This invention relates to ceramic metal halide (CMH) lamps and the sealing technology of such lamps.
Often times one of the structural components in the electrical feedthroughs of such lamps is made of a cermet (ceramic-metal composite) material. Cermets have been known for a long time to provide acceptable solutions for the sealing of electrical feedthroughs to surrounding nonconductive materials. For example, cermet materials have been made as early as 1979 by mixing coarse refractory oxide granules with fine metallic powders, such as tungsten, nickel and molybdenum, to obtain suitable electrical conductivity therein and yet result in having thermal expansion coefficients compatible with ceramic materials. Typical ceramic materials used in CMH lamps are polycrystalline alumina (PCA), individual rare earth oxides or their mixtures and sapphire.
In later years, up to the early 1990's, details of making cermets with various particle size materials, their structural forms, and their initial use in ceramic metal halide lamps were described by various lamp developers, but they did not at that time result in a practical ceramic metal halide (CMH) lamp. Later, in the mid 1990's, the first commercially viable CMH lamp was introduced, and the performance of metal halide lamps got a big boost as a result since the color characteristics, the kind of chemistries used, and the efficacies obtained were far superior to the previous quartz metal halide lamp technology. While the initial lamps introduced had electrical feedthroughs with structures made of niobium (Nb), molybdenum (Mo) and tungsten (W) metals, at later times some CMH lamps were introduced using cermets in those structures. Much of the work attempted to either shorten the overall size of an extended plug structure, lower the cost of the materials used, increase reliability of the seal under high temperature conditions, or provide an alternative seal that would be more manufacturable, or some combination of these. Here, the term “feedthrough” will be used for the entire current carrying structure of metals and ceramics, and the term “electrode” will be used specifically for the very tip section of the electrical feedthrough that is in contact with the gas plasma and the discharge arc during lamp use.
As is well known, the extended plug structure of such lamps, as shown in
One of the electrical feedthrough structural arrangements available involves the use of cermets that have an expansion coefficient intermediary to those of the two materials used in the structures joined therewith (which materials are also used in formulating the cermet material)—most often polycrystalline alumina and molybdenum. Although the cermet material allows forming a successful hermetic seal between the electrical feedthrough, in which it is used as a structural component, and the PCA of the capillary tube thereabout in which it is positioned via the glass frit sealing material, the cermet material also tends to be fairly brittle and a difficult base on which to spot weld other structural components to it. Therefore, it is quite a task in manufacturing arc discharge tubes and the corresponding lamps to handle the ends of electrical feedthroughs as arc tube electrical leads with a cermet piece as part of them sticking out of the PCA capillary to be exposed to the various risks and stresses of the manufacturing process.
The extended plug structure arc discharge lamp arrangement in present use that avoids having any cermet portion in the electrical feedthrough being exposed to the exterior of the arc discharge tube is shown in the cross section view in
A partially externally exposed outer lead wire, or sealing member 16a, a first lead-through wire 19a, and a first main electrode shaft 21a are joined together to form an electrical feedthrough that is positioned in capillary part 11a. In this arrangement, lead-through wire 19a is of a cermet material and sealing member 16a is a niobium material rod. A material typically used for electrode shaft 21a is tungsten or molybdenum. Specifically, one end of lead-through wire 19a is connected with one end of sealing member 16a by welding, and the other end of lead-through wire 19a is connected with one end of main electrode shaft 21a again by welding. Sealing member 16a is fixed to the inner surface of capillary part 11a by a glass frit 17a such that sealing member 16a is sealed hermetically to capillary part 11a. Sealing member, or outer lead wire, 16a is typically formed by niobium wire of a diameter compatible with the expansion coefficient of frit 17a. For example, the diameter of a niobium outer lead wire 16a may be 0.9 mm and the diameter of a molybdenum first main electrode shaft may be 0.5 mm.
Sealing member or outer lead wire 16a, first lead-through wire 19a and first main electrode shaft 21a are disposed, as indicated, in the capillary part 11a such that an end portion of outer lead wire 16a is positioned outside capillary part 11a. As can be seen in the figure, however, niobium outer lead wire 16a is positioned with the inner end thereof deep into capillary part 11a so that only a small thickness of frit 17a covers that inner end thereof. Thus, the repeated heating and cooling of arc tube 10 between the lamp being operated and not operated at some point tends to lead to cracks in frit 17a. Such cracks need not go far before outer lead wire 16a is exposed to the salts developed in the main discharge chamber during lamp operation which are very destructive of niobium material. Thus, this structural arrangement has a substantial risk of failure.
An electrode coil 22a is joined to the tip portion of main electrode shaft 21a by welding, so that main electrode 23a includes main electrode shaft 21a and electrode coil 22a. The electrode coil 22a is made out of tungsten or doped tungsten. The lead-through wire 19a serves as a lead-through to assure the placement of main electrode 23a at a predetermined position in main tube 15.
An alternative to the
Also shown in
Another alternative (not shown) is to use a crimping operation to widen the cross section of the outer lead wire along a laterally directed cross axis thereof which is provided right at the junction of the cermet lead-through and the outer lead wire weld. Such a widened cross section crimp preventing further insertion of the electrical feedthrough into the capillary part results in accomplishing a similar result in setting the feedthrough insertion depth into the arc discharge tube through a capillary thereof as does the provision instead of a cross wire as describe above. However, the crimping process often leads to geometric distortion of the remaining wire such as bending or twisting it into misalignment with the feedthroughs axis of the lamp. This leads to a relatively large failure rate in the remaining lamp manufacturing process steps which significantly increases manufacturing costs. Therefore, an accurate crimp at the joint of these two materials is a difficult to impractical approach for low cost manufacturing of CMH lamps.
As indicated above, cermets do provide a good solution for structural use as part of an electrically conductive feedthrough in having a thermal expansion that is compatible with surrounding structures in CMH lamps; however, as also indicated above, the brittleness of the cermets and the difficulty of spot welding to them makes using cermet structure portions a difficult choice in manufacturing such feedthroughs. Thus, there is a desire for an electrical feedthrough structure better suited to the use of cermet portions therein.
The present invention provides an intermediate arrangement for an arc discharge metal halide lamp for providing visible light comprising an arc discharge vessel formed of a visible light transmissive structure which defines a discharge region containing ionizable materials including a metal halide material and which has capillary tubes therein having a selected tube outside width between outside tube surface locations on opposite sides thereof and with a first electrical feedthrough positioned to extend through an interior passageway from a tube outer end in a corresponding one of the capillary tubes to have an interior end of that electrical feedthrough positioned in the discharge region opposite the interior passageway of the other capillary tube and an exterior end thereof positioned outside the outer end of the corresponding capillary tube, the interior passageway having a selected tube inside width between inside interior passageway surface locations on opposite sides thereof. The first electrical feedthrough having a cermet material portion thereof affixed to an end of an exterior electrical conductor portion thereof with a selected exterior conductor outside width between outside exterior electrical conductor surface locations on opposite sides thereof that is less than the tube outside width but greater than the tube inside width. A bonding material closed loop positioned about the end of the exterior electrical conductor portion such that the bonding material closed loop has no portion thereof extending past the outside tube surface locations of the corresponding capillary tube by more than thirty-five percent of the tube outside width.
The present invention also provides an arc discharge metal halide lamp for providing visible light comprising an arc discharge vessel formed of a visible light transmissive structure which defines a discharge region containing ionizable materials including a metal halide material and which has capillary tubes therein having a selected tube outside width between outside tube surface locations on opposite sides thereof and with a first electrical feedthrough positioned to extend through an interior passageway from a tube outer end in a corresponding one of the capillary tubes to have an interior end of that electrical feedthrough positioned in the discharge region opposite the interior passageway of the other capillary tube and an exterior end thereof positioned outside the outer end of the corresponding capillary tube. The first electrical feedthrough has a cermet material portion thereof, which has a selected cermet outside width between outside cermet material portion surface locations on opposite sides thereof, that is affixed in an outer fixation joint to an end of an exterior electrical conductor portion thereof along an axis common to each and that is also affixed in an inner fixation joint to an inner shaft electrical conductor portion along the common axis that also intersects the inner shaft electrical conductor portion, the inner shaft electrical conductor portion of the first electrical feedthrough having a selected inner shaft outside width between outside inner shaft electrical conductor portion surface locations on opposite sides thereof, the outer fixation joint having a length along the common axis between a nearest outside exterior electrical conductor portion surface and a nearest outside cermet material portion surface of a value that, doubled, is less than one-tenth the value of the length between the first fixation joint at the exterior electrical conductor portion side thereof and the interior end of the first electrical feedthrough in the circumstance of the inner shaft outside width having a magnitude with a value between the magnitude of the cermet outside width and one-half that magnitude thereof. Alternatively, or in addition, the first electrical feedthrough having a cermet material portion thereof extending along a cermet axis of symmetry with this cermet material portion having a selected cermet outside width between outside cermet material portion surface locations on opposite sides thereof, the cermet material portion being affixed in an inner fixation joint to an inner shaft electrical conductor portion extending along a shaft axis of symmetry substantially parallel to the cermet axis with the inner shaft electrical conductor portion having a selected inner shaft outside width between outside inner shaft electrical conductor portion surface locations on opposite sides thereof, the shaft axis on a corresponding side of the inner fixation joint being offset from the cermet axis on a corresponding side of the inner fixation joint by a distance having a magnitude with a value less than one-quarter that of the inner shaft outside width in the circumstance of the inner shaft outside width having a magnitude with a value less than one-half that of the cermet outside width.
The current invention provides an electrical feedthrough suited to have a cermet material portion used therein. In the cross section view of apportion of an electrical feedthrough shown in
Similarly, in
Therefore, it is desirable to have outer lead wire 44 and frit ring 46 with the relative diameters as shown in
Thus, internal diameter 41d of frit ring 46, shown in the cross section view thereof in
FRod≦1.35Cod Eq. 1
will result in good seals. Failure to follow this inequality leads to manufacturing problems for such a CMH product often diminishing the lamp operational life. These problems can include insufficient frit flowing inside the capillary and therefore providing a poor seal and external frit drops just outside the capillary leading to different thermal profiles for capillaries which will lead to poor performance of the lamps.
In the electrical feedthrough arrangements of
This feedthrough transition region typically can be as much as 0.5 mm in length which, in a small power CMH lamp dissipating on the order of 20 W or 35 W, is a substantial fraction of the typical arc length (the transition region axial length has to be multiplied by 2 in subtracting from the arc length, since there is one transition region for each electrical feedthrough in the arc discharge tube). Variance in this transition region length in the manufacturing process leads to substantial performance variation in the resulting lamps. Therefore, to have a narrow distribution of lamp performances, the transition region length x of the feedthrough region 53 has to be minimized and controlled carefully. That is, the length x has to be reproducible in the manufacture of electrical feedthroughs form one to the next. The transition region 53 is a junction region resulting from the welding together of lead-through 51 and outer wire 52, and so typically comprises the cermet material (often Mo and PCA) in lead-through 51 and the wire material in outer wire 52 (often Nb, but other compatible metals could also be used). The PCA in the cermet material typically leaches to the surface of the transition region x during welding so as to give it a somewhat different color appearance compared to cermet lead-through 51 and outer wire 52. In addition, when the PCA leaches to the surface of the transition region, that region becomes a nonconductive surface portion.
In addition to transition region 53 between the outer wire and the cermet material lead-through in
(2x+2y)<0.1A Eq. 2
where x is the axial length of transition region 66 and y is the axial length of transition region 63. Here A is the distance from the tip of electrode 61 to the far end of transition region 66 as shown in
Typically, the diameter of the W main shaft 62 is kept smaller than the diameter of cermet lead-through 64. If the diameter of W shaft 62 obeys the following inequalities,
1.0Dc>Dw>0.5Dc Eq. 3
where Dc is the diameter of lead-through 64 and Dw is the diameter of the W main shaft 62 in
Furthermore, under the conditions of Dw<0.5 Dc, the concentricity of W shaft 62 and lead-through 64 becomes important, because, if the situation as shown in
Satisfying following concentricity requirement set out in the following inequality
0≦z≦0.25Dw Eq.3a
in which z is the distance from the center of the W wire to the center of the cermet wire in a plane perpendicular to the axis of the feedthrough (see
As indicated above, the region 66 shown in
The welds in
Joints made instead with a few applications of a pulsed laser beam have the appearance shown in
In
2Dmo+Dw˜0.9Cid Eq. 4
where Dmo is the diameter of the Mo wire strand, Dw is the diameter of W shaft 82, and Cid is the internal diameter of the PCA capillary. If winding the Mo coil 87 extends from axial location 88, then Eq. 4 is not obeyed and the sum of 2Dmo+Dw becomes greater than Cid to result in the electrode not being able to slide through the opening in the capillary part and so getting stuck therein.
An example arc discharge tube, based on a single body 70 W arc tube having electrical feedthroughs like that shown in
The relative ease of construction of the resulting arc discharge tube compared to that of the alternative approach of inserting a cross wire to a surface covered with alumina and somewhat brittle cermet is striking, and also avoids a considerable yield loss of many electrodes occurring with the cross wire arrangement. The method of constructing electrical feedthroughs of the present invention for CMH lamps is highly accurate and advantageous for a low cost manufacturing operation at high production rates.
Although the present invention has been described with reference to preferred embodiments, workers skilled in the art will recognize that changes may be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4155757 | Hing | May 1979 | A |
4808882 | Parker et al. | Feb 1989 | A |
4910432 | Brown et al. | Mar 1990 | A |
5099174 | Coxon et al. | Mar 1992 | A |
5404078 | Bunk et al. | Apr 1995 | A |
5424609 | Geven et al. | Jun 1995 | A |
6139386 | Suzuki et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6750611 | Gubbels | Jun 2004 | B2 |
6882109 | Nakano et al. | Apr 2005 | B2 |
7122953 | Piena | Oct 2006 | B2 |
20040124776 | Lorio et al. | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20040135510 | Bewlay et al. | Jul 2004 | A1 |
20070001610 | Bewlay et al. | Jan 2007 | A1 |
20070188100 | Anami et al. | Aug 2007 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20090309497 A1 | Dec 2009 | US |