The present invention is directed generally to high intensity light sources and more particularly to plasma light sources for use in applications such as projection systems based on reflective microdisplays.
There is a continuing need for long-lived, efficient, compact, and high intensity white light sources for applications such as projection-based televisions and computer monitors as well as movie screen projectors. The various kinds of light sources which have been used previously include arc lamps and plasma lamps. Although an arc lamp produces an intense light by maintaining an electric arc between two electrodes, arc lamps have not tended to be long-lived for at least two reasons. First, the electrodes between which the arc is formed inevitably deteriorate and erode during the operation of the arc lamp, and ultimately this erosion leads to lamp failure. Second, arc lamps conventionally employ an envelope or bulb made from a transparent material in order to contain the gas fill of the lamp. Quartz has conventionally been used for such bulbs or gas envelopes.
Quartz bulbs, however, have several disadvantages. Because quartz devitrifies or recrystalizes at elevated temperatures, quartz bulbs do not endure well the high temperatures and repeated heatings inherent in lamp operation, and they tend to eventually discolor or crack causing lamp failure and limiting the useful life span of the lamp. In addition, because quartz has a low thermal conductivity, the use of the quartz bulb limits the maximum operating temperature of the lamp, and, therefore, the maximum obtainable brightness. Furthermore, quartz is partially permeable so that gas tends to slowly diffuse out of the bulb envelope. Ultimately, this diffusion causes the lamp to fail.
Unlike arc lamps, plasma lamps do not rely on electrodes, but rather produce light by creating a plasma discharge in a gas contained in a bulb by exposing the lamp gas to intense radio wave or radio frequency radiation. (As used herein, the phrase “radio wave radiation”, as well as the acronym “RF”, is intended to encompass electromagnetic radiation frequencies in either the conventional radio frequency range or in the conventional microwave frequency range.) Although there are no electrodes to fail in the case of a plasma lamp, the transparent bulb that is conventionally used to contain the gas is also typically made of quartz and has the same disadvantages discussed above in connection with the arc lamp because of the high operating temperatures involved.
In order to mitigate the bulb failure problem, various mechanical cooling arrangements have been developed to rotate the bulb and to propel cooling air onto its outer surface during lamp operation. However, such mechanical arrangements are complex, expensive, and occupy space which is often a scarce resource in the intended application for the lamp. In addition, the presence of these mechanical arrangements compromises the ability to collect the light generated by the lamp, thereby reducing efficiency.
Plasma lamps also conventionally require a separate mechanism to couple the radio wave radiation generated by the radiation source to the bulb filled with the plasma discharge-forming medium. The need for such a separate coupling mechanism is another problem with the plasma lamp because inefficiency of the coupling correspondingly constrains the overall efficiency of the plasma lamp. One conventional approach to such coupling is to mount the bulb near a separate air-filled RF structure, such as a waveguide, that receives the radio wave radiation from the radiation source and transmits the radiation to the bulb. In practice this approach may lead to a power loss as high as 60% because of coupling inefficiencies. In addition, the resulting structure is not physically compact because the RF structure is separate from the bulb.
Alternatively, it is known to mount the quartz bulb inside a separate structure and to place coils near to the bulb in order to inductively transfer radio wave radiation energy to the gas in the bulb. Again, however, the resulting structure lacks integration and compactness because the RF structure is separate from the bulb.
It is desirable to provide improved light sources that avoid these and other problems with known light sources, and it is to these ends that the present invention is directed.
According to one aspect of the invention, a plasma lamp is provided that comprises a gas housing containing a plasma discharge forming medium, and a source of radio frequency energy coupled to the plasma discharge medium. The gas housing is constructed from ceramic material and has a window transparent to visible light.
In more specific aspects, the window may be a sapphire window. The invention greatly extends the operating life expectancy of the plasma lamp as compared with the prior art lamps which use quartz because the problems of quartz devitrification at high temperature and quartz gas permeability are eliminated.
According to another aspect of the present invention, the RF structure used for the radio wave radiation and the envelope used to house the gas fill are formed so as to constitute a single, integrated ceramic structure.
According to another aspect of the present invention, solid material such as ceramic rather than air is used for the dielectric and the gas fill is contained by a combination of solid ceramic and a sapphire window. In this way the separate gas envelope and air-filled waveguide structure employed in the prior art are replaced by a single, integrated structure.
Because the integration of the RF structure and the gas envelope permits the quartz bulb to be done away with entirely, plasma lamps according to the present invention enjoy an unprecedented operating life expectancy as compared with the prior art. This is so in part because the problems associated with the inability of the quartz bulb to withstand heatings are eliminated.
In addition, the integrated design of the present invention enables a much higher proportion of the radio wave radiation energy to be focused onto the gas fill. As a result, the plasma lamp according to the present invention is made much more efficient.
The present invention enables these and many other benefits to be obtained.
Sapphire is preferred for the window since it is less gas permeable than quartz, for example, and better withstands the heat cyclings and high temperatures associated with lamp operation. Furthermore, the gas housing 20 is preferably made from a ceramic material, as described below, since ceramics are much more durable under heating than other materials such as quartz. As a result, the ceramic housing affords a much longer life expectancy for the plasma lamp than the conventional quartz bulb of the prior art. In addition, the ceramic housing advantageously enables the plasma lamp to be operated at a much higher maximum temperature than the quartz bulb, because it avoids the lower softening temperature point and low thermal conductivity limitations of quartz.
The sapphire window 34 may function as a “light integrator” for transmitting the light of the plasma lamp from the chamber, for example, to application-specific optics. The tapered, conical sapphire window 34 may be sealed against the surrounding ceramic material forming the channel 30 by coating the outside edges of the sapphire window with a material such as a glass containing MgO, or, alternatively, with SiO3 or SiO2. Next the mating surfaces of both the window and the ceramic channel may each be coated with a thin layer of metallic material, such as copper, a copper alloy, or platinum. Then a piece of preferably pure platinum wire may be placed between the two thin film layers. Finally, a laser is used to heat the wire, and thereby melt the metallic material and bond the layers together.
Alternatively, the coated sapphire window 34 may be sealed to the ceramic housing by heating a glass frit. In yet another alternative, the ceramic housing may be “shrunk down” onto the sapphire window during high temperature firing.
The gas fill in the plasma lamp according to the first embodiment of the invention can be coupled to a source of electromagnetic energy, such as radio wave radiation in any of a variety of ways in order to create a plasma discharge within chamber 24. Preferably this should be done so that the RF structure that is active with the radio wave radiation energy is integrated with the gas housing 20, as will be described.
The gas fill may appropriately be a combination of a metal compound and a carrier gas. The metal compound may preferably be a metal halide such as indium bromide. Other examples of suitable metal compounds are praseodymium and mercury. Preferred gases for the carrier gas are xenon, neon, argon, or krypton.
The second embodiment may also comprise segments of ferrite material 41 placed adjacent the coils 36 in order to help concentrate the magnetic field associated with the coils 36 on the gas fill. An illustration of this embodiment is shown in
The dimensions of the waveguide and the locations of the RF source and gas housing preferably are chosen so that the electromagnetic field produced by the radio wave radiation in the waveguide exhibits a maximum in intensity at or near to the location of the housing in order to optimize the energy coupling to the gas. The waveguide may form a resonant structure having a resonant mode at the frequency of the radiation from the RF source 54. The necessary relationship among the waveguide dimensions, dielectric constant, and RF frequency can be determined in a well-known way using electromagnetic waveguide theory. For example, it is well-known that for a rectangular waveguide cavity containing a dielectric with permeability and permittivity constants μ and ∈, and having length, width and depth dimensions a, b, and d and metal boundaries, the frequencies w(m,n,p) for the resonant modes are given by the following equation:
w(m,n,p)=(μ∈)−½(m2π2/a2+n2π2/b2+p2π2/d2)½
where m, n, and p are integers.
Furthermore, because the dimensions of the waveguide scale with the square root of the dielectric constant of the dielectric, use of a solid dielectric material instead of an air dielectric permits a dramatic reduction in waveguide size, particularly if a ceramic material with an appropriately high dielectric constant is chosen. The waveguide is preferably made from a solid ceramic material with a high dielectric constant (higher than air or greater than 1), such as titanium dioxide (TiO2) or barium neodymium titinate. In practice, it is found that materials that exhibit a suitably high dielectric constant are typically porous and unable to provide the required hermicity to contain the gas fill. Accordingly, as shown in
As with the embodiment of
In other embodiments of the invention, the interior of the gas housing may be coated with a thin film of protective material such as MgO. The MgO will protect the inner surface of the gas housing from the spontaneous conversion of ceramic to elemental metal that sometimes occurs in the presence of a partial vacuum and high temperature. This effect is not desirable and may cause failure of the bulb. Because the film of MgO acts as a secondary electron emitter, the film can also add to the brightness of the plasma lamp.
In alternative embodiments of the invention, a bulb made from quartz or another suitable material may be retained as a structure which houses the gas fill, but the quartz structure is sized so as to fill the interior space in the ceramic gas housing, which ceramic gas housing may be integrated into a ceramic waveguide as described above. This variation can be utilized in conjunction with any of the embodiments of the invention shown in
An example of a waveguide structure according to these alternative embodiments is a rectangular waveguide structure having dimensions of 34.72 mm by 38.84 mm by 17.37 mm and composed of alumina (Al2O3) ceramic. For such a waveguide, the RF structure, e.g., antenna, may appropriately be driven at a frequency of 2.4 gigahertz (GHz) in order to efficiently couple radio wave radiation of that frequency to the gas fill in the quartz bulb within the waveguide.
When the plasma lamp is constructed in such a way, the heat produced by the bulb operated in the normal drive mode will be dissipated more uniformly and rapidly than in the prior art because of the tight fit between the quartz bulb and the surrounding ceramic. In this way the ceramic encasing the quartz bulb acts as a heat sink and ameliorates the problems associated with the heating of a quartz material.
These alternative embodiments having a quartz bulb can be improved by depositing a thin, non-conductive reflective coating on either the inside or outside walls of the quartz bulb. The reflective coating can be deposited by evaporation, spraying, painting or other method and should cover the bulb apart from an “exit” window for the light. The material used may be liquid bright platinum or a similar reflective material. The function of the coating is to improve upon the reflectance of the ceramic and thereby increase the brightness yielded by the lamp.
In other embodiments of the invention, the bulb for containing the gas fill may be made entirely from sapphire rather than quartz. Sapphire is transparent to visible light and can better withstand high temperatures than quartz. Sapphire is also less permeable than quartz. Accordingly, the use of sapphire for the bulb can significantly improve the performance of the plasma lamp as compared with the prior art quartz bulb lamp.
A method for constructing a representative embodiment of the ceramic gas housing for the fill gas of the plasma lamp will now be described with reference to
The excitation gas is allowed to backfill until the chamber and, hence, the ceramic housing reaches the desired pressure. A ceramic plug 85 may then be used to seal the fill hole in a manner discussed more fully below in connection with
The scope of the present invention is meant to be that set forth in the claims that follow and equivalents thereof, and is not limited to any of the specific embodiments described above.
This application claims the benefit of the following U.S. Provisional Applications: U.S. Provisional Application Nos. 60/192,731 filed Mar. 27, 2000; 60/224,059 filed Aug. 9, 2000; 60/224,298 filed Aug. 10, 2000; 60/224,290 filed Aug. 10, 2000; 60/224,291 filed Aug. 10, 2000; 60/224,257 filed Aug. 10, 2000; 60/224,289 filed Aug. 10, 2000; 60/224,866 filed Aug. 11, 2000; and 60/234,415 filed Sep. 21, 2000. All of these provisional applications are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties.
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20010035720 A1 | Nov 2001 | US |
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