EP0581354B1 - High-pressure gas discharge lamp - Google Patents

High-pressure gas discharge lamp Download PDF

Info

Publication number
EP0581354B1
EP0581354B1 EP19930201980 EP93201980A EP0581354B1 EP 0581354 B1 EP0581354 B1 EP 0581354B1 EP 19930201980 EP19930201980 EP 19930201980 EP 93201980 A EP93201980 A EP 93201980A EP 0581354 B1 EP0581354 B1 EP 0581354B1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
lamp
coating
wall
pressure gas
gas discharge
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
EP19930201980
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP0581354A1 (en
Inventor
Petrus Martinus Gerardus Van Gennip
Mark Josephus Lucien Maria Van Dommelen
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.)
Koninklijke Philips NV
Original Assignee
Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV
Priority date (The priority date 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 date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV filed Critical Koninklijke Philips Electronics NV
Priority to EP19930201980 priority Critical patent/EP0581354B1/en
Publication of EP0581354A1 publication Critical patent/EP0581354A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of EP0581354B1 publication Critical patent/EP0581354B1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01JELECTRIC DISCHARGE TUBES OR DISCHARGE LAMPS
    • H01J61/00Gas-discharge or vapour-discharge lamps
    • H01J61/02Details
    • H01J61/36Seals between parts of vessels; Seals for leading-in conductors; Leading-in conductors
    • H01J61/366Seals for leading-in conductors

Definitions

  • the invention relates to a high-pressure gas discharge lamp comprising:
  • Such a high-pressure gas discharge lamp is known from US 4 594 529.
  • the known lamp is suitable for use as a vehicle headlamp and has electrode rods which may or may not have an enveloping winding at their ends and which may be made of, for example, thoriated tungsten.
  • the known lamp has only a short life when it is frequently switched on and switched off again after a short operating period.
  • the lamp vessel is then found to have become leaky, owing to which filling components have escaped and the lamp no longer ignites, or the lamp vessel is then cracked.
  • a seal is made in which one or several said metal foils are enclosed in the wall.
  • the quartz glass is softened at the area where this seal is to be created in the presence of the metal foil, the external current conductor and the electrode rod.
  • the electrode rod contracts more strongly than does the quartz glass, glass having a SiO 2 content of at least 98% by weight (approximately 6 x 10 -7 K -1 ) in which it is embedded. This creates a capillary space around the said rod. No such capillary space is created around the metal foil, often a molybdenum foil, because of the foil shape.
  • US 3 868 528-A discloses a metal halide lamp in which current supply conductors for a main and for a auxiliary electrode are enclosed in a seal of the lamp vessel next to one another. Under the influence of their opposite potentials and of metal halide, devitrification of the seal may occur in this lamp. To prevent this, the spaces surrounding the electrode rods in this lamp are filled with an alkaline earth-aluminosilicate glass with a comparatively low melting point and with a linear thermal coefficient of expansion which is close to that of tungsten.
  • a disadvantage of this is that the electrode rod must be kept above the metal foil while the seal is being made in order to allow the silicate glass to flow into the space around the rod and to keep it there.
  • the invention has for its object to provide a high-pressure gas discharge lamp of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph which is of a simple construction and in which premature failure is counteracted.
  • this object is achieved in that in the wall the electrode rods have a circumferential coating of quartz glass, at least adjacent the respective metal foil, which coating is mechanically unconnected with the quartz glass of the wall.
  • the invention is based on the recognition that the electrode rods must be given a greater mass without substantially changing their electrical characteristics and the characteristics of the discharge thereby.
  • the quartz glass coating of the electrode rods increases the mass of the rods and thus their heat capacity, the energy required for one degree of temperature rise, and also increases their diameter and thus their heat conductance. On the other hand, their electrical conductance does not increase.
  • the increased mass decelerates the temperature rise of the rods during lamp ignition, so that the surrounding quartz glass of the wall is given an opportunity of assuming a higher temperature and expanding owing to the permanent contact with the embedded metal foil, partly also as a result of the heat generated in this foil by the current passage.
  • the high-pressure gas discharge lamp according to the invention is very easy to manufacture.
  • Manufacture may start, for example, with electrode rods which have an additive, e.g. ThO 2 , at least at their surfaces.
  • the rods, fastened to the metal foil with the external current conductor, are enclosed in the wall of the lamp vessel in that the glass of the lamp vessel under manufacture is locally heated and brought into contact with the said metal parts. Contraction takes place upon cooling-down. Strain is created by this in the glass, which causes the glass to crack, whereby the circumferential quartz glass coating of the rods is obtained, mechanically unconnected with the glass of the wall owing to the said crack.
  • the crack follows a path which has such a shape that strain at the surface of the coating is at a minimum: the crack starts at an acute angle ⁇ to the rod in the location where the rod loses its contact with the wall adjacent the discharge space, runs on in a substantially cylindrical shape towards the metal foil and ends there at an acute angle to the rod.
  • the vacuumtight seal of the lamp vessel is present, as usual, in a zone between the ends of the metal foil. If the electrode rod should continue to outside the lamp vessel, and accordingly no embedded metal foil were connected to it, the lamp vessel would obviously be leaky from the start.
  • the coatings of individual lamps of one kind may have varying lengths because the rod loses its contact with the wall in locations which vary from lamp to lamp when the seal is made. This may be due to small variations in the temperature of the quartz glass during making of the seal.
  • the wall portions facing towards the discharge space are heated as little as possible so as to avoid deformation. Accordingly, there is a strong temperature gradient during making of the seal, the location of which may be subject to minor variations. If during sealing a location which will be situated in the seal in an individual lamp has a less high temperature than would otherwise be the case, the quartz glass in that location is comparatively viscous and no adhesion to the rod takes place in that location. The glass of that location then has no contact with the rod upon cooling down.
  • the object of the invention is achieved in spite of variations in the length of the coating, i.e. of the longitudinal portion of the electrode rod which has the coating.
  • this coating is achieved at a result of the high temperature and the close contact between the quartz glass and the current lead-through in that spot during sealing, or under the pressure exerted by the pinching blocks on the electrode rod during making of a pinched seal.
  • the quartz glass of the coating has a strong adhesion to the electrode rod owing to the additive present at least at the surface of said rod and which has penetrated into the layer of the coating which adjoins the interface between the electrode rod and the coating.
  • the lamp has the advantage that the passage which has arisen owing to the crack has only a very small width, smaller than the width of the said capillary space.
  • EP 0 330 268-A1 discloses electrical lamps which are closed in a vacuumtight manner and in which a tungsten wire does run directly from outside the lamp vessel through its wall into the interior.
  • This wire accordingly has a coating of quartz glass to which the wall, however, is sealed between the coating's ends, so that the coating projects from the wall both inside and outside the lamp vessel.
  • the coating is provided separately and ends at both sides at an acute angle. It is essential that the coating comprises an additive, such as thorium, in a layer which adjoins the metal/glass interface. It may nevertheless be advantageous, as it is in the lamp according to the present invention, to use a conventional current lead-through comprising a foil portion, because the industrial use thereof is very familiar.
  • the surface of the rod must be provided with this additive in order to achieve that the quartz glass will adhere to the rod.
  • the rod may be oxidized first and the tungsten oxide may be removed by evaporation, so that a skin is removed from the rod.
  • the additive present in this skin remains behind at the surface.
  • additives may be provided on the surface of the rod, for example, in the form of a suspension, according to the cited EP Application. When the quartz glass coating is provided, the additive then penetrates the coating in a layer adjoining the metal/glass interface, thus achieving adhesion to the rod.
  • additives which may be used are, for example, thorium, hafnium, chromium, aluminium, titanium, tantalum, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, zirconium, lanthanum, scandium, lanthanides, niobium, boron, yttrium, as elements or in the form of oxides or salts.
  • the presence of the added element in the glass of the coating at the metal/coating interface can be demonstrated in a "Scanning Electron Microscope” by means of "Energy Dispersive Analysis by X-rays” or “Wavelength Energy Dispersive Analysis by X-rays”.
  • the process may start with electrode rods which contain rhenium at least at their surfaces.
  • Rhenium may have been provided, for example, as a suspension or as a suspension of its oxide or of a salt. When an oxide or salt is heated, for example to 2200° C, the compound is dissociated and rhenium remains behind.
  • manufacture may start with tungsten/rhenium wire, for example, comprising one to several % by weight of rhenium, and rhenium may be brought to the surface in that the wire is oxidized and tungsten oxide is evaporated.
  • the coating of the electrode rods may alternatively be provided in a separate step preceding the manufacture of the lamp, for example, by means of a quartz glass tube.
  • the high-pressure gas discharge lamp according to the invention may be used, for example, as a vehicle headlamp, or in an optical system of a different kind.
  • the lamp may be fixed in a lamp cap, and may or may not be surrounded by an outer envelope.
  • a lamp cap may or may not be integrated with a reflector.
  • the metal foils may be embedded next to one another in one region of the wall, or they may be embedded in regions situated at a distance from one another, for example, opposite one another.
  • the high-pressure gas discharge lamp in the drawing has a lamp vessel 1 which is closed in a vacuumtight manner and has a quartz glass wall 2 enclosing a discharge space 3.
  • Metal foils 4 connected to respective external current conductors 5 are embedded in the lamp vessel wall.
  • Tungsten electrode rods 6 are each connected to a respective one of said metal foils, in the Figure made of Mo with 0.5% Y 2 O 3 by weight, and project from the lamp vessel wall into the discharge space. As ususal the metal foils have feathered edges. An ionizable filling is present in the discharge space.
  • the electrode rods 6 each have a circumferential coating 7 of quartz glass, which is mechanically unconnected with the glass of the wall 2.
  • the electrode rods 6 comprise an additive which is present at least in a layer of the coating 7 adjoining the interface of electrode rod 6 and the coating.
  • the additive comprises an element chosen from the group consisting of thorium, hafnium, chromium, aluminium, titanium, tantalum, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, zirconium, lanthanum, scandium, lanthanides, niobium, boron, and yttrium.
  • the electrode rods 6 of Figs. 1 and 2 comprise a small quantity of tungsten crystal growth regulating means, such as 0.01% by weight in total of K, Al, and Si, and as an additive 1.5% ThO 2 by weight distributed through said rods.
  • the tungsten crystals have an average size of 3 * 3 * 10 ⁇ m 3 .
  • a skin was removed from the rods 6 in that the latter were oxidized and the formed oxides were removed, whereby ThO 2 was brought to the surface.
  • the rods 6, which are connected to the metal foils 4 with connected thereto the external conductors 5, made of Mo in the present embodiment, were partly enclosed in the lamp vessel wall in that the quartz glass was fused to them, or in that the quartz glass was pinched so as to make a pinched seal.
  • the lamp vessel is surrounded by an outer envelope 9 and coupled thereto.
  • the lamp may be gripped by a lamp cap at a metal clamping sleeve 10.
  • the lamp has a filling of mercury, sodium iodide and scandium iodide, and xenon, for example, xenon at a pressure of 7 bar at room temperature, and consumes a power of 35 W during operation at rated voltage.
  • the electrode rod 6 has a coating 7 inside the wall 2 of the lamp vessel 1 at least adjacent to the metal foil 4.
  • the coating is fully circumferential and made of quartz glass, the glass of the lamp vessel 1.
  • the coating is substantially cylindrical in shape with tapering ends near the foil 4 and at the area where the rod loses its contact with the glass. As a result, the coating has an acute edge angle ⁇ .
  • the broken line 7' indicates that layer of the coating 7 which adjoins the electrode rod/coating interface. It is noted that the lamp vessel wall at the area indicated with 2' is not deformed during making of the seal because the lamp vessel under manufacture had already been given its final shape in that location before. No close circumferential contact between the rod and the glass was effected in this location.
  • the temperature of the quartz glass is always sufficiently high for achieving close contact, and thus adhesion, during lamp manufacture.
  • the electrode rod has a thickness of 250 ⁇ m and the coating has a layer thickness of approximately 40 ⁇ m. It can be seen that the coating 7 and the crack surrounding it end at the weld 4' between the rod and the foil, or at the foil.
  • the seal 2 is vacuumtight in a zone between the external current conductor and the electrode rod 4.
  • the lamp vessel 1 is enclosed in a different outer envelope 9' and coupled thereto.
  • the lamp vessel is fixed in a lamp cap 8 of the bayonet type, provided with a central pin contact 11 and a ring contact 12 which are connected to respective electrode rods 6, the ring contact via a connection conductor 13.
  • the electrode rods have Y 2 O 3 as the additive, both in their bulk, 3% by weight, and in the glass of their coatings.
  • the lamp vessel 1 is enclosed in a different lamp cap 8' which has contacts 11' and 12' at cables issuing to the exterior.
  • the electrode rods 6 comprise HfO 2 as the additive in a layer of the coating which adjoins the electrode rod/coating interface.
  • a ceramic insulator 14 is present around the connection conductor 13.
  • the lamp of Fig. 4 has electrode rods of tungsten with 1% rhenium by weight distributed therein. Rhenium is also present at the surface, whereby a strong adhesion between the quartz glass coating and the electrode rods is obtained owing to the interlocking surface structures of the rods and their coatings.

Landscapes

  • Vessels And Coating Films For Discharge Lamps (AREA)

Description

The invention relates to a high-pressure gas discharge lamp comprising:
  • a lamp vessel which is closed in a vacuumtight manner and which has a quartz glas wall enclosing a discharge space;
  • metal foils embedded in the wall of the lamp vessel and each connected to a respective external current conductor;
  • tungsten electrode rods which may have an additive, are connected each to a respective one of said metal foils, and project from the wall of the lamp vessel into the discharge space;
  • an ionizable filling in the discharge space.
  • Such a high-pressure gas discharge lamp is known from US 4 594 529. The known lamp is suitable for use as a vehicle headlamp and has electrode rods which may or may not have an enveloping winding at their ends and which may be made of, for example, thoriated tungsten.
    High requirements are imposed on the speed with which the lamp, after it has been energized, provides a major fraction of the luminous flux which it provides during stable operation. It is also necessary for the lamp to be capable of being ignited while it is still hot owing to a previous operating period. The lamp is ignited at a voltage of several kV and several kHz in order to comply with these requirements.
    It was found that the known lamp has only a short life when it is frequently switched on and switched off again after a short operating period. The lamp vessel is then found to have become leaky, owing to which filling components have escaped and the lamp no longer ignites, or the lamp vessel is then cracked.
    In the manufacture of the known lamp, a seal is made in which one or several said metal foils are enclosed in the wall. During this, the quartz glass is softened at the area where this seal is to be created in the presence of the metal foil, the external current conductor and the electrode rod. After this the lamp, or the lamp-to-be, cools down. Owing to its comparatively high coeeficient of linear thermal expansion (approximately 45 * 10-7 K-1), the electrode rod then contracts more strongly than does the quartz glass, glass having a SiO2 content of at least 98% by weight (approximately 6 x 10-7 K-1) in which it is embedded. This creates a capillary space around the said rod. No such capillary space is created around the metal foil, often a molybdenum foil, because of the foil shape.
    When the known lamp is ignited, the temperature of the electrode rods rises steeply owing to the high current flowing through them and owing to heat transfer from the discharge. The quartz glass does not instantaneously follow this temperature rise. Owing to their higher temperature and their higher coefficient of expansion, the rods will come into contact with the quartz glass and exert pressure on it. It was found that damage, such as microcracks occurs, in the quartz glass during this, which microcracks may increase in number and size during subsequent ignition periods and lead to lamp leaks.
    A possibility of avoiding these effects consists in the creation of a comparatively wide space around the electrode rods, so that it is prevented that the glass of the wall touches the rods during the manufacture of the seal. This possibility, however, is not always feasible in practice, because a space of comparatively low temperature arises thereby during operation, in which space filling components of low volatility may accumulate and thus may no longer take part in the discharge. Lamps having such a comparatively wide, but restricted space around the electrode rods are disclosed in EP 0 206 598-B1.
    US 3 868 528-A discloses a metal halide lamp in which current supply conductors for a main and for a auxiliary electrode are enclosed in a seal of the lamp vessel next to one another. Under the influence of their opposite potentials and of metal halide, devitrification of the seal may occur in this lamp. To prevent this, the spaces surrounding the electrode rods in this lamp are filled with an alkaline earth-aluminosilicate glass with a comparatively low melting point and with a linear thermal coefficient of expansion which is close to that of tungsten.
    A disadvantage of this is that the electrode rod must be kept above the metal foil while the seal is being made in order to allow the silicate glass to flow into the space around the rod and to keep it there. It is not possible in this position to cool a ionizable filling in the lamp vessel sufficiently. This filling must be provided in a subsequent step through an exhaust tube, after which the exhaust tube is sealed. An exhaust tube, however, interferes with the beam paths of generated light.
    The invention has for its object to provide a high-pressure gas discharge lamp of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph which is of a simple construction and in which premature failure is counteracted.
    According to the invention, this object is achieved in that in the wall the electrode rods have a circumferential coating of quartz glass, at least adjacent the respective metal foil, which coating is mechanically unconnected with the quartz glass of the wall.
    The invention is based on the recognition that the electrode rods must be given a greater mass without substantially changing their electrical characteristics and the characteristics of the discharge thereby. The quartz glass coating of the electrode rods increases the mass of the rods and thus their heat capacity, the energy required for one degree of temperature rise, and also increases their diameter and thus their heat conductance. On the other hand, their electrical conductance does not increase. The increased mass decelerates the temperature rise of the rods during lamp ignition, so that the surrounding quartz glass of the wall is given an opportunity of assuming a higher temperature and expanding owing to the permanent contact with the embedded metal foil, partly also as a result of the heat generated in this foil by the current passage.
    The high-pressure gas discharge lamp according to the invention is very easy to manufacture.
    Manufacture may start, for example, with electrode rods which have an additive, e.g. ThO2, at least at their surfaces. The rods, fastened to the metal foil with the external current conductor, are enclosed in the wall of the lamp vessel in that the glass of the lamp vessel under manufacture is locally heated and brought into contact with the said metal parts. Contraction takes place upon cooling-down. Strain is created by this in the glass, which causes the glass to crack, whereby the circumferential quartz glass coating of the rods is obtained, mechanically unconnected with the glass of the wall owing to the said crack.
    The crack follows a path which has such a shape that strain at the surface of the coating is at a minimum: the crack starts at an acute angle α to the rod in the location where the rod loses its contact with the wall adjacent the discharge space, runs on in a substantially cylindrical shape towards the metal foil and ends there at an acute angle to the rod. The vacuumtight seal of the lamp vessel is present, as usual, in a zone between the ends of the metal foil. If the electrode rod should continue to outside the lamp vessel, and accordingly no embedded metal foil were connected to it, the lamp vessel would obviously be leaky from the start.
    It was found that the coatings of individual lamps of one kind may have varying lengths because the rod loses its contact with the wall in locations which vary from lamp to lamp when the seal is made. This may be due to small variations in the temperature of the quartz glass during making of the seal.
    When the seal is being made, the wall portions facing towards the discharge space are heated as little as possible so as to avoid deformation. Accordingly, there is a strong temperature gradient during making of the seal, the location of which may be subject to minor variations.
    If during sealing a location which will be situated in the seal in an individual lamp has a less high temperature than would otherwise be the case, the quartz glass in that location is comparatively viscous and no adhesion to the rod takes place in that location. The glass of that location then has no contact with the rod upon cooling down.
    It has also been found, however, that the object of the invention is achieved in spite of variations in the length of the coating, i.e. of the longitudinal portion of the electrode rod which has the coating. In a zone adjoining the metal foil adhering to the quartz glass for achieving a vacuumtight seal, in fact, this coating is achieved at a result of the high temperature and the close contact between the quartz glass and the current lead-through in that spot during sealing, or under the pressure exerted by the pinching blocks on the electrode rod during making of a pinched seal.
    The quartz glass of the coating has a strong adhesion to the electrode rod owing to the additive present at least at the surface of said rod and which has penetrated into the layer of the coating which adjoins the interface between the electrode rod and the coating.
    In addition to the durability of the lamp and its ease of manufacture, the lamp has the advantage that the passage which has arisen owing to the crack has only a very small width, smaller than the width of the said capillary space.
    EP 0 330 268-A1 discloses electrical lamps which are closed in a vacuumtight manner and in which a tungsten wire does run directly from outside the lamp vessel through its wall into the interior. This wire accordingly has a coating of quartz glass to which the wall, however, is sealed between the coating's ends, so that the coating projects from the wall both inside and outside the lamp vessel. The coating is provided separately and ends at both sides at an acute angle. It is essential that the coating comprises an additive, such as thorium, in a layer which adjoins the metal/glass interface.
    It may nevertheless be advantageous, as it is in the lamp according to the present invention, to use a conventional current lead-through comprising a foil portion, because the industrial use thereof is very familiar.
    If the additive is present in the bulk of the electrode rod, according to the cited EP Application, such as in the case of a rod of thoriated tungsten, the surface of the rod must be provided with this additive in order to achieve that the quartz glass will adhere to the rod. For this purpose, the rod may be oxidized first and the tungsten oxide may be removed by evaporation, so that a skin is removed from the rod. The additive present in this skin, however, remains behind at the surface.
    Alternatively, additives may be provided on the surface of the rod, for example, in the form of a suspension, according to the cited EP Application. When the quartz glass coating is provided, the additive then penetrates the coating in a layer adjoining the metal/glass interface, thus achieving adhesion to the rod.
    According to the cited EP Application, additives which may be used are, for example, thorium, hafnium, chromium, aluminium, titanium, tantalum, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, zirconium, lanthanum, scandium, lanthanides, niobium, boron, yttrium, as elements or in the form of oxides or salts. The presence of the added element in the glass of the coating at the metal/coating interface can be demonstrated in a "Scanning Electron Microscope" by means of "Energy Dispersive Analysis by X-rays" or "Wavelength Energy Dispersive Analysis by X-rays".
    Alternatively, the process may start with electrode rods which contain rhenium at least at their surfaces. Rhenium may have been provided, for example, as a suspension or as a suspension of its oxide or of a salt. When an oxide or salt is heated, for example to 2200° C, the compound is dissociated and rhenium remains behind. Alternatively, manufacture may start with tungsten/rhenium wire, for example, comprising one to several % by weight of rhenium, and rhenium may be brought to the surface in that the wire is oxidized and tungsten oxide is evaporated.
    It is known from EP 0 410 511-A1 that tungsten wire with rhenium at its surface has a strong adhesion to a quartz glass coating, with a mechanically interlocking configuration, and that the coated wire can be directly sealed into a quartz glass lamp vessel between the ends of its coating. No rhenium could be demonstrated in the quartz glass immediately adjoining the metal/glass interface.
    The coating of the electrode rods may alternatively be provided in a separate step preceding the manufacture of the lamp, for example, by means of a quartz glass tube.
    The high-pressure gas discharge lamp according to the invention may be used, for example, as a vehicle headlamp, or in an optical system of a different kind. For this purpose, the lamp may be fixed in a lamp cap, and may or may not be surrounded by an outer envelope. A lamp cap may or may not be integrated with a reflector.
    The metal foils may be embedded next to one another in one region of the wall, or they may be embedded in regions situated at a distance from one another, for example, opposite one another.
    Embodiments of the high-pressure gas discharge lamp according to the invention are shown in the drawing, in which
  • Fig. 1 shows a lamp in side elevation;
  • Fig. 2 shows a detail of Fig. 1 on an enlarged scale; and
  • Figs. 3 and 4 show the lamp of Fig. 1 with a lamp cap in side elevation.
  • The high-pressure gas discharge lamp in the drawing has a lamp vessel 1 which is closed in a vacuumtight manner and has a quartz glass wall 2 enclosing a discharge space 3. Metal foils 4 connected to respective external current conductors 5 are embedded in the lamp vessel wall.
    Tungsten electrode rods 6 are each connected to a respective one of said metal foils, in the Figure made of Mo with 0.5% Y2O3 by weight, and project from the lamp vessel wall into the discharge space. As ususal the metal foils have feathered edges. An ionizable filling is present in the discharge space.
    In the wall 2 at least near the relevant metal foil, the electrode rods 6 each have a circumferential coating 7 of quartz glass, which is mechanically unconnected with the glass of the wall 2.
    The electrode rods 6 comprise an additive which is present at least in a layer of the coating 7 adjoining the interface of electrode rod 6 and the coating.
    The additive comprises an element chosen from the group consisting of thorium, hafnium, chromium, aluminium, titanium, tantalum, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, zirconium, lanthanum, scandium, lanthanides, niobium, boron, and yttrium.
    The electrode rods 6 of Figs. 1 and 2 comprise a small quantity of tungsten crystal growth regulating means, such as 0.01% by weight in total of K, Al, and Si, and as an additive 1.5% ThO2 by weight distributed through said rods. The tungsten crystals have an average size of 3 * 3 * 10 µm3. A skin was removed from the rods 6 in that the latter were oxidized and the formed oxides were removed, whereby ThO2 was brought to the surface. The rods 6, which are connected to the metal foils 4 with connected thereto the external conductors 5, made of Mo in the present embodiment, were partly enclosed in the lamp vessel wall in that the quartz glass was fused to them, or in that the quartz glass was pinched so as to make a pinched seal.
    In the Figure, the lamp vessel is surrounded by an outer envelope 9 and coupled thereto. The lamp may be gripped by a lamp cap at a metal clamping sleeve 10.
    The lamp has a filling of mercury, sodium iodide and scandium iodide, and xenon, for example, xenon at a pressure of 7 bar at room temperature, and consumes a power of 35 W during operation at rated voltage.
    It is visible in Fig. 2 that the electrode rod 6 has a coating 7 inside the wall 2 of the lamp vessel 1 at least adjacent to the metal foil 4. The coating is fully circumferential and made of quartz glass, the glass of the lamp vessel 1. The coating is substantially cylindrical in shape with tapering ends near the foil 4 and at the area where the rod loses its contact with the glass. As a result, the coating has an acute edge angle α. The broken line 7' indicates that layer of the coating 7 which adjoins the electrode rod/coating interface. It is noted that the lamp vessel wall at the area indicated with 2' is not deformed during making of the seal because the lamp vessel under manufacture had already been given its final shape in that location before. No close circumferential contact between the rod and the glass was effected in this location. In a zone of the electrode rod having a length of at least one third the distance between the foil and the location referenced 2' and provided with a ridge, the temperature of the quartz glass is always sufficiently high for achieving close contact, and thus adhesion, during lamp manufacture.
    In the embodiment shown, the electrode rod has a thickness of 250 µm and the coating has a layer thickness of approximately 40 µm. It can be seen that the coating 7 and the crack surrounding it end at the weld 4' between the rod and the foil, or at the foil. The seal 2 is vacuumtight in a zone between the external current conductor and the electrode rod 4.
    In Fig. 3, the lamp vessel 1 is enclosed in a different outer envelope 9' and coupled thereto. The lamp vessel is fixed in a lamp cap 8 of the bayonet type, provided with a central pin contact 11 and a ring contact 12 which are connected to respective electrode rods 6, the ring contact via a connection conductor 13. The electrode rods have Y2O3 as the additive, both in their bulk, 3% by weight, and in the glass of their coatings.
    In Fig. 4, the lamp vessel 1 is enclosed in a different lamp cap 8' which has contacts 11' and 12' at cables issuing to the exterior. The electrode rods 6 comprise HfO2 as the additive in a layer of the coating which adjoins the electrode rod/coating interface. A ceramic insulator 14 is present around the connection conductor 13.
    In a modified version, the lamp of Fig. 4 has electrode rods of tungsten with 1% rhenium by weight distributed therein. Rhenium is also present at the surface, whereby a strong adhesion between the quartz glass coating and the electrode rods is obtained owing to the interlocking surface structures of the rods and their coatings.

    Claims (5)

    1. A high-pressure gas discharge lamp comprising:
      a lamp vessel (1) which is closed in a vacuumtight manner and which has a quartz glas wall (2) enclosing a discharge space (3);
      metal foils (4) embedded in the wall of the lamp vessel and each connected to a respective external current conductor (5);
      tungsten electrode rods (6) which may have an additive, are connected each to a respective one of said metal foils, and project from the wall of the lamp vessel into the discharge space;
      an ionizable filling in the discharge space,
         characterized in that in the wall (2) the electrode rods (6) have a circumferential coating (7) of quartz glass, at least adjacent the respective metal foil (4), which coating is mechanically unconnected with the quartz glass of the wall (2).
    2. A high-pressure gas discharge lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the electrode rods (6) having the coating comprise an additive at least in a layer of the coating (7) which adjoins the interface of the electrode rod (6) and the coating to improve the adhesion of the coating (7) to the electrode rod.
    3. A high-pressure gas discharge lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the additive comprises an element chosen from the group consisting of thorium, hafnium, chromium, aluminium, titanium, tantalum, magnesium, calcium, strontium, barium, zirconium, lanthanum, scandium, lanthanides, niobium, boron, and yttrium.
    4. A high-pressure gas discharge lamp as claimed in Claim 1, characterized in that the electrode rods comprise rhenium at least at their surface.
    5. A high-pressure gas discharge lamp as claimed in any one of the preceding Claims, characterized in that the lamp is held in a lamp cap (8).
    EP19930201980 1992-07-13 1993-07-07 High-pressure gas discharge lamp Expired - Lifetime EP0581354B1 (en)

    Priority Applications (1)

    Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
    EP19930201980 EP0581354B1 (en) 1992-07-13 1993-07-07 High-pressure gas discharge lamp

    Applications Claiming Priority (3)

    Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
    EP92202132 1992-07-13
    EP92202132 1992-07-13
    EP19930201980 EP0581354B1 (en) 1992-07-13 1993-07-07 High-pressure gas discharge lamp

    Publications (2)

    Publication Number Publication Date
    EP0581354A1 EP0581354A1 (en) 1994-02-02
    EP0581354B1 true EP0581354B1 (en) 1998-04-29

    Family

    ID=26131551

    Family Applications (1)

    Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
    EP19930201980 Expired - Lifetime EP0581354B1 (en) 1992-07-13 1993-07-07 High-pressure gas discharge lamp

    Country Status (1)

    Country Link
    EP (1) EP0581354B1 (en)

    Families Citing this family (12)

    * Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
    Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
    US5598063A (en) * 1992-12-16 1997-01-28 General Electric Company Means for supporting and sealing the lead structure of a lamp
    DE29507422U1 (en) * 1994-05-10 1995-06-29 Philips Electronics Nv Socketed high-pressure discharge lamp
    JPH09509786A (en) * 1994-12-23 1997-09-30 フィリップス エレクトロニクス ネムローゼ フェンノートシャップ Light bulb with cap
    DE69817493T2 (en) * 1997-02-24 2004-06-17 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. HIGH PRESSURE METAL HALOGEN LAMP
    ES2216512T3 (en) 1998-06-30 2004-10-16 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. HIGH PRESSURE GAS DISCHARGE LAMP.
    WO2000000996A1 (en) * 1998-06-30 2000-01-06 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. High-pressure gas discharge lamp
    DE69928647T2 (en) * 1998-12-21 2006-08-10 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. ELECTRIC LAMP
    JP3759498B2 (en) 2001-03-30 2006-03-22 松下電器産業株式会社 Metal halide lamp for automotive headlamp
    JP2008506229A (en) * 2004-07-06 2008-02-28 コーニンクレッカ フィリップス エレクトロニクス エヌ ヴィ Discharge lamp
    CN101031991B (en) * 2004-09-30 2010-06-23 皇家飞利浦电子股份有限公司 Electric lamp with sealing foil
    DE102007015740A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Christoph Schwellenbach Tanning device for UV irradiation of human skin
    DE102007015738A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Christoph Schwellenbach A lamp for use as an irradiation phase in an irradiation device for UV irradiation of the human skin

    Family Cites Families (3)

    * Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
    Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
    US3868528A (en) * 1974-01-14 1975-02-25 Gen Electric Quartz pinches containing sealant glass
    JPH0330995Y2 (en) * 1985-06-14 1991-07-01
    EP0410511A1 (en) * 1989-07-24 1991-01-30 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Electric lamp

    Also Published As

    Publication number Publication date
    EP0581354A1 (en) 1994-02-02

    Similar Documents

    Publication Publication Date Title
    US5461277A (en) High-pressure gas discharge lamp having a seal with a cylindrical crack about the electrode rod
    EP0581354B1 (en) High-pressure gas discharge lamp
    US5159239A (en) Electric lamp with SiO2 vessel and seal therefor
    US5142195A (en) Pinch-sealed high pressure discharge lamp, and method of its manufacture
    CN101213635B (en) Ceramic lamps and methods of making same
    US5986403A (en) Method for making a capped electric lamp by using reduced internal pressure to collapse glass
    US5550421A (en) Discharge lamp with enhanced performance and improved containment
    EP0160445B1 (en) Discharge tube assembly for high-pressure discharge lamp
    EP0410512B1 (en) Electric lamp
    EP0181223B1 (en) Ceramic envelope device for high-pressure discharge lamp
    JPH07240184A (en) Ceramic discharge lamp, projector device using this lamp, and manufacture of ceramic discharge lamp
    US6534918B1 (en) High pressure discharge lamp with tungsten electrode rods having second parts with envelope of rhenium
    KR920010056B1 (en) Metal vapor discharge tube of one-sided sealing type
    EP0930639B1 (en) Seal of bulb
    EP1040508B1 (en) High-pressure gas discharge lamp
    EP0042151B1 (en) High-pressure sodium lamp
    JP4273380B2 (en) Metal vapor discharge lamp
    JP3407555B2 (en) Light irradiation device
    Ekkelboom et al. Electric lamp with SiO 2 vessel and seal therefor
    JPH0388257A (en) Single-sealing type metal vapor discharge lamp
    JPH08212977A (en) Seal part structure and sealing method thereof for metal vapor arc tube

    Legal Events

    Date Code Title Description
    PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

    AK Designated contracting states

    Kind code of ref document: A1

    Designated state(s): BE DE ES FR GB IT NL SE

    RAP1 Party data changed (applicant data changed or rights of an application transferred)

    Owner name: N.V. PHILIPS' GLOEILAMPENFABRIEKEN

    17P Request for examination filed

    Effective date: 19940728

    17Q First examination report despatched

    Effective date: 19951214

    GRAG Despatch of communication of intention to grant

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA

    GRAG Despatch of communication of intention to grant

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS AGRA

    GRAH Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA

    GRAH Despatch of communication of intention to grant a patent

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: EPIDOS IGRA

    GRAA (expected) grant

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009210

    AK Designated contracting states

    Kind code of ref document: B1

    Designated state(s): BE DE ES FR GB IT NL SE

    PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: NL

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF FAILURE TO SUBMIT A TRANSLATION OF THE DESCRIPTION OR TO PAY THE FEE WITHIN THE PRESCRIBED TIME-LIMIT

    Effective date: 19980429

    Ref country code: BE

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF FAILURE TO SUBMIT A TRANSLATION OF THE DESCRIPTION OR TO PAY THE FEE WITHIN THE PRESCRIBED TIME-LIMIT

    Effective date: 19980429

    REF Corresponds to:

    Ref document number: 69318226

    Country of ref document: DE

    Date of ref document: 19980604

    ITF It: translation for a ep patent filed

    Owner name: ING. C. GREGORJ S.P.A.

    ET Fr: translation filed
    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: ES

    Ref legal event code: FG2A

    Ref document number: 2116400

    Country of ref document: ES

    Kind code of ref document: T3

    PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: SE

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF FAILURE TO SUBMIT A TRANSLATION OF THE DESCRIPTION OR TO PAY THE FEE WITHIN THE PRESCRIBED TIME-LIMIT

    Effective date: 19980729

    RAP4 Party data changed (patent owner data changed or rights of a patent transferred)

    Owner name: KONINKLIJKE PHILIPS ELECTRONICS N.V.

    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: FR

    Ref legal event code: CD

    NLV1 Nl: lapsed or annulled due to failure to fulfill the requirements of art. 29p and 29m of the patents act
    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: ES

    Ref legal event code: PC2A

    PLBE No opposition filed within time limit

    Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009261

    STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

    Free format text: STATUS: NO OPPOSITION FILED WITHIN TIME LIMIT

    26N No opposition filed
    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: GB

    Ref legal event code: IF02

    PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: GB

    Payment date: 20120731

    Year of fee payment: 20

    PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: IT

    Payment date: 20120725

    Year of fee payment: 20

    Ref country code: ES

    Payment date: 20120831

    Year of fee payment: 20

    Ref country code: FR

    Payment date: 20120814

    Year of fee payment: 20

    PGFP Annual fee paid to national office [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: DE

    Payment date: 20121001

    Year of fee payment: 20

    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: DE

    Ref legal event code: R071

    Ref document number: 69318226

    Country of ref document: DE

    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: GB

    Ref legal event code: PE20

    Expiry date: 20130706

    PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: DE

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF EXPIRATION OF PROTECTION

    Effective date: 20130709

    PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: GB

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF EXPIRATION OF PROTECTION

    Effective date: 20130706

    REG Reference to a national code

    Ref country code: ES

    Ref legal event code: FD2A

    Effective date: 20140828

    PG25 Lapsed in a contracting state [announced via postgrant information from national office to epo]

    Ref country code: ES

    Free format text: LAPSE BECAUSE OF EXPIRATION OF PROTECTION

    Effective date: 20130708