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Reactions causing loss of sodium vapor in HPS lamps

✍ Scribed by H. Lovas; M. Tóth; J. Madarász; V.K. Josepovits; Z. Tóth


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
335 KB
Volume
79
Category
Article
ISSN
0165-2370

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✦ Synopsis


Temperature dependence of the solid state reaction between sodium and polycrystalline alumina powder has been investigated in thermal experiments between 800 and 1100 8C, i.e. in the wall-temperature range of operating high pressure sodium (HPS) lamps with sintered polycrystalline alumina arc tube. During the experiments a ceramic arc tube was applied as a reactor chamber, in which Al 2 O 3 powder was subjected to controlled Na vapor and Xe gas atmosphere. The tubes were heated in an electric furnace at 800-1100 8C for 4-24 h in N 2 flow. The products of these heat-treatments were analysed by X-ray powder diffraction (XRD). According to the XRD identification, several different Na-O-Al compounds (NaAlO 2 , NaAl 11 O 17 , etc.), in minor ratio compared to the unchanged Al 2 O 3 , have been detected. Formation of Na-b-alumina (NaAl 11 O 17 ), a well-known Na + -cation conducting material, might be considered to provide a rapid path of sodium loss through even a polycrystalline alumina wall. It was observed that the structure of the alumina affects the conversion of the reaction between the alumina and sodium under thermally simulated lamp conditions and the disordered structure of the starting material results in an other Na-O-Al end product.