1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to plasma crucible sealing and a sealed plasma crucible.
2. Description of the Related Art
In our PCT/GB2008/003829, we have described and claimed a light source to be powered by microwave energy, the source having:
In that application, we gave the following definitions:
“lucent” means that the material, of which the item described as lucent, is transparent or translucent;
“plasma crucible” means a closed body [for] enclosing a plasma, the latter being in the void when the void's fill is excited by microwave energy from the antenna. In this application we continue to use the definition, with the proviso that it is in the context of sealing a crucible, which does not contain a plasma during sealing. Accordingly, as used herein, the definition includes the word “for”.
In this application, we define:
“filled plasma crucible” to mean a lucent plasma crucible having sealed in its void an excitable, light emitting fill.
A filled plasma crucible as such may have an antenna fixedly sealed within the crucible, possibly in the void, or a re-entrant in the crucible, into which an antenna is inserted for use of the crucible.
The object of the present invention is to provide an improved method of sealing a filled plasma crucible.
According to one aspect of the invention there is provided a method of sealing a filled plasma crucible consisting in the steps of:
Preferably the sealing step includes collapse and fusing of the tube.
Whilst in certain embodiments, the plug now described will not be used, in other embodiments:
Where a plug is not used, the tube can be positioned on and fused onto a face of the crucible. Alternatively, the tube can be positioned in and fused into a counterbore in the face of the crucible at the mouth of the void.
In some uses of the filled plasma crucible, it will be supported via the tube which will remain extending from the crucible. In other uses, the tube will be removed close to the seal and the crucible supported from its body.
According to another aspect of the invention, there is provided a filled plasma crucible having:
A second tube or a vestige thereof extending from the sealed mouth at the opposite face of the crucible.
Where the crucible is to be of quartz, whilst moulding and sintering is possible for forming the crucible and the tube; conveniently the crucible is formed from a block of quartz, having the void machined in it, and the quartz tube is sealed to the block by heating and fusing. Final sealing of this crucible is conveniently completed by tipping off, that is local heating of the tube close to the crucible, allowing atmospheric pressure to collapse it when softened, removing the heat and drawing the remaining tube away.
To clean up the void after drilling, in particular to remove particulate impurities liable to interfere with the plasma discharge, the void is preferably ultrasonically cleaned and then flame polished to enhance transparency and inhibit crack propagation. To facilitate this, the void is preferably bored right through the crucible and then sealed off at its end opposite the tube after polishing.
A plug may be fused into the mouth or at least retained by the collapsed and sealed tube.
Fusing of the quartz tube is readily performed using conventional flames or argon plasma flames.
Normally the crucible, the tube and the plug, where provided, will be of the same material. Where the material is polycrystalline ceramic, this is more readily moulded in green state and fired to finished state. It is less easy to seal this crucible by collapse and fusing of the tube and a plug is more likely to be used. A frit material can be provided at the interface between the plug and the crucible to provide a fusible, sealing interface between the two. Conveniently the frit is provided initially on the plug. The frit can be readily fused by use of a laser, which can be arranged to pass through the ceramic material to focus on the frit material.
Where a plug is to be used, it and/or the mouth of the void are shaped with a step, whereby the plug is readily placed in position with the step providing the stop. The plug can be thin with respect to its diameter—it and the mouth normally being of circular cross-section—but it will normally be of appreciable thickness so as to be unable to turn out of alignment within the tube whilst being positioned. Alternatively to a stepped configuration, the mouth and plug can be tapered, the taper providing the seat. Such a configuration is satisfactory for evacuation, but can provide self-sealing against inert gas introduction. For this a specific gas passage can be provided in the form or a shallow flat or groove along the plug. It may be desirable to provide such a flat or groove even with the stepped configuration, in particular to avoid premature closure at the step against inert gas introduction.
Conveniently, and in particular to enhance predictable microwave resonance in the crucible, the plug is dimensioned to be locally flush with the plasma crucible when positioned on the stop. Nevertheless it can be envisaged that fusing for sealing may be easier if the plug extends into the tube. Further sealing of the tube against the wall of the tube renders condensation space for the excitable material more predictable. Considerations here being that the vestige of the tube is likely to provide a cold spot at which the excitable material is likely to condense and that it is important for the material to have a surface in ready communication with the void, whereby the material can evaporate into the void to participate in the plasma.
Preferably, in use, the vestige of the tube is used as a duct via which an electric field pulse can be introduced into the crucible for initiating discharge in it.
Normally the void will be positioned on a central axis of the crucible.
For light emitting use, the filled plasma crucible will normally have a re-entrant occupied by an antenna. The re-entrant can be on the central axis of the crucible, opposite from the plug or indeed in the plug. In either of these cases the void and the re-entrant will normally be co-axial. Alternatively the antenna re-entrant can be off-set to one side of the void.
To help understanding of the invention, a number of specific embodiments thereof will now be described by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Referring to
A pellet 12 of excitable material is dropped into the void via that the tube, followed by a circular cylindrical plug 13. This is of a clearance diameter in the bore 10 and comes to rest on the step 14 between the counter bore 5 and the void 3. To provide for initial gas communication from the void past the plug, this has a shallow groove 15 along its length, which continues in its inner face 16 beyond the radial extent of the step.
The distal end of the tube is connected to vacuum pump (not shown as such) via a Y fitting having a first valve and union 17 for connection to the pump and a second valve and union 18 for connection to a source of noble gas at a controlled, sub-atmospheric pressure (the source as such also not shown). The void is evacuated via the valve 17, which is closed after evacuation. The void is then charged with noble gas via the valve 18, which again is closed after charging. The gas is able to reach the void via the groove 15.
The final stage in formation of a filled plasma crucible is heating of the tube via a burner 19. The heating is continued until the quartz material of the tube softens and the excess of atmospheric pressure over the internal pressure of the noble gas causes the tube to collapse on itself. The plug seated on the step 14 extends slightly into the tube 8 and past the external face of the end of the crucible, as is shown by the dimension 20. The heating is made just beyond this dimension, whereby as the tube collapses, it shrinks onto the outer end corner 21 of the plug. Thus the void is double sealed in that any vestigial space 22 at the end of the plug is sealed from the void at the corner 21 and a complete closure of the tube is achieved at the “tip off” 23 of the tube, where the distal end piece of the tube is drawn away from the crucible after collapse of the tube.
In the variant shown in
A further variant is shown in
Another variant is shown in
The invention is not intended to be restricted to the details of the above described embodiments. For instance, the stepped counter bore and circular cylindrical plug can be replaced by a complementarily tapered bore and plug. Further it is expected to be possible to seal the tube to crucible without the counter-bore 6 by performing this sealing operation in a lathe.
Such a plasma crucible 92 is shown in
In a further alternative, in contrast to a through-bored crucible, which can be treated as mentioned above for removal of micro-cracks, or indeed a section of thick wall tube, it is possible for applications where product life is not a primary concern, to bore the void from one side a piece to quartz. Again it can be envisaged that the crucible might be formed of sintered material. In such instances, a single tube only can be butt sealed around the mouth of the void and sealed in the manner described.
Typically in use of a quartz crucible operating at 2.4 GHz, the crucible can be circularly cylindrical with a diameter of 49 mm and a thickness of 21 mm. The diameter of the void is not thought to be critical and can vary between 1 mm for low power and 10 mm for high power. We have used sealing tube having wall thicknesses between 1 mm and 3 mm. We have also tested crucibles with tipped off tubes up to 30 mm in length from the face of the crucible. We prefer the internal length of the tipped off tube back to the face to be between zero and 10 mm. The preferred distance is 5 mm. Provision of such a length of tube is envisaged to be useful in holding the crucible in subsequent processing and/or use thereof.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0903017.2 | Feb 2009 | GB | national |
This application is for entry into the U.S. National Phase under §371 for International Application No. PCT/GB2010/000313 having an international filing date of Feb. 22, 2010, and from which priority is claimed under all applicable sections of Title 35 of the United States Code including, but not limited to, Sections 120, 363 and 365(c), and which in turn claims priority under 35 USC 119 to United Kingdom Patent Application No. 0903017.2 filed on Feb. 23, 2009 and to U.S. Patent Application No. 61/209,598 filed on Mar. 9, 2009.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/GB2010/000313 | 2/22/2010 | WO | 00 | 1/5/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2010/094938 | 8/26/2010 | WO | A |
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20020000779 | Anders | Jan 2002 | A1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20120091892 A1 | Apr 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61209598 | Mar 2009 | US |