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Ignition Studies of Low-Pressure Discharge Lamps M. Gendre - M. Haverlag - H. van den Nieuwenhuizen - J. Gielen - G. Kroesen Friday, March 31 st 2006 Experiments on CFL Ignition PHILIPSTU/e
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PHILIPSTU/e 1/22 Goals of the study Set-up DC breakdown AC resonant ignition Summary Outlines Goals of the study
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PHILIPSTU/e 2/22 Understanding Plasma Ignition Physics: better comprehension of dielectric-plasma phase transitions in general Technology: understand how compact fluorescent lamps ignite under various conditions Goals of the Study Motivations
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PHILIPSTU/e 3/22 Interest of a better understanding Goals of the Study Courtesy of R. Richter, private communication 1900s
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PHILIPSTU/e 4/22 Interest of a better understanding Goals of the Study 2000s
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PHILIPSTU/e 5/22 Understanding Lamp Ignition Q: How does low-pressure breakdown work ? Townsend model: electron avalanche between electrodes Goals of the Study cathode anode E atom ion electron - homogeneous E field - infinite electrode extension Neglected by Townsend - inhomogeneous field - diffusion losses of charges toward the walls - wall surface charges
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PHILIPSTU/e Goals and Approach 6/22 A: Thorough study of ignition in a ‘standard’ linear lamp studies: - different experiments on same lamp design - different lamp configurations (gas, pressures…) - control of experiments (repeatability, accuracy…) - cross-comparisons between results Global Overview of the Phenomenon Goals of the Study
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PHILIPSTU/e 7/22 Goals of the study Set-up DC breakdown Back to AC resonant ignition Summary Outlines
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PHILIPSTU/e 8/22 Global Circuitry Set-Up RLRL HV probe camera controller ICCD camera lens TTL trigger Faraday cage lamp capacitive probe driver computer digital oscilloscope ch 1 2 3 ch 4 voltage regulator IFIF IGIG power amplifier function generator IAIA pulse generation low-voltage waveform amplified to 200-1200V double pulse scheme for charge clean-up load resistor for lamp current regulation power amplifier function generator IAIA voltage regulator electrode heating active electrode at 1000K for e - emission electrode impedance constant over time electrode voltage kept at constant value no drift of electrode performances during the experiments time reference same time base for all instruments lamp voltage taken as the main reference simultaneous triggering of scope and camera camera controller ICCD camera lens computer 1- optical imaging fast iCCD camera for 50-500ns time resolution one full lamp ignition for each image taken 20 to 60 images are added for each time step data processed to give space-time diagrams capacitive probe driver 2- potential probing custom-built floating capacitive probe lamp potential mapping in time and space 7mm and 1ms space and time resolutions data processed to give space-time diagrams IFIF IGIG 3- current recording current measured at three critical points sub- s and A time and current resolutions current waveforms recorded by oscilloscope power amplifier IAIA Faraday cage lamp Faraday cage critical for the accuracy of the experiments power amplifier IAIA
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PHILIPSTU/e probe rack - house and locate the probe lamp - 145mm long, 10mm diameter ITO window - transparent and electrically conducting Faraday’s cage - stable electrostatic environment 9/22 Set-Up Experimental Frame of Reference electrostatic probe - senses the lamp surface potential
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PHILIPSTU/e Goals of the study Set-up DC Breakdown AC resonant ignition Summary 10/22 Outlines
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PHILIPSTU/e -400 -300 -200 -100 0 V KA potential 11/22 Ignition Mechanism Overview 0 A 14 x (cm) K -500 +5000 light global evolution identical in both cases apparent lag of light emission (max 1 s) smooth evolution of lamp potential potential gradient in the wake of first wave DC Breakdown Argon 3 torr –600V Pre-breakdown wave: - starts at the cathode - propagates toward the anode - speed and intensity decreases Return strike: - starts at end of first wave propagation - propagates toward the cathode - speed and intensity decreases Argon 3 torr –600V Pre-breakdown wave: - starts at the cathode - propagates toward the anode - speed and intensity decreases time
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PHILIPSTU/e 12/22 3torr Ar-Hg lamp : -500V dt=100ns Cathode-Initiated Breakdown DC Breakdown K A (0)
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PHILIPSTU/e 13/22 DC Breakdown Argon 3torr –200V : Failed Ignition resolution potential: 10ns optical: 100ns Argon 3torr –300V : Failed Ignition resolution potential: 10ns optical: 500ns Argon 3torr –400V : Successful Ignition resolution potential: 10ns optical: 500ns
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PHILIPSTU/e 14/22 Pre-Breakdown Wave Position vs. Voltage - wave speed directly proportional to voltage - ignition condition: first wave has to reach the anode DC Breakdown 10 - 3 km/s 51- 44 km/s
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PHILIPSTU/e 15/22 Lamp Net Charges vs. Voltage DC Breakdown - first wave charging effect increases with voltage - decrease of net charge only for successful breakdown - Ignition condition: charging threshold to be reached
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PHILIPSTU/e 16/22 _ + High radial/axial E-field component Local Townsend-like breakdown Wall charging and field displacement Further ionization in front of cathode Global Overview of the Phenomenon DC Breakdown Qualitative model ee Wave propagation toward the anode Decreasing electron current flux Field rotation and enhancement Electrodes bridged, circuit closed Steep current increase Wave propagation toward the cathode Global lamp charge decrease Exponential current increase Current stabilized by ballast - ionization wave driven by front field, rate of wall charge - wave speed dependent on E/p value - gradual decrease of field and wave speed during propagation - ignition condition : E/p high enough for 1 st wave to reach anode
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PHILIPSTU/e Goals of the study Set-up DC breakdown AC resonant ignition Summary 17/22 Outlines
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PHILIPSTU/e 18/22 Optical Recording AC Resonant Ignition
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PHILIPSTU/e 19/22 Electrostatic Recordings AC Resonant Ignition
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PHILIPSTU/e Correlation with DC Breakdown - synchronous propagation of K and A waves - importance of surface charge memory effect - easier ignition in alternating potentials as a result 20/22 AC Resonant Ignition
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PHILIPSTU/e Goals of the study Set-up DC breakdown AC resonant ignition Summary 21/22 Outlines
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PHILIPSTU/e Global Overview - multiple diagnostic tools running simultaneously - cross comparisons between optical/electrical data - various experimental conditions investigated - correlation between wave propagation and lamp charging - minimum lamp charging required for successful ignition - new information inferred from data analysis 22/22 Summary
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PHILIPSTU/e ANY QUESTIONS?
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PHILIPSTU/e Global RC-Probe Circuit Provides lamp surface potential vs. time/space R U Faraday’s cage Z + - - limited field disturbance around the lamp - Z chosen so total system transfer function = pure real - little need for post-experiment data treatment Set-Up x r
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PHILIPSTU/eSet-Up Calculated Data from RC-Probe Output Measured: =f(t,x) Calculated: radial E field: disp. current: linear charge: |E| field: <E field: axial E field: total disp. current total charge
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