The present invention relates to an electroded discharge lamp.
It is known to excite a discharge in a capsule with a view to producing light. A typical example is a fluorescent tube lamp, which uses mercury vapour. This is excitable to produce ultraviolet radiation. In turn, this excites fluorescent powder to produce light. Many discharge lamps such as sodium discharge lamps produce visible light directly, at the particular discharge frequency of the excitable material used. Such lamps are more efficient in terms of lumens of light emitted per watt of electricity consumed than tungsten filament lamps. However, they still suffer the disadvantage of requiring electrodes within the capsule to excite the discharge. Since these carry the current required for the discharge, they degrade and ultimately fail.
In a development programme of electrodeless bulb lamps, we have developed the lamps shown in our patent application Nos. PCT/GB2006/002018 entitled “Lamp” (our “'2018 lamp”), PCT/GB2005/005080 for a bulb for the lamp and PCT/GB2007/001935 for a matching circuit for a microwave-powered lamp. These all relate to lamps operating electrodelessly by use of microwave energy to stimulate light emitting plasma in the bulbs. Our '2018 lamp uses a dielectric wave-guide, which substantially reduces the wave length at the operating frequency of 2.4 Ghz. This lamp is suitable for use in domestic appliances such as rear projection television.
U.S. Pat. No 6,737,809 describes a light source to be powered by microwave energy, the source having:
In pursuing our programme, we coalesced the bulb and the waveguide into a single component, as described in our International patent application No PCT/GB2008/003829, dated 14 Nov. 2008 and now published under No WO2009/063205. In the latter, we described and claimed (as amended during International examination), a light source to be powered by microwave energy, the source having:
We call this light source a Light Emitting Resonator (LER)
As used in the LER specification (WO2009/063205):
“lucent” means that the material, of which the item described as lucent, is transparent or translucent;
“plasma crucible” means a closed body enclosing a plasma, the latter being in the void when the latter's fill is excited by microwave energy from the antenna.
In our LER lamp the plasma is driven at high power. A thin walled electroded lamp, of the same internal dimensions, operating at such high power would be likely to fail because the inner wall temperature would be too high. Typically LER plasma chambers are operated at wall loadings of greater than 50 W.cm−2. Conventional fused silica arc tubes for general lighting service are operated at less than 25 W.cm−2. Wall loading is defined as the total power dissipated in the LER lamp divided by the internal surface area of the plasma chamber. We believe that this high wall loading is possible due to the LER lamp's ability to dissipate heat. Heat is conducted away from close to the plasma chamber and dissipated from a relatively large surface area by both radiation and convection. The convection can be forced or natural.
We now believe that a thick walled electroded lamp can be operated at the same order of power as the LER, with an excitable-material filling void also of the same order of magnitude as the LER.
The object of the present invention is to provide an improved light source.
According to the invention there is provided an electroded lamp comprising:
The arrangement is such that in use:
It is anticipated that much of the heat will be dissipated from the surface of the crucible by convection, and also much of it will be dissipated by radiation.
Further, we expect heat to be radiated from the internal material of the crucible, especially close to the void. At present we know of no means for measuring whence precisely radiated heat is originating; that is to say, considering the crucible to be made up of successively larger incremental cylinders or skins, how much heat is radiated from each cylinder or skin. We do however believe that our thick wall lamps do dissipate a significant proportion of their heat by radiation from the crucible material close to the void.
In our LER lamp, typically the ratio of outer diameter to the diameter of the void is greater than a factor of 5. This results from the crucible being sized as a resonant cavity, in other words the dimensions of crucible are a function of the microwave drive frequency.
In the present invention, we could use such a ratio of void to crucible size, but do not expect such a large ratio to be necessary. Indeed, we expect the cross-sectional dimension of the crucible to be too small for microwave resonance. Nevertheless the cross-sectional dimension is substantially larger than of conventional lamps for a given void cross-section.
The void within the lucent crucible can be sealed about the electrodes
Preferably, a strip of molybdenum, or any material with a similar low coefficient of thermal expansion and high electrical conductivity, extends through the seal in the crucible and electrically connects the electrodes to outside of the crucible.
Preferably, a sealable exhaust tube is provided for the introduction of material excitable by electric current into the void in the lucent crucible.
To help understanding of the invention, a specific embodiment thereof will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring first to
For comparative purposes, the outside surface area of the tube corresponding to the length of the void is
2πRL
R being radius of the tube and L being the length of the void. For the lamp of
2×π×12.5×12=942.48 mm2.
Assuming that the convective and radiant heat loss from the surface is proportional only to this surface area, a conventional thin walled, electroded lamp having an equivalent surface area would for a wall thickness of 1 mm have a length of
12×12.5/3.5=42.86 mm.
In other words by increasing the wall thickness to produce a thick-walled lamp, the length has been reduced by more than a factor of three. This in turn has significant benefits in terms of focusing the emitted light for its use in a luminaire. It is known that optical systems are more efficient when the light source that the system is controlling is close to a point source. It will be seen by this comparison that the exemplified lamp of the invention produces light over a considerably shorter length, whereby luminaire efficiency is markedly increased. Indeed we would expect that such increase in efficiency can result in reduction of the number of luminaires, even to the extent of halving their number. In turn this halves not only the operating cost, but also the capital cost.
The electrodes can be incorporated in the lamp in any of a number of conventional manners, known to the skilled addressee of this specification. Accordingly, one embodiment only will be described.
Referring on to
It is anticipated that for high powers, the diameter of the thick wall tube can be increased above double the bore of the void.
The lamp can be driven in any conventional manner including being driven off mains voltage with a choke in series.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0922076.5 | Dec 2009 | GB | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB10/02287 | 12/16/2010 | WO | 00 | 7/18/2012 |