This also got me thinking; if it isn’t mercury that confers a longer life, then could it be something else? Could it be fine-tuning the cathode material? Could it be fine tuning of the gas mixture and/or pressure? Which got me wondering if there would also be a way to determine the pressure in the tube? For example by examining the width of spectral emission lines?
In a 2011 email to me, Roger Wolfe, a Burroughs engineer, recalled the team’s first fragile attempt: “We put the tube on life test overnight. When we came in the next day, so much cathode material had sputtered onto the dome of the tube that the numerals were no longer visible. We had invented a tube with a 24-hour life!”
After some tinkering, Wolfe wrote, they discovered that the addition of mercury vapor would greatly extend the tube’s life span. The sputtering had been caused by the accelerated neon ions striking the cathode. But when the neon ions collided with the heavier mercury molecules, their energy dropped below the point where they could damage the cathode.
“We secured a tiny ampule with mercury sealed inside, wrapped a few turns of resistance wire around the ampule, [and] connected the ends of the wire to two of the [tube’s] pins,” Wolfe wrote. The tube was then sealed, and the team ran current through the wire, which heated and broke the ampule, releasing the mercury.
In August 1955, Burroughs unveiled its new indicator tube at Wescon—the Western Electronic Show and Convention, in California—which was for many years the leading U.S. electronics event. Soon after, it began shipping the first tubes to customers. That December, the company filed for a patent on its “glow indicating tube” [PDF] The devices were mechanically superior to the numeric display tubes still on offer from National Union: They had dedicated anodes made from wire mesh, and instead of hand-bent wires, the cathode numerals were etched out of thin sheet metal. The addition of mercury prolonged the tubes’ life span, eventually to more than 200,000 hours.
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On Jul 17, 2020, at 9:37 PM, Dekatron42 <martin....@gmail.com> wrote:
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After some tinkering, Wolfe wrote, they discovered that the addition of mercury vapor would greatly extend the tube’s life span. The sputtering had been caused by the accelerated neon ions striking the cathode. But when the neon ions collided with the heavier mercury molecules, their energy dropped below the point where they could damage the cathode.
“We secured a tiny ampule with mercury sealed inside, wrapped a few turns of resistance wire around the ampule, [and] connected the ends of the wire to two of the [tube’s] pins,” Wolfe wrote. The tube was then sealed, and the team ran current through the wire, which heated and broke the ampule, releasing the mercury."
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Nicholas,
Iodine (and all of the halogens) produce
excimers (excited dimers) with the noble gases. Excimers do
produce unusual colored discharges, but they have a problem --
there is nothing more chemically reactive than an ionized
halogen.
Tubes containing metal electrodes and a halogen "clean up" rapidly, as the ionized halogens react with and permanently bind to the metal electrodes. After a relatively short period of operation the halogens are depleted.
Some plasma sculptures are made with halogens, and do produce interesting colored displays, but the halogens will even attack the silicon dioxide of the glass envelopes, and clean up after some period of operation. I've seen a traffic light red plasma globe that used neon plus a halogen, as well as a lovely turquoise globe that used a halogen plus one of the heavier noble gases Neither had a long lifetime.
Dave
On Jul 18, 2020, at 17:13, David Speck MD <dr.s...@davidspeckmd.org> wrote: