mjk_icopsO1.pps - Mark J. Kushner
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Transcript mjk_icopsO1.pps - Mark J. Kushner
STARTING MECHANISMS FOR HIGH
PRESSURE METAL HALIDE LAMPS*
Brian Lay**, Sang-Hoon Cho and Mark J. Kushner
University of Illinois
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
Urbana, IL 61801
http://uigelz.ece.uiuc.edu
June 2001
* Work supported by General Electric and NSF
** Present Affiliation: Sun Microsystems, Inc.
ICOPS01_title
AGENDA
Metal-halide, HID Lamps
Description of Model
HID Startup with Trigger Electrode
Role of Photoionization
Startup of Hot Lamps
Concluding Remarks
ICOPS01_agenda
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
METAL HALIDE HIGH PRESSURE LAMPS
High pressure, metal-halide, High-Intensity-Discharge (HID) lamps are
common illumination sources for large area indoor and outdoor applications.
In the steady state, HID lamps are
thermal arcs, producing quasicontinuum radiation from a multiatmosphere, metal-vapor plasma.
Cold-fills are 50-100 Torr Ar with
doses of metal or metal-halide salts.
Initiation consists of high pressure
breakdown of the cold gas, heating of
the cathode and housing, vaporizing
the metal (-salts).
ICOPS01_01
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
STARTUP OF HIGH PRESSURE HID LAMPS
Breakdown of cold, high pressure HID lamps is often assisted by small
additions of 85Kr for preionization.
An auxiliary trigger
electrode is employed for
further “preionization”.
Multi-kV pulses are next
used to breakdown the gap.
Issues:
Lifetime (minimizing
sputtering of electrodes)
High-pressure restart
Reduction/removal of 85Kr.
ICOPS01_02
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
MODELING OF STARTUP IN HIGH PRESSURE LAMPS
To better understand and develop more optimum startup sequences for high
pressure, metal-halide lamps, LAMPSIM has been developed, a 2dimensional model.
2-d rectilinear or cylindrical unstructured mesh
Implicit drift-diffusion for charged and neutral species
Poisson’s equation with volume and surface charge, and material
conduction.
Circuit model
Local field or electron energy equation coupled with Boltzmann
solution for electron transport coefficients
Optically thick radiation transport with photoionization
Secondary electron emission by impact
Thermally enhanced electric field emission of electrons
Surface chemistry.
ICOPS01_03
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
DESCRIPTION OF MODEL
Continuity with sources due to electron impact, heavy particle reactions,
surface chemistry, photo-ionization and secondary emission.
N i
qN ii DiN i Si
t
Photoionization:
r r
N i ( r )ij N j ( r ) exp
SPi ( r )
2
4
r r
d3r
Electric field and secondary emission:
SSi j,
ICOPS01_04
1/2
W q 3E/ 0
,
jE AT 2 exp
kTS
jS ij j
j
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
DESCRIPTION OF MODEL (cont.)
Poisson for Electric Potential:
V S
Volumetric Charge:
V
q ii
t
i
Surface Charge:
S
qii 1 i jE
t
i
Solution: Equations are descritized using finite volume techniques and
Scharfetter-Gummel fluxes, and are implicitely solved using an iterative
Newton’s method with numerically derived Jacobian elements.
Ni ( t t ) Ni ( t ) Nit
N i
N i
N j
N i N i ( t t ) N i ( t )
( t t ) t
t
j N j
ICOPS01_05
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Optical and Discharge Physics
MODEL GEOMETRY AND UNSTRUCTURED MESH
Investigations of a cylindrically symmetric lamp were conducted using an
unstructured mesh to resolve electrode structure.
Cylindrical symmetry is questionable with respect to the trigger electrode.
1 cm
Fin
Grounded
Electrode
Air
Powered
Electrode
"W indings"
Trigger
Electrode
Plasma
Quartz Tube
Grounded
Housing
Fin
CL Cylinder Center-line
ICOPS01_06
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
BIAS WAVEFORMS
Startup is initiated by a -600V, 100ns pulse on the trigger electrode with the
power electrode grounded.
The sustain pulse (trigger and powered electrodes) is -3500V, 275 ns.
BIAS (V)
0
Roughness on the trigger
electrode provides
sufficient electric field
enhancement for electron
emission.
No other initial sources of
electrons are allowed.
-500
-1000
TRIGGER
-1500
-2000
-2500
TRIGGER AND
POWER ELECTRODE
-3000
-3500
-4000
0
ICOPS01_07
100
200
300
TIME (ns)
400
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Optical and Discharge Physics
ELECTRON DENSITY: BASE CASE (SLIGHTLY WARM)
Electric field emission from the
trigger electrode initiates the
discharge.
Densities of 1011 cm-3 are
produced by the trigger pulse.
Avalanche in the main gap is
anode directed due to cathode
preionization. After gap closure,
avalanche is cathode directed.
“Prearrival” of avalanche at
anode occurs due to photoionization of Hg.
Pulsation occurs at the cathode.
4 x 107 - 2 x 1011 cm-3
75 Torr, Ar/Hg = 75/0.001 (slightly
warm), 450 ns.
3 x 108 - 2 x 1012 cm-3
ICOPS01_08
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Optical and Discharge Physics
LEADING EDGE OF TRIGGER PULSE ([e] and Te)
Te closely follows the electric field. The electron density is sufficiently
low that little shielding occurs.
Electron Temperature
Electron Density
As the voltage ramps to 600 V (15 ns), electric field
emission seeds the minigap.
Avalanche preferentially
occurs near the windings
where the gross electric
field and Te are largest.
75 Torr, Ar/Hg = 75/0.001
(slightly warm), 0 - 30 ns.
0 - 6 eV
7 x 106 - 7 x 1010 cm-3
ICOPS01_09
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Optical and Discharge Physics
LEADING EDGE OF TRIGGER PULSE (e-SOURCES)
Electron impact ionization occurs near the trigger electrode tip and near
the windings closely tracking the electron temperature.
Electron Impact Ionization
Photoionization
Photoionization of Hg,
tracking excited states and
not directly electric field,
peaks dominantly near the
trigger electrode.
As avalanche times are < 1
ns at electric fields of
interest (100s Td), e-impact
sources dominate.
Photoionization does
penetrate “further, sooner”.
75 Torr, Ar/Hg = 75/0.001
(slightly warm), 0 - 30 ns.
7 x 106 - 7 x 1010 cm--3s-1
9 x 1012 - 9 x 1016 cm--3s-1
ICOPS01_10
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Optical and Discharge Physics
PHOTIONIZATION LEADS ELECTRON IMPACT
Photoionization of Hg provides seed electrons in advance of the
electron impact avalanche front, similar to stream propagation.
[Photoionization][Electron impact]
As time progresses and the
electric field increases, the delay
between photo-ionization and
impact decreases.
Photoionization by non-resonance
radiation will have longer
penetration distances and larger
effects.
75 Torr, Ar/Hg = 75/0.001 (slightly
warm), 0 - 15 ns.
MIN
ICOPS01_11
MAX
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Optical and Discharge Physics
PHOTIONIZATION LEADS ELECTRON IMPACT AT ANODE
The leading of electron impact of photoionization is best illustrated at
the anode.
Electron Density
Electric field enhancement at the
small radius anode produces
“avalanche” class E/N, though
lacking seed electrons.
Photoionization leading the
avalanche front from the cathode
seeds the high E/N region around
the anode.
The resulting local avalanche
begins a cathode directed
breakdown wave.
75 Torr, Ar/Hg = 75/2.3 (warm), 185
- 450 ns.
5 x 108 - 5 x 1011 cm-3
ICOPS01_12
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Optical and Discharge Physics
[e] vs TEMPERATURE
The cw pressure of (hot)
HIDs is many atm.
After turn off, the tube
must cool (metal vapor
condense), to reduce the
density (increase E/N) so
that the available starting
voltage can reignite the
lamp.
100/ 0.001
Ambient
99.9/0.1
50 C
97/3
140 C
Ar (75 Torr cold fill) / Hg
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7/3
220C
5 x 108 - 5 x 1011 cm-3
0-450 ns
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics
CONCLUDING REMARKS
A model for startup of high pressure, metal halide, HID lamps has been
developed.
Internally triggered lamps have been investigated, demonstrating role of
photoionization and field emission in startup phase.
Restart of hot (cooling lamps) is ultimately limited by available voltage
to “spark” high density (low E/N) of still condensing metal vapor .
Future developments will address heating of electrodes and onset of
thermionic emission.
ICOPS01_14
University of Illinois
Optical and Discharge Physics