer tubular conductor thereof, spaced at predetermined intervals along the open channel 4, so as to irradiate the bulb 2 from the inner core thereof in a uniform manner. It is intended that the distribution of the holes may not be uniform for special purposes.
It is also intended that the bulbs 2 may have different lighting characteristics, e.g. different colours, shapes, lengths.
With reference of
In this embodiment, the coaxial antenna 5 has circular holes at the same side of the antenna 5 facing the bulbs 2. The holes 6 can be either spaced with regular intervals to uniformly irradiate the bulbs along the succession, or distributed according to special patterns, adapted to the bulb features.
With reference of
The lamp is capable of emitting radiation with a line spectrum, a band spectrum or mixed spectrum, in a wide range of wavelengths. It works without any electrodes in contact with the particles that emit the radiation, in a continuous or pulsed way. The spectral composition of the radiation as emitted depends from the substances used for filling the bulb, their quantity ratio, as well as the power and the frequency of the microwaves used for excitation.
To the above described microwave powered lamps a man skilled in the art, in order to meet specific requirements and contingencies, may bring further modifications, all falling within the scope of protection of the present invention, as defined by the annexed claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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RM2013A0162 | Mar 2013 | IT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2014/059816 | 3/14/2014 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2014/141186 | 9/18/2014 | WO | A |
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2488169 | Browner | Nov 1949 | A |
4178534 | McNeill | Dec 1979 | A |
4189661 | Haugsjaa et al. | Feb 1980 | A |
4266167 | Proud et al. | May 1981 | A |
4586115 | Zimmerman | Apr 1986 | A |
4643186 | Rosen | Feb 1987 | A |
5013976 | Butler | May 1991 | A |
5114372 | Fuchs | May 1992 | A |
5216322 | Fuchs | Jun 1993 | A |
6731074 | Suzuki | May 2004 | B2 |
6863773 | Emmerich | Mar 2005 | B1 |
7095163 | Longo | Aug 2006 | B2 |
8328799 | Brannan | Dec 2012 | B2 |
20080245976 | Eastlund | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20140038431 | Stowell | Feb 2014 | A1 |
Entry |
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Ferrari, et al.: “A Novel Microwave Photochemical Reactor for the Oxidative Decomposition of Acid Orange 7 Azo Dye by MW/UV/H2O2 Process”; Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology, A: Chemistry, vol. 204, No. 2-3, May 20, 2009, pp. 115-121, Abtract only. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20160005589 A1 | Jan 2016 | US |