This application is a national stage entry according to 35 U.S.C. §371 of PCT application No.: PCT/EP2011/057991 filed on May 17, 2011.
The present disclosure is directed to a high-pressure discharge lamp. It relates in particular to metal halide lamps. Such lamps are in particular high-pressure discharge lamps having ceramic discharge vessel for general illumination.
EP 1 114 438 and WO 2006/077516 and WO 2008/075273 each disclose a high-pressure discharge lamp, in which iridium is used for the seal. The feedthrough is a pin or a wire made of iridium, wherein the pin is sintered directly into the end of the ceramic discharge vessel. The wire is pushed as a coil onto a core pin. However, these concepts have not proven themselves in practice.
Various embodiments provide a high-pressure discharge lamp, which has a short structural length and is simple to produce and has a service life sufficient for commercial purposes.
Long service lives in ceramic lamps have been ensured up to this point by long capillaries at the ends, in which feedthroughs are seated, which typically have a front halogen-resistant end made of molybdenum or tungsten, and which have a feedthrough made of niobium or also cermet at the rear. This technology is reliable, but it is complex and is linked to a longer structural length to achieve the required low temperatures in the region of the seal.
According to the disclosure, a two-part feedthrough is used, the outer end of which, as known, is implemented by a niobium pin or a niobium-like material. This means a material, the thermal coefficient of expansion of which is in the range of 6 to 9*10-6 l/K and is high-temperature stable. In particular rhenium and tantalum are suitable here instead of niobium or alloys based thereon. It is fused in a way known per se in a short capillary at the end of the discharge vessel by means of solder. The electrode, which is attached at the front on the feedthrough, is based on a shaft made of tungsten, as is known per se. It has a head, which has a sphere or a coil, as also previously known.
It is novel that the feedthrough has a short front part, which is manufactured from iridium. It is preferably a sphere, which approximately has the diameter of the pin, which is attached thereon at the rear.
The front part is preferably shaped spherically and in particular is either formed as a sphere, or is formed to be dumbbell-like from two or more spheres placed one on the other, or in particular a sphere or dumbbell having a pin-like attachment. In this manner, on the one hand, a higher consumption of the costly material iridium is avoided and, on the other hand, the processing of the material iridium, which is difficult to process, is reduced to a minimum. The sphere shape is also preferable for thermal reasons. A seal having a spherical thickening in the region of the feedthrough for reasons of acoustic resonance operation is previously known from DE 102007045071.
The part of the feedthrough which is manufactured from niobium or niobium-like material, and at least a subregion of the front part made of iridium, is sealed using a high-temperature solder. This is a solder known per se, see, for example, WO 2005/124823 or also the iridium-containing solder disclosed in WO 2003/096377. A preferred embodiment is a solder which contains oxides of aluminum and of at least one rare earth metal, such as dysprosium. In particular, it is a eutectic mixture, which may also be designated as a high-temperature frit.
The feedthrough is welded in each case to the electrode.
Preferably at least the hemisphere of the front part of the feedthrough which faces toward the niobium pin is overlapped using the solder or the frit.
However, the solder can also overlap a larger region of the front part.
A plurality of spherical parts can also be concatenated for the front part of the feedthrough. The spherical parts are preferably connected to one another via crest fusion.
The discharge vessel is preferably manufactured from aluminum oxide, such as PCA (polycrystalline alumina), inter alia, as is known per se. It may have integral ends or also separate plugs. Instead of niobium, another material which behaves similarly can also be used, in particular tantalum or rhenium or a material, the thermal coefficient of expansion of which differs by less than 20% from that of niobium, with respect to a temperature of 1100 K. A cermet can optionally also be used. These materials are referred to in summary as niobium material.
An unsaturated filler is preferably used as a filler, which thus passes completely into the vapor phase in operation.
A wattage of 70 W to 150 W is typical, wherein the lamp displays high stability and good dimming properties. An iridium wire as a front part may be sintered directly into the capillary. However, the service lives heretofore implemented therewith are still too short for commercial application.
A front part, which is equipped with a short iridium pin attached to a sphere or a dumbbell, is preferred. This results in stabilization of the alignment of the feedthrough. The key here is to lengthen the fusion length of the glass solder up to the iridium pin. If an unsaturated mercury-free filler is used, frits of the type aluminum oxide/thulium oxide/aluminate and aluminum oxide/yttrium oxide have proven themselves particularly well. The fusion is performed, for example, by means of IR laser or tungsten coil heater.
The spherically shaped front part made of iridium is the key to keeping a high-temperature seal tightly sealed for a long time under application of temperatures of at least 1550° C.
The discharge vessel is preferably shaped to be bulbous, oval, elliptical, barrel-shaped, or similar to a rugby ball, and has in particular a high aspect ratio of at least 2. The novel sealing technology typically allows a shortening of the structural length of the discharge vessel with respect to the conventional capillary seal by 30% to 60%.
Typical fillers contain NaI, CaI2, and rare earth metals such as in particular CeI3 and optionally PrI3 and also ErI3. These also include, for example, HgI2, TlI, and optionally MnI2. Other halogens such as chlorine or bromine are also suitable for the halides.
In the case of mercury-free lamps, in particular ZnI2, InI, TlI, NaI, and REI3 are used in a mixture as filler, RE standing for rare earth metal here. In particular xenon is used alone or in combination with other noble gases, in particular argon, as a noble gas.
In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead generally being placed upon illustrating the principles of the disclosed embodiments. In the following description, various embodiments described with reference to the following drawings, in which:
The following detailed description refers to the accompanying drawing that show, by way of illustration, specific details and embodiments in which the disclosure may be practiced.
The discharge vessel 2 is enclosed by an external bulb 7. The discharge vessel 2 is mounted in the external bulb by means of a frame, which includes a short and a long power supply line 8a and 8b. A screw base 9 is seated on the external bulb.
The discharge vessel contains a filler, which typically includes mercury (3 to 30 mg/cm3) and 0.1 to 1 mg/cm3 metal halide. Argon at a pressure of 30 to 300 hPa cold is typically used as a noble gas.
Instead of niobium, another niobium-like material can also be used for the rear part, in accordance with the following Table 1. Four metals are compared with PCA therein. The thermal coefficient of expansion TCE at an operating temperature of 1130 K and the percentage difference from niobium are specified.
The spheres are in particular approximately as wide in the transverse dimension thereof as the diameter of the rear part 15. The diameter of the shaft 11 of the electrode, in contrast, is conventionally somewhat smaller, specifically in an order of magnitude of typically 20-30% or matching with the wattage of the high-pressure discharge lamp.
Typical diameters for the spheres 12, 20 are 0.3 mm to 1.2 mm. The value is dependent on the wattage of the lamp. For a typical 100 W lamp, a typical value of the diameter of the sphere is 0.7 mm.
The length of the fusion zone AX, i.e., the axial region in which the solder extends at least into the capillary, is typically 0.8 mm to 4 mm. A typical value for a 100 W lamp is 1.5 mm to 2.5 mm.
The frits typically consist of mixtures of various rare earth oxides such as Dy2O3 together with aluminum oxide, wherein aluminates, for example, Dy2Al5O12 may be admixed. Furthermore, small proportions of SiO2 can also be admixed, a proportion of 1% to 15% is typical.
The proposed sealing technology is suitable both for mercury-containing fillers and also for mercury-free fillers.
The filler typically contains iodides of sodium, cesium, thulium, dysprosium, and/or thallium and also of calcium. Metal halides of other metals are not precluded, of course.
An upper limit for the transverse dimension of the spheroid front part is 1.2 mm, if this is based on a power up to 1000 W. An application for powers between 20 W and 400 W, in particular 75 W to 150 W, is typical.
The feedthrough system having the iridium-containing front part is well suitable in particular for wattages from 150 W to 1000 W.
A particular advantage of the novel closure technology is that it can be introduced on standard production machines. The sealing is performed by means of closing by laser irradiation.
While the disclosed embodiments has been particularly shown and described with reference to specific embodiments, it should be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosed embodiments as defined by the appended claims. The scope of the disclosed embodiments is thus indicated by the appended claims and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/057991 | 5/17/2011 | WO | 00 | 11/12/2013 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2012/155965 | 11/22/2012 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
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102007045071 | Apr 2009 | DE |
1114438 | Dec 2008 | EP |
03096377 | Nov 2003 | WO |
2005124823 | Dec 2005 | WO |
2006077516 | Jul 2006 | WO |
2008075273 | Jun 2008 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20140175976 A1 | Jun 2014 | US |