The invention proceeds from a high-pressure discharge lamp having a ceramic discharge vessel in accordance with the preamble of claim 1.
EP-A 926 703 discloses a high-pressure discharge lamp in the case of which an electrode system is composed of a number of parts. Two parts consist respectively of tungsten, specifically the electrode shaft, including a filament, and a central leadthrough part. The electrode system further includes a molybdenum filament pushed onto the leadthrough part, and a terminating leadthrough part made from niobium.
Such a design is not attacked by normal fills. The dead space is filled up in this case by the molybdenum filament or similar structure, which are based on molybdenum.
The object of the present invention is to provide an electrode system for a high-pressure discharge lamp that also resists particularly aggressive fills.
This object is achieved by the characterizing features of claim 1.
Particularly advantageous refinements are to be found in the dependent claims.
According to the invention, the electrode system is now produced completely from tungsten material, which also resists particularly aggressive fills. However, the coefficient of thermal expansion of tungsten is not adapted to ceramic capillaries as ends of a discharge vessel. There is thus a need for a novel design.
The electrode itself, that is to say shaft and head, as well as the leadthrough system itself, now are produced from tungsten material. In this case tungsten can be provided with suitable dopings. The complete system consists of four parts that are substantially of cylindrical shape. However, each of the four segments has a different diameter. The transition zones between the segments can be arbitrarily configured, for example they can be of conical or stepped design. The electrode system can be fabricated in one part from uniform material and be produced in one piece, for example by eroding the diameter, laser processing etc.
However, the four segments preferably consist of individual parts that are suitably combined, for example by welding, soldering, a mechanical plug and socket connection, etc.
The first segment is the electrode head. The second segment is the electrode shaft, whose diameter is smaller than or at most equal to that of the head. The third segment is a central leadthrough part that fills up the dead space in a capillary as well as possible. Its diameter is preferably 85 to 95% of the capillary inside diameter. The fourth segment is the terminating leadthrough part, which is led through the sealing region at the end of the capillary, and sealed there by means of solder glass.
According to the invention, the fourth segment is a core pin made from tungsten with a maximum diameter of 300 μm, which is additionally surrounded by a sleeve made from ceramic, in particular PCA or the like. The sleeve is preferably shorter over its axial length by 0.3 . . . 1.0 mm than the core pin that it surrounds.
This part is welded to a niobium pin projecting on the capillary or to a pin made from niobium-like material as concerns the coefficient of thermal expansion. The projecting pin and the weld are completely surrounded by a solder glass.
Since the entire electrode system consists of tungsten, it resists any sort of aggressive fill. Consequently, it is possible to attain substantial advantages by comparison with a molybdenum-containing electrode system.
A further particular advantage of the novel electrode system is that the spacing along the electrodes and electrode leadthrough capillary is of very uniform design.
Convection of the fill is substantially reduced thereby and leads to a reduction in local leaching of the capillary inner wall.
This electrode system is particularly well suited to metal halide fills, which dispense with mercury entirely or virtually completely.
The aim below is to explain the invention in more detail with the aid of a number of exemplary embodiments. In the figures:
An exemplary embodiment of a metal halide high-pressure discharge lamp 1 is shown in
The electrode system is shown in detail in
Adjacent thereto, finally as fourth segment, is a combined leadthrough part 10. It consists of a core pin 11 made from tungsten with a diameter D4 of preferably 200 to 300 μm. A practical lower limit for the diameter of the core pin is 100 μm. The core pin 11 is surrounded by a tubular sleeve 12 with the axial length Lm. Its outside diameter Dma corresponds approximately to the diameter D3. The sleeve is preferably made from ceramic. It is fabricated from Al2O3, mostly PCA, it being possible for the PCA to be doped or undoped. It has an inside diameter Dmi that is adapted to the core pin 11. As the end piece of the leadthrough, a niobium pin 14 is adjacent to the core pin. The diameter D5 of the niobium pin should likewise be closely adapted to the bore of the capillary.
The following relations are preferably to be observed between the diameters D1 to D5 as well as Dm:
The following relations are preferably to be observed between the axial lengths of the four segments L1, L2, L3 and L4 and the axial length Lm in the sleeve:
The system as outlined dispenses with the use of molybdenum as material for the leadthrough, since molybdenum is not sufficiently resistant to corrosion. Furthermore, it turns out in general to be disadvantageous when use is made of a wound item as component of the leadthrough, since the inhomogeneous structure of a wound element of variable outside diameter leads to undesirable leaching in the capillary. Consequently, according to the invention there is implemented for the first time a system that is free of molybdenum and of wound elements and is based on the material tungsten, that is to say largely predominantly contains tungsten, if appropriate with additives or as an alloy, and that nevertheless ensures reliable sealing by means of solder glass. This object is served by the ceramic sleeve in conjunction with the thin tungsten wire as core pin. The solder glass extends from outside from the niobium pin up to the beginning of the ceramic sleeve. Solder glasses known per se are suitable as solder glass.
It is well known that niobium can be sealed in effectively. In comparison with ceramic, the coefficient of thermal expansion of tungsten is so large that it is possible at most to seal a tungsten pin with a diameter of 300 μm.
The sleeve is retained on the core pin, for example by a weld point serving as spacer.
Overall, the sum L1+L2+L3+L4 is somewhat longer than the capillary length LK, it being the head of the electrode that projects from the capillary at one end, while it is the sealed niobium pin at the other end.
It is advantageous when the sleeve lies loosely against the third segment. It should be delimited from the niobium pin by a gap that has an axial length of between 0.2 and 0.8 mm, in order, firstly, to take account of the different thermal expansion so as to create sufficient space for fastening and, overall, to be able to bring the solder glass sufficiently up to the tungsten pin and thereby to be able to produce a reliable seal.
It is not the material of the pin projecting outside on the end of the capillary that is important; what is decisive is its coefficient of thermal expansion, which is adapted to the ceramic and is best implemented by niobium.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20 2007 007 688.6 | May 2007 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2008/055270 | 4/29/2008 | WO | 00 | 11/30/2009 |