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Encyclopedia > Carbon arc lamp
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The 300,000-watt Plasma Arc Lamp in the Infrared Processing Center (IPC) at Oak Ridge National Laboratory

An arc lamp is a device that produces light by the sparking (or arcing, from voltaic arc) of a high current between two carbon rod electrodes. The rods are touched and then slowly drawn apart; as the rods separate the current is "struck" and arcs across the gap in a bright, ionized path. The arc produces a temperature of several thousand degrees, and the tips of the carbon rods are heated to incandescence, creating light. The rods are slowly vaporized during the process and need to be regularly adjusted to maintain the arc. The concept was first demonstrated by Sir Humphry Davy in the early 19th century (1802, 1805, 1807 and 1809 are all mentioned), using charcoal sticks and a 2000-cell battery to create an arc across a 4-inch gap.


The concept was improved upon by a number of people including William Staite and Charles F. Brush. There were attempts to produce the lamps commercially after 1850 but the lack of a constant electricity supply thwarted efforts. It was not until the 1870s that lamps such as the Yablochkov candle were more commonly seen. The harsh and brilliant light was found most suitable for public areas, being around 200 times more powerful than contemporary filament lamps. There were two major advances in the 1880s when the arcs were enclosed in a small tube to slow the carbon consumption (increasing the life span to around 100 hours) and with the introduction of flame arc lamps, where the carbon rods had added salts (usually magnesium, strontium, barium or calcium fluorides) to increase light output and produce different colours.


The arc lamps were soon superseded by the more efficient and longer-lasting filament lamps in most roles, remaining in only certain niche markets such as cinema projection and search lights.




See also



  Results from FactBites:
 
Why are light bulbs & lamps colored? (incandescence) (648 words)
Carbon arc lamps saw extensive use throughout the USA and the world from the late 1870s on.
Arc lamps come from almost the exact historical point when electricity went from being a scientific curiosity to being part of everyday life.
The "Brush arc lamp" from GE accomplished this "spacing" issue, and became commercially successful by the late 1870s ushering in the era of electric light.
Brush's Arc Lamp (2739 words)
The carbon holder rod is sized to freely pass through the central hole of the ring clutch as long as the clutch is perfectly horizontal.
The upper carbon holder is free to move through the central hole of the ring clutch and the upper electrode is maintained in contact with the lower electrode by the weight of the upper electrode assembly.
The upward movement of the upper carbon electrode establishes a gap and the arc of the lamp is "struck".
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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