This disclosure relates to a discharge lamp with high lumen maintenance. It finds particular application in connection with a metal halide lamp (both in quartz and ceramic implementations) with a lanthanide oxide (an oxide of a lanthanide series element) as a source of available oxygen in the vessel that, during lamp operation, maintains a difference in solubility for tungsten species between the wall and the electrodes, and will be described with particular reference thereto.
High Intensity Discharge (HID) lamps are high-efficiency lamps that can generate large amounts of light from a relatively small source. These lamps are widely used in many applications, including highway and road lighting, lighting of large venues such as sports stadiums, floodlighting of buildings, shops, industrial buildings, and projectors, to name but a few. The term “HID lamp” is used to denote different kinds of lamps. These include mercury vapor lamps, metal halide lamps, and sodium lamps. Metal halide lamps, in particular, are widely used in areas that require a high level of brightness at relatively low cost. HID lamps differ from other lamps because their functioning environment requires operation at high temperature and high pressure over a prolonged period of time. Also, due to their usage and cost, it is desirable that these HID lamps have relatively long useful lives and produce a consistent level of brightness and color of light. Although in principle, HID lamps can operate with either an alternating current (AC) supply or a direct-current (DC) supply, in practice, the lamps are usually driven via an AC supply.
Discharge lamps produce light by ionizing a vapor fill material, such as a mixture of rare gases, metal halides and mercury with an electric arc passing between two electrodes. The electrodes and the fill material are sealed within a translucent or transparent discharge vessel that maintains the pressure of the energized fill material and allows the emitted light to pass through it. The fill material, also known as a “dose,” emits a desired spectral energy distribution in response to being excited by the electric arc. For example, halides provide spectral energy distributions that offer a broad choice of light properties, e.g. color temperatures, color renderings, and luminous efficacies.
Such lamps often have a light output that diminishes over time due to blackening of the discharge vessel walls. The blackening is due to tungsten transported from the electrode to the wall. It has been proposed to incorporate a calcium oxide or tungsten oxide oxygen dispenser in the discharge vessel, as disclosed, for example in WO 99/53522 and WO 99/53523 to Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Lamps produced according to the proposals in these applications may not, however, simultaneously meet acceptable lamp efficiency, color point, color stability, lumen maintenance, and reliability values for a commercial lamp.
Above mentioned application Ser. No. 11/951,677 discloses a lamp which includes an oxide of tungsten as an oxygen dispenser.
The exemplary embodiment provides a new and improved metal halide lamp with improved lumen maintenance.
In one aspect of the exemplary embodiment, a lamp includes a discharge vessel. Tungsten electrodes extend into the discharge vessel. An ionizable fill is sealed within the vessel. The fill includes a buffer gas, a halide component including a rare earth halide. A source of oxygen comprising a lanthanide oxide is present within the discharge vessel.
In another aspect, a lamp includes a discharge vessel. Tungsten electrodes extend into the discharge vessel. An ionizable fill is sealed within the vessel. The fill includes a buffer gas, a halide component including a rare earth halide. A lanthanide oxide is present in the discharge vessel. The lanthanide oxide is sealed in the vessel in a sufficient amount to maintain a concentration of WO2X2 in a vapor phase in the fill during lamp operation of at least 1×10−9 mol cm3.
In another aspect, a method of forming a lamp includes providing a discharge vessel, providing tungsten electrodes which extend into the discharge vessel and introducing a source of available oxygen within the vessel. The source of available oxygen includes a lanthanide oxide in solid form.
One advantage of at least one embodiment is the provision of a discharge vessel with improved performance and lumen maintenance.
Another advantage of at least one embodiment resides in reduced wall blackening.
Another advantage is that a tungsten regeneration cycle is maintained between a wall of a discharge vessel and a portion of an electrode that is operating at a higher temperature than the wall.
Another advantage is ease of handling of a lanthanide oxide dose component by current doser equipment.
Still further advantages will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understanding the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments.
Aspects of the exemplary embodiment relate to a lamp that is formulated to promote a tungsten regeneration cycle by enabling a higher solubility of tungsten species adjacent the wall of the lamp, where deposition would otherwise occur, than at the electrode, even though the electrode operates at a substantially higher temperature than the wall.
With reference to
The electrodes become heated during lamp operation and tungsten tends to vaporize from the tips 28, 30. Some of the vaporized tungsten may deposit on an interior surface 32 of wall 16. Absent a regeneration cycle, the deposited tungsten may lead to wall blackening and a reduction in the transmission of the visible light.
While the electrodes 20, 22 may be formed from pure tungsten, e.g., greater than 99% pure tungsten, it is also contemplated that the electrodes may have a lower tungsten content, e.g., may comprise at least 50% or at least 95% tungsten.
The exemplary discharge vessel 12 is surrounded by an outer bulb 36 that is provided with a lamp cap 28 at one end, through which the lamp is connected with a source of power (not shown), such as mains voltage. The bulb 36 may be formed of glass or other suitable material. The lighting assembly 10 also includes a ballast (not shown), which acts as a starter when the lamp is switched on. The ballast is located in a circuit that includes the lamp and the power source. The space between the discharge vessel and outer bulb may be evacuated. Optionally a shroud (not shown) formed from quartz or other suitable material, surrounds or partially surrounds the discharge vessel to contain possible discharge vessel fragments in the event of an discharge vessel rupture.
The interior space 14 has a volume commensurate with the operating voltage of the lamp and sustainable wall loading. For example, for a 70 W lamp, the volume may be about 0.15 cm3 to about 0.3 cm3, e.g., about 0.2 cm3, and for a 250 W lamp, the volume may be about 0.5 cm3 to about 2.0 cm3, e.g., about 1.35 cm3.
The ionizable fill 18 includes a buffer gas, optionally mercury (Hg), and a halide component. A source 40 of available oxygen (an oxygen dispenser) comprising at least one lanthanide oxide is also present in the discharge vessel and is in contact with the fill during lamp operation. The source 40 may be present as a solid oxide. In some embodiments, the fill may further include a source of available halogen. The components of the fill 18, source 40, and their respective amounts are selected to provide a higher solubility of tungsten species at the wall surface 32 for reaction with any tungsten deposited there. The halide component includes a rare earth halide and may further include one or more of an alkali metal halide, an alkaline earth metal halide, and a Group IIIA halide (indium and or thallium halide). In operation, the electrodes 20, 22 produce an arc between tips 28, 30 of the electrodes, which ionizes the fill to produce a plasma in the discharge space. The emission characteristics of the light produced are dependent, primarily, upon the constituents of the fill material, the voltage across the electrodes, the temperature distribution of the chamber, the pressure in the chamber, and the geometry of the chamber. The source 40 of oxygen may also contribute to the emission characteristics. In the following description of the fill, the amounts of the components refer to the amounts initially sealed in the discharge vessel. i.e., before operation of the lamp, unless otherwise noted.
The buffer gas may be an inert gas, such as argon, xenon, krypton, or combination thereof, and may be present in the fill at from about 5-20 micromoles per cubic centimeter (μmol/cm3) of the interior chamber 14. The buffer gas may also function as a starting gas for generating light during the early stages of lamp operation. In one embodiment, suited to CMH lamps, the lamp is backfilled with Ar. In another embodiment, Xe or Ar with a small addition of Kr85 is used. The radioactive Kr85 provides ionization that assists in starting the lamp. The cold fill pressure may be about 60-300 Torr, although higher cold fill pressures are not excluded. In one embodiment, a cold fill pressure of at least about 120 Torr is used. In another embodiment, the cold fill pressure is up to about 240 Torr. Too high a pressure may compromise starting. Too low a pressure can lead to increased lumen depreciation over life. During lamp operation, the pressure of the buffer gas may be at least about 1 atm.
The mercury dose, where present, may be present at from about 3 to 35 mg/cm3 of the discharge vessel volume. In one embodiment, the mercury dose is about 20 mg/cm3. The mercury weight is adjusted to provide the desired discharge vessel operating voltage (Vop) for drawing power from the selected ballast. In an alternative embodiment, the lamp fill is mercury-free.
The halide component may be present at from about 20 to about 80 mg/cm3 of discharge vessel volume, e.g., about 30-60 mg/cm3. A ratio of halide dose to mercury can be, for example, from about 1:3 to about 15:1, expressed by weight. The halide(s) in the halide component can each be selected from chlorides, bromides, iodides and combinations thereof. In one embodiment, the halides are all iodides. Iodides tend to provide longer lamp life, as corrosion of the discharge vessel and/or electrodes is lower with iodide components in the fill than with otherwise similar chloride or bromide components. The halide compounds usually will represent stoichiometric relationships.
In one embodiment, the rare earth halide may be one that is selected in type and concentration such that it does not form a stable oxide by reaction with the source of oxygen, i.e., it forms an unstable oxide. By this it is meant that it permits available oxygen to exist in the fill during lamp operation. Exemplary rare earth halides which form unstable oxides include halides of lanthanum (La), cerium (Ce), praseodymium (Pr) neodymium (Nd), samarium (Sm), gadolinium (Gd), and combinations thereof. The rare earth halide(s) of the fill can have the general form REX3, where RE is selected from La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, and Gd, and X is selected from Cl, Br, and I, and combinations thereof. An exemplary rare earth halide from this group is lanthanum halide.
The rare earth halide may be present in the fill at a total concentration of, for example, at least about 3 μmol/cm3. The rare earth halide concentration may be up to about 13 μmol/cm3 The rare earth halide may be present at a molar concentration of at least 2% of the halides in the fill, e.g., at least about 8 mol % of the halides in the fill.
In one embodiment, only rare earth halides from this limited group of rare earth halides (La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, and Gd) are present in the fill. In this embodiment, the lamp fill thus is free of other rare earth halides, by which it is meant that all other rare earth halides are present in a total amount of not more than about 0.1 μmol/cm3. In particular the fill is free of halides of the following rare earth elements: terbium, dysprosium, holmium, thulium, erbium, ytterbium, lutetium, and yttrium. Other halides which form stable oxides are also not present in the fill, such as scandium halides and magnesium halides.
The alkali metal halide, where present, may be selected from sodium (Na), potassium (K), and cesium (Cs) halides, and combinations thereof. In one specific embodiment, the alkali metal halide includes sodium halide. The alkali metal halide(s) of the fill can have the general form AX, where A is selected from Na, K, and Cs, and X is as defined above, and combinations thereof. The alkali metal halide may be present in the fill at a total concentration of, for example, from about 20 to about 300 μmol cm3.
The alkaline earth metal halide, where present, may be selected from calcium (Ca), barium (Ba), and strontium (Sr) halides, and combinations thereof The alkaline earth metal halide(s) of the fill can have the general form MX2, where M is selected from Ca, Ba, and Sr, and X is as defined above and combinations thereof In one specific embodiment, the alkaline earth metal halide includes calcium halide. The alkaline earth metal halide may be present in the fill at a total concentration of, for example, from about 10 to about 100 μmol/cm3. In another embodiment, the fill is free of calcium halide.
The group IIIa halide, where present, may be selected from thallium (Tl) and indium (In) halides. In one specific embodiment, the group IIIa halide includes thallium halide. The group IIIa halide(s) of the fill may have the general form LX or LX3, where L is selected from Tl and In, and X is as defined above. The group IIIa halide may be present in the fill at a total concentration of, for example, from about 1 to 10 μmol/m3.
As previously noted, the source 40 of available oxygen includes at least one lanthanide oxide. The source 40 is one that, under the lamp operating conditions, makes oxygen available for reaction with other fill components to form tungsten oxyhalide (WO2X2). The source of available oxygen may thus be an oxide that is unstable under lamp operating temperatures. However, in some embodiments, the source of available oxygen may further include other sources, such as oxygen gas (O2), water, molybdenum oxide, mercury oxide, or combination thereof.
The lanthanide oxide can have the general form: LnnOm, where Ln represents a lanthanide selected from the group consisting of lanthanum (La), cerium (Ce), praseodymium (Pr), neodymium (Nd), samarium (Sm), gadolinium (Gd) and combinations thereof, n≧1, and m≧2. Exemplary lanthanide oxides include LnO2, and Ln6O11.
Heretofore, it was not apparent that certain oxides, such as cerium oxide, could decompose readily to form available oxygen under lamp operating conditions and thus act effectively as sources of oxygen. It has been found that certain rare earth oxides, such as certain lanthanide oxides, are able to release oxygen. This is believed to be derived from the ability of these oxides to undergo a transformation between two different oxidation states with different oxygen stoichiometries. For example, in the +4 oxidation state, the present exemplary lanthanide combines with oxygen forming the stable form of LnO2. However, when exposed to an oxygen depleted environment, the LnO2 readily releases oxygen transforming to its most reduced +3 oxidation state to form Ln2O3 as shown in Eqn. 1.
4LnO2→2Ln2O3+O2(g) Eqn. 1
The following equations represents some of the reactions for exemplary lanthanide oxides:
4CeO2→2Ce2O3+O2(g)
4PrO2→2Pr2O3+O2(g)
4NdO2→2Nd2O3+O2(g)
Pr6O11→3Pr2O3+O2(g)
The energy for conversion of the higher oxidation state oxide to the lower oxidation state is provided by the energy of the lamp during operation. For example, CeO2 can be converted to Ce2O3 at a temperature of about 800° C., which is typically exceeded in lamp operation.
In comparison to tungsten oxide (WO3), which releases all of the attached oxygen, in changing from the +4 to the +3 oxidation state, CeO2 and other LnO2 oxides release one quarter of the attached oxygen. Therefore, 0.12 mg of CeO2 releases the same molar amount of O2 as 0.027 mg of WO3. Other lanthanide dioxides are similar. Pr6O11 releases a smaller proportion by weight of O2. An advantage of this is that the larger amount of LnO2 is more feasible to handle in production compared to the smaller amount of WO3.
The source 40 of available oxygen (e.g. LnO2) may be present in an amount sufficient to provide a total of at least 10−2 μmol/cm3 of oxygen in the discharge space (i.e., when the lanthanide oxide is converted from its introduced form, e.g., as LnO2, to its lower oxidation state). In one embodiment, the source 40 of available oxygen is present in a sufficient amount to provide at least 5×10−2 μmol/cm3 of O2, and in one embodiment, up to about 20 μmol cm3 of O2 in the discharge space. The source of available oxygen, in the case of LnO2, yields 1 mole of O2 for every four moles of LnO2. The lanthanide oxide may thus be present in the fill in an amount of at least about 4×10−2 mol cm3 of the discharge space, e.g., at least about 0.1 μmol/cm3, and in some embodiments, at least about 1 μmol/cm3, and may be up to about 80 μmol/cm3 of the discharge space, or greater. For example, the lanthanide oxide may be present at 0.2-7.0 μmol/cm3 and in one embodiment, from 0.2-3.6 μmol/cm3. For lanthanide oxides which produce more O2 per mol of oxide, such as Pr6O11, the molar amounts can be correspondingly lower although the weight used is higher. Additionally, if other sources of oxygen, such as WO2, are combined with the lanthanide oxide, the minimum amount of LnO2 introduced to the discharge vessel can be correspondingly lowered.
The amount added may depend, to some degree on the anticipated lifetime of the lamp. While in theory, the same amount of lanthanide oxide could be used, irrespective of lamp lifetime, it has been found that, over time, some of the oxygen generated may be depleted. Thus, somewhat more lanthanide oxide may be added to compensate for this for lamps which are designed to operate for over 20,000 hrs.
The lanthanide oxide can be introduced to the discharge vessel in the form of a fine powder, grains, a pure crystal, a pellet, an oxide layer, e.g., on the electrode/discharge vessel wall, a combination thereof, or the like. For example, in one embodiment the lanthanide oxide is in pellet form with dimensions in the range of about 0.30-0.35 mm. The size of the pellet may be selected to allow introduction to the arc tube. The lanthanide oxide may be the sole component of the pellet or may be combined with other components, such as a carrier material and/or other component(s) of the fill, such as one or more of the halides to be used.
The lanthanide oxide may be introduced to the discharge vessel by hand or using an automated dispenser. For example, lanthanide oxide may be introduced to the discharge vessel using an automated dispenser as a pellet, a spherical, or other suitable shape. In other embodiments, the lanthanide oxide may be introduced along with inserting the tungsten electrodes which extend into the discharge vessel, e.g., as a layer on a part of the electrode.
In one embodiment, the discharge vessel, when formed, is free of all rare earth oxides other than oxides of lanthanum, cerium, praseodymium, neodymium, samarium, and gadolinium. In another embodiment, the fill is free of rare earth oxides of terbium, dysprosium, holmium, erbium, thulium, ytterbium, lutetium, scandium, and yttrium. By free, it is meant that these oxides are present in no greater than normal impurity amounts as part of the discharge vessel, electrodes, and/or other components of the fill, e.g., are each present in the discharge vessel/electrodes at a total concentration of less than about 10 ppm.
The source of available halogen as previously discussed in application Ser. No. 11/951,677, where present, may be generally an unstable halide or other halogen containing compound, which is capable of increasing the concentration of vapor phase WO2X2, through one or more reactions occurring during lamp operation, where X is as defined above. The source of free halogen may be a compound capable of reacting directly or indirectly with tungsten metal, tungsten-containing species, or a compound of tungsten to form WO2X2. The source of available halogen may be a halide selected from mercury halides, such as HgI2, HgBr2, HgCl2, and combinations thereof.
In one specific embodiment, the lamp fill, when the lamp is formed, i.e. before operation, consists essentially of a buffer gas, free mercury, a lanthanide oxide, such as cerium oxide, and a halide component consisting essentially of a rare earth halide selected from the group consisting of lanthanum halides, cerium halide, neodymium halides, samarium halides, and gadolinium halides, and combinations thereof, and at least one of an alkali metal halide, an alkaline earth metal halide and a halide of an element selected from In and Tl.
An exemplary fill composition for a 70 W lamp may be formulated as shown in Table 1:
The fill is formulated to provide conditions which favor regeneration, i.e., favor the solubility of tungsten in the fill 18 at the wall 32 while favoring the redeposition of the solubilized tungsten at the electrode(s) 20, 22. The electrode temperature during lamp operation may be about 2500-3200K at the electrode tip 28, 30, and in one embodiment, is maintained at a temperature of less than about 2700K. Regeneration can be achieved by selecting the lamp fill to provide a higher solubility of tungsten species adjacent the wall than at the electrode tip.
The regeneration is achieved even though the wall 32 of the discharge vessel, where significant tungsten deposition would otherwise occur, is at a lower temperature than the electrode tip 28 or 30 (or other portion of the electrode on which the tungsten is redeposited). For example, the wall may be at a temperature that is at least 200K lower than the portion of the electrode on which redeposition occurs, and in general, is at least 500K lower.
where SPWTe is the SPW at the temperature of the electrodes 20, 22 (2600K) and SPWTs is the SPW at the temperature of the wall surface 32. This means is that if the value is <0, the SPW established by vapor with equilibrium at the arctube wall, i.e., by vapor in contact with tungsten deposited on the wall, is larger than the SPW for at least one point on the electrode surface, thus there is a driving force for W deposition from the vapor phase to the electrode for at least that one point—and perhaps over wider regions if the value is <0 over a range of electrode temperatures. In general, lower supersaturation values are more favorable, although if the supersaturation value becomes too negative, it may be undesirable. Values within the range of 0.70-1.39 μmol shown in
Knowing the temperature of the discharge vessel wall 32 in the region where blackening due to tungsten deposition is most likely to occur and the temperature of the electrode tip 28, 30, in lamp operation, a suitable amount of a lanthanide oxide can be determined which favors regeneration while minimizing the effect on other lamp properties.
Without being bound by any particular theory, it is believed that the lanthanide oxide leads to an increase in WO2I2 in the vapor and thus is capable of decreasing W supersaturation and increasing wall cleaning.
Since cerium does not influence the color of the emitted light significantly, this allows for the CeO2 to be present in relatively high amounts without impacting the color rendering of the lamp significantly. For lanthanides which have a greater impact on color of the emitted light, the amount may be chosen to minimize the influence on light color, while still providing the beneficial effects of reduced wall blackening.
In various aspects, the ballast is selected to provide the lamp, during operation, with a wall loading of at least about 30 W/cm2. The wall loading may be at least about 50 W/cm2, and in some embodiments, about 70 W/cm2, or higher. Below about 25-30 W/cm2, the discharge vessel walls tend to be too cool for efficient maintenance of the active tungsten halogen cycle. As defined herein, the discharge vessel wall loading (WL)=W/A where W is the total discharge vessel power in watts and A is the area in cm2 of the discharge vessel wall which is located between the electrode tips 28, 30. The discharge vessel power is the total discharge vessel power including electrode power. In general the dose and wall loading are sufficient to maintain a wall temperature of at least about 600K, e.g., 1000-1400K.
In the case of a ceramic discharge vessel, the ceramic metal halide discharge vessel 12 can be of a three part construction, and may be formed, for example, as described, for example, in any one of U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,866,982 6,346,495; 7,215,081; and U.S. Pub. No. 2006/0164017. It will be appreciated that the discharge vessel 12 can be constructed from fewer or greater number of components, such as one or five components. The parts are formed as green ceramic and bonded in a gas tight manner by sintering or other suitable method. An exemplary discharge vessel can be constructed by die pressing or injection molding, and extruding a mixture of a ceramic powder and a binder into a solid cylinder. The ceramic powder may comprise high purity alumina (Al2O3), optionally doped with magnesia. Other ceramic materials which may be used include non reactive refractory oxides and oxynitrides such as yttrium oxide. lutetium oxide, and hafnium oxide and their solid solutions and compounds with alumina such as yttrium-aluminum-garnet and aluminum oxynitride. Binders which may be used individually or in combination include organic polymers such as polyols, polyvinyl alcohol, vinyl acetates, acrylates, cellulosics and polyesters. Subsequent to die pressing or injection molding and extrusion, the binder is removed from the green part, typically by thermal pyrolysis, e.g., at about 900-1100° C., to form a bisque-fired part. The sintering step may be carried out by heating the bisque-fired parts in hydrogen at about 1850-1880° C. The resulting ceramic material comprises a densely sintered polycrystalline alumina.
In other embodiments, the discharge vessel is formed of quartz glass and can be formed of one piece.
The lanthanide oxide can be introduced to the discharge vessel, e.g., thorough one of the leg members, prior to insertion of the electrodes. Alternatively, it may be introduced through a fill port (not shown) in a wall of the discharge vessel which is subsequently sealed.
The exemplary lamp finds use in a variety of applications, including highway and road lighting, lighting of large venues such as sports stadiums, floodlighting of buildings, shops, industrial buildings, automotive lighting, such as headlights, and in projectors.
Without intending to limit the scope of the disclosure, the following example demonstrates the formation of lamps with improved lumen maintenance.
Discharge vessels 12 were formed according to the shape shown in
The lanthanide oxide may be at least 99% pure, by weight, e.g., at least 99.9% pure and can be up to 99.999% pure. Various lanthanide oxides of 99.9% purity are obtainable from METALL RARE EARTH LIMITED, 12 Floor, AT Tower, 180 Electric Road, North Point, Hongkong, China.
Table 2 shows sample CeO2 pill sizes used in the lamps. N is the number of lamps tested for each design cell A, B, and C. In some tests, the cerium oxide pill was introduced into the discharge vessel by hand. In another tests, cerium oxide was incorporated using a commercial doser (available from APL Engineered Materials, Inc). This particular doser allows cerium oxide to be introduced into the arc tube of the lamp by a device including a stainless steel container with a small porous lid.
The lamps were run in a standard burning cycle (11 hrs. on followed by 1 hour off) for extended periods in a vertical-base-up orientation (i.e., at 90 degrees to that illustrated in
Table 3 shows the results obtained after 100, 500, and 1000 hrs. V is the burning voltage. Lumens is the lumen output of the lamp. LPW is the lumens per watt. % Lumen, i.e. lumen maintenance, is the lumens at a certain burning hour as expressed as % of lumens at 100 hours. X color and Y color are the chromaticity X and Y respectively; on a standard CIE (Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage) chromaticity diagram in which the chromaticity coordinates X and Y represent relative magnitudes of two of the three primary colors. CRI is the color rendering index and is a measure of the ability of the human eye to distinguish colors by the light of the lamp, higher values being favored. CCT is the correlated color temperature of the lamp which is the color temperature of a black body which most closely matches the lamp's perceived color. Dccy is the difference in chromaticity of the color point, on the Y axis (Y color), from that of the standard black body curve. The results are the mean of the N lamps in the cell.
As can be seen, the lumens and lumen efficacy (LPW) of the lamps with the lower CeO2 dose (cells B and C) was higher at each burning hour, although the lamps with the higher CeO2 dose (cell A) had a higher lumen maintenance at 500 hours, and 1000 hours.
A two-sample t-test was used to compare whether the average difference between the hand-dosed and doser-dosed cells was significant. The results are shown in Tables 4 and 5. These show no significant differences between the hand-dosed cell B and APL-dosed cell C in 100 hours of lamp performance for both CRI and lumens. Mean is the average of CRI and Lumen respectively for sample number N. Standard Deviation (St. Dev.) is a measure of the dispersion of the collection of sample CRI and Lumen values respectively. The SE Mean is the standard error of a method of measurement and P is the probability of obtaining a result at least as extreme as the one that was actually observed. As shown in Tables 4 and 5, since both samples have a P-value above 0.05 (5 percent), it can be concluded that there is no difference between the means.
Similar tests were performed to determine whether the results for the two pill sizes were significantly different. Tables 6, 7, 8, and 9 show analysis of variance for CRI (Tables 6 and 7) and lumens (Tables 8 and 9) respectively. Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) is a test for significant differences between means. N, Mean and St Dev are as described above. SS is the sum of the squared deviations. P is as described above. As shown in Tables 7 and 9, since the samples have a P-value below 0.05 (5 percent), it can be concluded that there is a difference between the means. It can therefore be concluded that the 0.18 mg CeO2 dose yields more lumens than a 0.24 mg CeO2 dose. The CRI results are similar for the two dosages.
In a comparative study, five lamps were formed as for the cells A, B, and C, with the same discharge vessel geometry and dose but without a lanthanide oxide oxygen dispenser. The results for these cells (labeled D) at 100 hrs, 500 hrs, and 1000 hrs are shown in Table 10 below. The average values and standard deviation (Sigma) are also provided.
It can be seen from these results that the exemplary lamps, on average, outperform the lamps without the CeO2 oxygen dispenser.
The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations.
This application claims the benefit, as a continuation-in-part, of application Ser. No. 11/951,677, filed Dec. 6, 2007, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11951677 | Dec 2007 | US |
Child | 12270216 | US |