CA1280150C - Metal halide lamp containing halide composition to control arc tube performance - Google Patents

Metal halide lamp containing halide composition to control arc tube performance

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Publication number
CA1280150C
CA1280150C CA000554017A CA554017A CA1280150C CA 1280150 C CA1280150 C CA 1280150C CA 000554017 A CA000554017 A CA 000554017A CA 554017 A CA554017 A CA 554017A CA 1280150 C CA1280150 C CA 1280150C
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Canada
Prior art keywords
arc tube
thorium
metal halide
lamp
envelope
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
CA000554017A
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Timothy David Russell
Daniel Michael Cap
Richard Phillip Gilliard
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
General Electric Co
Original Assignee
General Electric Co
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Publication date
Application filed by General Electric Co filed Critical General Electric Co
Priority to CA000554017A priority Critical patent/CA1280150C/en
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Publication of CA1280150C publication Critical patent/CA1280150C/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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Abstract

ABSTRACT OF THE DISCLOSURE

In an arc tube for a high intensity metal halide discharge lamp, a particular composition of metal halide dose is provided to control thorium transport to the electrodes within the arc tube and tungsten transport to the wall to improve arc tube performance.

Description

~ ~8~;0 METAL HALIDE LAMP CONTAINING HALIDE
COMPOSITION TO CONTROL ARC TUBE PERFORMANCE

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention The present invention relates to high intensity discharge lamps of the metal halide type and, in particular, to a high intensity discharge lamp containing a combination of metal halides including a particular range of concentrations of thorium iodide to control thorium transport to the electrode tips within the arc tube of the lamp to improve arc tube performance.
2. Description of the Prior Art Metal halide arc discharge lamps utilize the addition of halides of various light emitting metals to mercury in the arc tube of a high pressure discharge lamp in order to modify the color temperature of the light emitted by the lamp and to raise the operating efficacy of the light output by the lamp as described in U.S. Patent No. 3,234,421 issued February 8, 1966 to Reiling and assigned to the as6ignee of the present invention. The electrodes of prior art metal halide lamps typically comprise a thorium tungsten electrode formed by wrapping a tungsten coil to serve as a heat radiator around a tungsten rod with a thorium or thorium oxide containing compound in the turns of the coil. Under proper conditions when operating in a o -2- LD 9436 `

thorium iodide containing atmosphere the tungsten rod acquires a thorium spot on its distal end which serves as a good electron emitter and which is continually renewed by a transport cycle involving the halogen present in the atmosphere which returns to the cathode any thorium lost by any process. The thorium tungsten electrode and its method of operation are described in Electric Discharge Lamps by John F. Waymouth, MIT
Press, 1971 Chapter 9. Waymouth describes an analysis of the operation of the lamp electrodes in the presence of thorium as producing a coating on the tip of the lamp electrodes. When the electrode is not coated by thorium, the work function of the electrode is higher due to exposure of the tungsten and the resultant direct contact between the arc and the tungsten requiring the electrode to run hotter in order to sustain the arc current which causes poorer lumen maintenance especially in smaller sized lamps. The higher temperature makes the arc tube blacken due to tungsten loss from the electrodes which results in poor lumen maintenance. In a prior art~patent No.
4,360,756, issued November 23, 1982 to Spencer et al and assigned to the present assignee, a composition of fill materials is described and claimed which results in a reduction of the free iodine within the arc tube in the arc tube atmosphere during lamp operation to maintain a layer of thorium on the electrode tip during operation. Spencer et al describe the addition of getters (e.g. cadmium and zinc) to limit the build-up of iodine within the arc tube and thereby provide an enhancement of the thorium transport cycle.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIO~
An object of the present invention is to provide a high intensity discharge lamp exhibiting improved lumen maintenance and lamp life. A more o~s~
particular object of the present invention i8 to provide a specific dose of thorium iodide in the arc tube of a high intensity lamp such that throughout the normal operating cycle of a high intensity metal halide discharge lamp tungsten loss from the electrode is ~uppressed.
Accordingly, the present invention in a preferred embodiment includes a fill composition for the arc tube of a high intensity metal halide lamp which includes a quantity of thorium iodide sufficient to ensure the presence of thorium metal or thorium iodide upon the arc electrode surfaces to block tungsten transport therefrom for as long as possible during lamp life. In a particularly preferred embodiment of the present invention the fill composition includes approximately 3.8 percent by weight of thorium iodide ~ThI4) or approximately 0.9 milligrams of thorium iodide (ThI4) per ampere of arc current.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
Further objects and advantages of the present invention together with its organization, method of operation and best mode contemplated may best be understood by reference to the following description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which like references characters refer to like elements throughout, and in which:
Fig. 1 i6 a schematic elevation view of a high intensity metal halide discharge lamp incorporating the present invention:
Fig. 2 i5 a schematic partial cross-sectional elevational view of an arc chamber of the lamp illustrated in Fig. 1: and Fig. 3 is a schematic enlarged elevational view of an arc electrode of the present invention.
DESCRIPTIO~I OF THE PREFER~ED EMBODIMENTS
A high intensity metal halide discharge lamp 10 as illustrated schematically in Fig. 1 includes an outer envelope 12 of vitreous material, such as glass having a suitable composition for a high intensity discharge lamp, and a base 14 having suitable electrical coneacts for making electrical connection to a conventional threaded socket. The space within the outer envelope 12 may be evacusted or ~illed with nitrogen gas to a pressure of about 0.5 atmosphere.
The end cap 14 surrounds the stem 16 of the lamp through which electrically conductive terminal wires 18 and 20 extend. Terminal wire 1~ is connected to support rod 22 to which support member 24 is attached.
An electrically conductive inlead 26 connected to support member 24 on one end is connected to foil member 28 which is connected to electrode stem 30 of the electrode 32. A support lead 34 is connected to terminal 20 and is connected directly to inlead 36 which i6 connected to the foil member 38 connected to electrode stem 40 of electrode 42. An anchoring dimple 44 is provided at the bottom end of the outer envelope 12 80 that a metallic collar 46 may be disposed thereon to support rod 48 connected by support member 50 to the stem 52 of the arc tube 54. The stems 52 and 56 of the arc tube are sealed around the ribbon members 28 and 30 to seal the interior of the arc tube.
The arc tube 54 shown in more detail in Fig. 2 includes an inner envelope of vitreous material such as thin walled fu~ed silica sealed at the respective ends as described above with the electrodes 32 and 42 projecting into the interior from the respective ends thereof. In the arc tube 54 ~hown in Fig. 2 the arc tube envelope includes a generally hemispherical end 60 having a predetermined radius and a generally lSO
hemispherical end 70 having a radius larger than the radius of end 60 and joined thereto by a tapered wall 72 having the shape of a generally circular arc of revolution. Although only the asymmetrical arc tube is shown it is to be understood that the present invention applies equal}y well to lamps having arc tubes with a circular cylindrical geometry with the radius generally constant along the arc tube longitudinal axis. A
suitable filling is disposed within the arc chamber 54 to provide an arc carrying medium during operation of the lamp. The electrode stem 30 is 6ealed at 62 into the arc tube end and the stem 40 is similarly sealed into the opposite arc tube end. The tungsten wire electrodes 32 and 42 are wrapped into the form shown in Fig. 2 and project into the interior of the arc chamber by a predetermined distance so that the vaporization of fill materials is maintained at the appropriate level during lamp operation. The electrode 42 i8 shown greatly enlarged in Fig. 3, and it is to ~e understood that both electrodes 32 and 42 in the arc tube are constructed and operate 6imilarly. The tip 80 of the tungsten electrode is coated by a layer 82 of thorium.
The coil 84 of tungsten 6urrounds the rod B6 of the electrode 42 and serves to radiate heat and cool the electrode. An infrared reflective coating 66 may be disposed upon the exterior surface 68 of o~e end 60 of the arc tube 54 to assi6t in maintaining the fill materials in the vapor state during lamp operation.
The present invention involves maintaining the vaporization rate of thorium iodide at the wall of the arc tube so as to ensure the presence of the thorium metal layer 82 on the 6urface of the electrode tip 80 for as long as possible during lamp operation in order to ensure against loss of tungsten from the electrode surface. A similar layer of thorium is maintained on 0~5C) electrode tip 64. The electrode is made of tungsten and thorium metal or thorium oxide (ThO21 and the metal halide dose includes a quantity of thorium tetraiodide (ThI4). During operation of the lamp the metal halides including the thorium tetraiodide vaporize in the arc and condense on the interior surface of the arc tube walls to form a film, shown by stippling 74. The amount of coverage of the interior wall surface of the arc tube depends upon the amount of fill material within the arc tube that can be vaporized during operation of the discharge lamp and the arc tube geometry. The composition of the fill determines the materials in the condensate which coat the interior of the arc tube walls. The fill normally includes an amalgam of mercury, for example, of an about 0 to about 5 molar percent cadmium amalgam, and a quantity of metal halides normally a combination of iodides including, for example, 60dium iodide, scandium iodide and thorium iodide in predetermined weight percents, plus an inert gas fill as a starting gas. The total quantity of the metal halides is selected to provide an excess of halides above the amount which is vaporized during normal operation of the lamp, so that some of the metal halides will condense upon the interior surface of the arc tube wall.
During normal lamp operation a transport cycle exists between the thorium tetraiodide, ThI4, on the arc tube walls and the thorium metal or thorium oxide ThO2 which is part of the lamp electrodes. If 6ufficient thorium tetraiodide is deposited upon the arc tube walls, Rome will be continuously vaporized and provide a source for deposition of thorium metal upon the lamp electrodes to maintain a coating of thorium upon the tungsten electrodes. ~ctivation of the OlSO
transport cycle requires a vapori~ation rate from the electrode tip of thorium metal or ThIX (X < 4~ to be less than the vaporization rate of thorium tetraiodide Thl4 at the walls. The present invention involves maintaining the vaporization rate of thorium tetraiodide, ThI4, at the wall greater than the rate of thorium removal at the electrode during lamp li$e, particularly in the presence of iodine buildup due to inevitable metal loss and reaction in the arc tube throughout lamp life, thereby decreasing the rate of tungsten loss from the electrode. Lumen maintenance improvement is obtained by adding a specified amount of ThI4 to the metal halide dose in order to promote physical and chemical mechanisms which result in larger than conventional amounts of thorium being deposited on both electrodes during lamp life. When the amount of thorium tetraiodide per ampere of arc current is about O.9 mg/amp, substantial improvements in lumen maintenance are realized over arc tubes having ThI4 concentration of about 0.4 mg/amp. Lumen maintenance improvement is observed to level o$f as ThI4 concentration increases to the range of about l.O
mg/amp to about 1.5 mg/amp for arc tubes with approximately equal total amounts of metal halide dose. The amount of thorium dose in the lamp affects lumen maintenance either because the presence of bulk thorium as opposed to only a monolayer further suppresses tungsten loss, and/or because some of the thorium initially reacts with inevitable arc tube impurities. In either case the more thorium present in the arc tube available for transport, the greater the likelihood of a sufficient amount being transported to the electrode tip to ensure bulk deposition or at least a coating layer 82 of thorium being present on the electrode. The amount of thorium transported is Oi~;~
determined by the vapor pressure of thorium at the arc tube wall, which in turn is determined by the surface temperature of the condensate on the arc tube wall as well as the composition of the condensate.
Increasing the relative concentration of ThI4 in the metal halide dose tends to raise the ThI4 vaporization rate at the wall and favor transport of thorium to the electrode, until iodine buildup over time from loss or reaction of other lamp metals (e.g. 60dium and scandium) suppresses thorium condensation on the electrode. Increasing the total amount of metal halide dose ensures that there is sufficient condensate to fill small crevices and other cold parts of the arc tube and still provide suf f icient condensate to ensure that wall coverage will be non-localized extending over the inner surface of the arc tube wall up to the point of the upper electrode in the case of appropriate arc tube geometries. Complete coverage of the arc tube wall with metal halide condensate prevents deposition of tungsten compounds upon the arc tube and the resultant wall darkening.
Excess dose also ensures that sufficient thorium tetraiodide is present on the walls to sustain the thorium transport cycle and maintain a coating of thorium on the lamp electrode. The presence of thorium on the electrode tip reduces tungsten loss by acting as a barrier and/or by lowering the electrode tip temperature as a result of the lowered work function.
High wall coverage of condensate serves as a reservior of thorium at the top of the arc tube to increase thorium concentration near the top electrode to improve thorium coating on the top electrode during lamp operation. We have found that a metal halide dose containing a quantity of thorium tetraiodide ThI4 in the range from about 3.8 percent by weight up to an 1~301~0 _g_ LD 9436 apparent saturation limit of about 6.0 percent by weight of metal halide dose improves lumen maintenance irrespective of other lamp design factors over a ThI4 concentration of about 1.8 percent. At concentration above the saturation limit an undesireable chemical reaction may result between thorium and other arc tube materials or chemicals. For metal halide discharge lamps in the range of about 30 watts to about 1000 watts which operate with arc current in the range of about 0.5 ampere to about 3.5 amperes and voltage levels of about 80 to about 270 volts, use of a metal halide dose having a sufficient quantity of ThI4 to provide a ratio of amount of ThI4 to lamp arc current in the range of about 0.9 mg/amp to about 1.5 mg/amp maintain the thorium transport cycle and thereby improve lamp lumen maintenance.
In a specific experiment a metal halide dose composition containing sodium iodide (NaI~ about 85.1 percent by weight, scandium iodide (ScI3) about 11.1 percent by weight and thorium iodide (ThI4) about 3.8 percent by weight provided significantly improved lumen maintenance using standard electrodes in a high intensity metal halide discharge lamp when compared with a dose containing about 85.9~ NaI, 12.3% ScI3, and 1.8% ThI4. A te6t was conducted to compare 80 and 100 watt metal halide lamps having a ThI4 concentration in the metal halide dose of about 3.8 percent by weight with similar lamps having a ThI4 concentration of about 1.8% by weight. After 2000 hours of continuous burning the lamps having a ThI4 concentration of 3.8 percent showed a lumen maintenance about 11.3% higher than the lamps having the lower ThI4 concentration, in a factorial experiment with a variety of factors including a compari~on of lumen maintenance versus ThI4 concentration~ A similar 1~301~0 e~periment was conducted using 125 watt metal halide lamps operated for 3000 hours with one third of the lamps burned continuously for 3000 hours and two thirds of the lamps operated on a schedule of eleven hours on and one hour off for a total time of 3000 hours. The 125 watt lamps having a ThI4 concentration of about 3.8 percent by weight or about 0.9 milligrams per ampere of arc current showed an average lumen maintenance advantage at 3000 hours of about 12.6~ over the lamps having a ThI4 concentration of about 1.8 percent by weight or about 0.4 milligrams per ampere.
From the above description of the present invention those skilled in the art will recognize that a substantial improvement in metal halide discharge lamp lumen maintenance has been achieved as a result of the present invention which recognizes and utilizes various factors of metal halide lamp design to enhance the thorium transport cycle.

Claims (8)

1. A high intensity metal halide discharge lamp comprising:
an hermetically sealed vitreous light transmissive outer envelope;
first and second electrical terminal means secured into said outer envelope for making electrical connection from an external power source to the interior of said outer envelope;
first and second conductive lead means for making connection to respective ones of said terminal means;
an hermetically sealed light transmissive vitreous arc tube envelope having respective first and second ends disposed within said outer envelope;
first and second electrodes comprising tungsten and thorium or thorium oxide disposed within said arc tube envelope and sealed into said first and second respective ends of said arc tube envelope;
first and second inlead means for passing through respective arc tube stems at said respective ends of said arc tube envelope and for connecting respective ones of said conductive lead means to respective ones of said first and second electrode means;
support means for supporting said arc tube envelope in a predetermined orientation relative to said outer envelope;
a discharge supporting medium disposed within said arc tube envelope and comprising a quantity of an amalgam of mercury containing O to 5 molar percent cadmium;
a quantity of an inert fill gas in said arc tube as a starting gas, and a metal halide dose comprising a combination of metal halides, including thorium tetraiodide, present in said arc tube in an amount in excess of that amount vaporized during normal operation of the lamp wherein the amount of thorium tetraiodide present in the dose ranges from about 3.8 to 6.0 wt. % thereof and from about 0.9 to 1.5 milligrams per ampere of arc current to maintain a coating of thorium on at least the end portion or tip of said electrodes.
2. The lamp of claim 1 wherein said metal halide dose comprises a mixture thorium tetraiodide, sodium iodide and scandium iodide.
3. The invention of claim 2 wherein said lamp comprises a metal halide discharge lamp for operating from an a-c power supply providing a lamp operating voltage in the range of about 80 to about 270 volts.
4. The lamp of claim 2 wherein said metal halide dose consists essentially of about 85.1 percent by weight sodium iodide, about 11.1 percent by weight scandium iodide and about 3.8 percent by weight thorium tetraiodide.
5. An arc tube for a high intensity metal halide discharge lamp comprising:
an hermetically sealed light transmissive vitreous arc tube envelope having respective first and second ends;
first and second electrodes comprising tungsten and thorium or thorium oxide sealed into said respective first and second ends of said arc tube envelope;
first and second inlead means for passing through respective arc tube stems at the respective ends of said arc tube envelope and for connecting respective ones of said first and second electrode means to a source of electrical power;
a discharge supporting medium disposed within said arc tube envelope and comprising a quantity of a mercury amalgam which may contain up to about 5 molar percent cadmium;
a quantity of an inert fill gas in said arc tube as a starting gas; and a metal halide dose comprising a combination of metal halide, including thorium tetraiodide, present in said arc tube in an amount in excess of that amount vaporized during normal operation of the arc wherein the amount of thorium tetraiodide present in the dose ranges from about 3.8 to 6.0 wt. % thereof and from about 0.9 to 1.5 milligrams per ampere of arc current to maintain a coating of thorium on at least the end portion or tip of said electrodes.
6. The arc tube of claim 5 wherein said metal halide dose comprises a mixture of thorium tetraiodide, sodium iodide and scandium iodide.
7. The invention of claim 6 wherein said arc tube comprises an arc tube for operating from an a-c power supply providing an operating voltage in the range of about 80 to about 270 volts.
8. The arc tube of claim 6 wherein said metal halide dose consists essentially of about 85.1 percent by weight sodium iodide, about 11.1 percent by weight scandium iodide and about 3.8 percent by weight thorium tetraiodide.
CA000554017A 1987-12-10 1987-12-10 Metal halide lamp containing halide composition to control arc tube performance Expired - Lifetime CA1280150C (en)

Priority Applications (1)

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CA000554017A CA1280150C (en) 1987-12-10 1987-12-10 Metal halide lamp containing halide composition to control arc tube performance

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Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
CA000554017A CA1280150C (en) 1987-12-10 1987-12-10 Metal halide lamp containing halide composition to control arc tube performance

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CA1280150C true CA1280150C (en) 1991-02-12

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Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE10227151A1 (en) * 2002-06-18 2004-01-15 Wild Flavors Berlin Gmbh & Co.Kg Extract from by-products of the processing of nuts and legumes, process for its production and its use
CN103943454A (en) * 2014-04-14 2014-07-23 扬州市邗江圣珠光电有限公司 Novel solid mercury high in climbing speed

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE10227151A1 (en) * 2002-06-18 2004-01-15 Wild Flavors Berlin Gmbh & Co.Kg Extract from by-products of the processing of nuts and legumes, process for its production and its use
DE10227151B4 (en) * 2002-06-18 2007-03-15 Wild Flavors Berlin Gmbh & Co. Kg Extract of by-products of nut processing, process for its preparation and its use
CN103943454A (en) * 2014-04-14 2014-07-23 扬州市邗江圣珠光电有限公司 Novel solid mercury high in climbing speed

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