Information
-
Patent Grant
-
6741035
-
Patent Number
6,741,035
-
Date Filed
Wednesday, February 12, 200321 years ago
-
Date Issued
Tuesday, May 25, 200420 years ago
-
Inventors
-
Original Assignees
-
Examiners
Agents
- Nixon Peabody LLP
- Safran; David S.
-
CPC
-
US Classifications
Field of Search
US
- 313 623
- 313 624
- 313 625
- 313 626
-
International Classifications
-
Abstract
A short arc discharge lamp in which the arc tube contains opposed cathode and anode electrodes with upholding parts that are inserted into a respective glass tube holding cylinder, and in which the glass tubes of the holding cylinders are secured in the side tubes at opposite sides of the arc tube by contracted areas, provides the peripheral surface of the holding cylinders with at least one section of reduced diameter to prevent the holding cylinders from moving, to prevent force from acting in a concentrated manner on the sealed areas and to prevent the lamp from being damaged when the lamp is shaken during transport or the like.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a short arc discharge lamp which is used as a light source for a projector, for semiconductor exposure, for UV curing and the like.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Conventionally, a xenon gas-filled short arc lamp is used, for example, for a light source for a projector. Recently, there has been more and more often a high demand for more radiance of the projected image of the projector. Therefore, there is the tendency to increase the amount of added xenon gas. As a result, the gas pressure in the arc tube of short arc lamps during operation, recently, has been extremely high.
In one such short arc lamp, a spherical or oval arc tube composed of silica glass is filled with xenon gas along with opposed cathode and anode electrodes. The upholding parts of the cathode and anode electrodes are sealed in ends of side tubes which adjoin opposite sides of the arc tube. To secure the upholding parts of the electrodes of the cathode and the anode, the ends of the side tubes are contracted by heating, the diameter is reduced, and thus, contracted areas are formed. However, in order to directly secure the upholding parts of the cathode and anode electrodes in the contracted areas of the side tubes, the amount of contraction must be increased.
Therefore, the upholding parts of the cathode and anode electrodes are inserted into a silica glass holding cylinder, the contracted areas of the side tubes are welded to the holding cylinders, and thus, the upholding parts of the cathode and anode electrodes are secured.
If the contracted areas of the side tubes are welded to the holding cylinders, on the weld end, a wedge-like area is formed as a small gap which leads to the formation of fractures during operation. Therefore, as can be seen from Japanese patent disclosure document HEI 11-135067 and corresponding U.S. Pat. No. 6,356,018, an arrangement is suggested in which in the outside periphery of the respective holding cylinder, there is an intermediate layer in the form of a metal layer or ceramic layer.
FIG. 1
shows as the prior art a short arc discharge lamp in a schematic cross section in which the technology described in the above described publication is used. Here, there are an anode
22
and a cathode
21
in the oval arc tube
10
. Bordering the arc tube
10
, there are side tubes
11
into which the upholding parts
23
of the electrodes are inserted; on their respective tip, an electrode is mounted and they are sealed on the ends of the side tubes. Thus, on the respective end of the side tube, a sealed area
13
is formed. The upholding parts
23
of the electrodes are each inserted into a holding cylinder
30
of silica glass for securing the upholding parts of the electrode and secured. The outside periphery of the respective holding cylinder
30
is provided with an intermediate layer
40
in the form of a metal layer or a ceramic layer.
However, since the contracted area
12
of the side tube and the holding cylinder
30
are not welded to one another, there is the danger that the holding cylinders
30
will move if, during transport or the like, the lamp is subjected to vibration. If the holding cylinders
30
move, the force is concentrated on the sealed areas
13
; this leads to lamp damage.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The primary object of the invention is to devise a short arc lamp in which the glass tubes of the holding cylinders are prevented from moving, the force acting on the lamp is prevented from being concentrated on the sealed areas and the lamp is prevented from being damaged when the lamp is shaken during transport or the like.
In a first aspect of the invention, in a short arc discharge lamp in which in the arc tube there are opposed cathode and anode electrodes, in which the upholding parts of the cathode and anode electrodes are each secured by insertion into a holding cylinder, in which these holding cylinders are supported by contracted areas of the side tubes which adjoin the arc tube, and in which the outer periphery of the respective holding cylinder is coated with a coating material of metal or ceramic, the object is achieved by the respective holding cylinder having a part with a reduced diameter in the lengthwise direction.
The object is achieved according to one development of the invention by the holding cylinders having an outside diameter which decreases in the direction toward the cylinder middle and the holding cylinders are preferably shaped essentially like a tambourine.
The holding cylinders can, moreover, have several sections of reduced diameter in the lengthwise direction so that the holding cylinders, for example, have an outside contour with a wave shape in the lengthwise direction.
According to another aspect of the invention, in a short arc discharge lamp in which in the arc tube contains opposed cathode and anode electrodes, in which the upholding parts of the electrodes of the cathode and anode electrodes are each secured by insertion into a holding cylinder, in which these holding cylinders are supported by contracted areas of the side tubes which adjoin the arc tube, and in which the outer periphery of the respective holding cylinder is coated with a coating material of metal or ceramic, the object is achieved by the outside peripheral surface of the respective holding cylinder being provided with projections. For example, the holding cylinders can have flange-like projections on their respective ends.
The holding cylinders can have both a round-cylindrical and also a polygon-cylindrical basic shape.
The invention is described specifically below using several embodiments shown in the drawings.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1
is a schematic cross-sectional view of a conventional short arc discharge lamp;
FIG. 2
is a schematic cross-sectional view of a short arc discharge lamp in accordance with the invention;
FIGS.
3
(
a
) to
3
(
c
) each show a schematic of a respective embodiment of a holding cylinder which is located in the short arc discharge lamp in accordance with the invention; and
FIGS.
4
(
a
) to
4
(
c
) each show an enlargement of the vicinity of the holding cylinder of the short arc discharge lamp in accordance with the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
FIG. 2
shows a xenon short arc lamp as one example of a short discharge lamp in accordance with the invention. In a silica glass arc tube
10
, a cathode
21
and an anode
22
are disposed opposite each other on a respective one of a pair of upholding parts
23
of the electrodes, which parts a made of tungsten rods. The arc tube
10
is filled with xenon gas. A side tube
11
extends from each of opposite sides of the arc tube
10
. The upholding parts
23
of the electrodes are sealed in the sealed areas
13
on the ends of the side tubes
11
.
A holding cylinder
30
of silica glass has a part on its outside peripheral surface that has a smaller diameter in its middle area in the lengthwise direction (the lengthwise direction of the upholding parts
23
of the electrodes onto which the holding cylinder is pushed). The upholding parts
23
of the electrodes are secured by the holding cylinders
30
. The diameter of the side tubes
11
is reduced by exposing the inside of the arc tube
10
to a negative pressure and by heating the ends of the side tubes
11
on the side of the arc tube
10
. In this way, contracted areas
12
are formed. Between the respective holding cylinder
30
and the respective contracted area
12
, as is shown in
FIG. 2
, a coating material
50
of metal or ceramic is applied. The respective holding cylinder
30
and the respective contracted area
12
are attached to one another by this coating without their being connected to one another in one piece by welding.
The holding cylinder
30
can have the shapes shown, by way of example, in FIGS.
3
(
a
),
3
(
b
) and
3
(
c
). The holding cylinder
30
, in its lengthwise direction, has a part
31
with a reduced diameter (two parts in the FIG.
3
(
a
) embodiment). By heating the outside periphery of the side tube, the side tube is heated especially at the point which corresponds to the part(s)
31
with a smaller diameter, by which the contracted area(s)
12
is/are formed. Thus, attachment takes place such that the holding cylinder
30
is squeezed. In FIG.
3
(
b
), the area of smaller diameter is the result of the two ends of the holding cylinder
30
in the lengthwise direction being provided with annular flange-shaped projections
32
. The projections
32
need not always be provided on the two ends, but it is likewise possible if they are located somewhere else on the outside peripheral surface of the holding cylinder. In FIG.
3
(
c
), the holding cylinder has a somewhat tambourine-like appearance in cross section, the outer surface being longitudinally concave. This is especially advantageous with respect to ease of forming (ease of manufacture) of the glass. The holding cylinder
30
has a through opening into which the upholding part of the respective electrode is inserted.
FIGS.
4
(
a
),
4
(
b
) and
4
(
c
) each show a state in which the respective holding cylinder shown in FIGS.
3
(
a
) to
3
(
c
) is inserted into the side tube and the latter has been contracted by external heating of the side tube in order to attach the holding cylinder.
The coating material
50
can be, for example, a molybdenum foil. The production process is described below in this case.
First, a molybdenum foil is wound around the peripheral surface of the holding cylinder
30
. When the inside of the arc tube is subjected to a negative pressure and the side tubes
11
are heated along the tube axis, their diameter is reduced and contracted areas
12
form. However, since there is a coating material
50
of molybdenum foil, the holding cylinder
30
and the contracted area
12
are attached to one another without having to be connected integrally to one another by welding. In this way, since only the process of winding the molybdenum foil, as the coating material
50
, around the peripheral surface of the holding cylinder
30
is additionally required, there is the advantage that handling and production are extremely simple. The holding cylinder
30
need not always be a circular cylinder, but can also be a polygonal cylinder, for example, having a base in the shape of a pentagon. The concept of cylinder used here will designate all cylindrical forms.
Furthermore, the coating material
50
can also be a vapor-deposited metal layer or a sintered ceramic. Moreover, a metal, such as molybdenum, can be vapor deposited on the outside peripheral surface of the holding cylinder
30
, for example, by sputtering.
In the case of using ceramic as the coating material
50
, it is possible to proceed as follows.
Powdered ceramic, such as aluminum oxide, zirconium dioxide, silicon carbide, tantalum carbide, titanium oxide or the like is dispersed in a binder by which an application liquid is obtained which is applied to the outside peripheral surface of the holding cylinder
30
in a given thickness, heated and sintered. In this way, a ceramic coating is formed.
Action of the Invention
As was described above, in accordance with the invention, a short arc discharge lamp is obtained in which the glass tubes of the holding cylinders are prevented from moving, force is prevented from acting in a concentrated manner on the sealed areas and the lamp is prevented from being damaged when the lamp is shaken during transport or the like.
Claims
- 1. Short arc discharge lamp comprising an arc tube within which cathode and anode electrodes are disposed in an opposed relationship to each other, each of the electrodes have an upholding part inserted into a holding cylinder; wherein side tubes are connected to opposite sides of the arc tube and the holding cylinders are secured in the side tubes by contracted areas of the side tubes, wherein a coating material of a metal or ceramic material is provided on a peripheral surface of each holding cylinder; and where each of the holding cylinders has at least one section with a reduced outside diameter between longitudinal ends thereof.
- 2. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 1, wherein the holding cylinders have an outside diameter which decreases in a direction toward a longitudinal middle thereof.
- 3. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 2, wherein the peripheral surface of the holding cylinders has a longitudinal concave curvature.
- 4. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 1, wherein the holding cylinders have a plurality of sections with a reduced outside diameter between longitudinal ends thereof.
- 5. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 4, wherein the holding cylinders have an outside contour with a wave shape in the lengthwise direction.
- 6. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 1, wherein the outside peripheral surface of the respective holding cylinder is provided with projections.
- 7. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 6, wherein said projections are flange-shaped projections on each of opposite ends thereof.
- 8. Short arc discharge lamp as claimed in claim 1, wherein the holding cylinders have a base of a polygonal shape.
Priority Claims (1)
Number |
Date |
Country |
Kind |
2002-035038 |
Feb 2002 |
JP |
|
US Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Name |
Date |
Kind |
4038578 |
Mathijssen |
Jul 1977 |
A |
6356018 |
Higashimoto et al. |
Mar 2002 |
B1 |