Xenon Igniter

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Ronna Bordelon

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:55:31 PM8/3/24
to ticksecarcia

What do xenon lamps and the invention of radio have in common?The box below is a 1960s German high voltage unit that CuriousMarc obtainedas part of an auction.After some research, we determined that it is an Osram1 igniter2, which generates a 40-kilovolt pulse3to ignite a xenon arc lamp.The unit didn't work, so I opened it up, figured out its circuitry, and fixed it, so we could generate some sparks.The circuit turned out to be very similar to a Tesla coil, although the sparks are much smaller.

A xenon arc lamp generates light by producing a high-temperature plasma of ionized xenon betweentwo electrodes.It produces bright white light that has a spectrum similar to daylight and is useful for movie projectors, searchlights, and laboratory uses.Although the lamp is powered by a low-voltage, high-current DC power supply,a high-voltage spark is required to start the arc, and that is the role of this 40 kV igniter.

I searched for information on this ignitor.The only thing I found was a 1964 paper titled A Spectrofluorophosphorimeterthat described an experimental setup for measuring fluorescence and phosphorescence spectra.The experiment used a 450-W Osram xenon arc lamp, ignited by a Z2201 igniter, the same as this one.The research was done at SRI (Stanford Research Institute), just a few miles away, so there's a good chance that Marc obtained the exact unit that was used in this research.

We opened up the unit and I examined the unusual components inside.A large 220V to 7kV transformer is at the right of the photo below.The output transformer is the reddish flat cylinder at the back left; this transformer's output is the connection pillar on the front of the unit.In front of this transformer is a dark yellowish disk, a 1000pF 20kV capacitor.The most unusual component is the ceramic cylinder in the front.

I traced out the circuitry of the unit6.It is a high-voltage circuit that is also sometimes used in Tesla coils (details).The way it works is that the high voltage transformer raises the 220 V input to 7 kV. This charges the high-voltage "tank" capacitor until it has enough voltage to break down the spark gap, causing a spark across it.When the spark gap fires it conducts at low resistance. This creates a high-frequency resonant circuit between the tank capacitor and the output transformer's primary.Energy is transferred to the secondary, at a much higher voltage, producing the 40 kV output.As energy shifts back and forth between the primary and secondary, it is dissipated, until the spark gap stops conducting and the process repeats, thousands oftimes a second.5

Schematic of a Tesla coil circuit. This is a less popular topology for a Tesla coil, but is the circuit used in the igniter. (The igniter has an output, not a torus, of course.) Schematic from Omegatron.

So where is the spark gap in this unit? It turns out to be the ceramic cylinder.I opened up the cylinder and found a stack of eight metal disks with (maybe) carbon electrodes in the center. The disks are separated by mica washers to leave 0.33 mm gaps between each pair.This forms a series of 7 tiny spark gaps.

This type of spark gap is known as a "quenched spark gap".Spark gap transmitters were the first form of radio transmitter, used from 1887 to 1920.They used a spark totransmit Morse code via radio waves (details).The quenched spark gap was one type of spark gap used in these transmitters, as shown in the diagram below.By combining multiple small gaps, the quenched spark gap could cool off efficiently.

We cautiously hooked the igniter to 220V to test it, but nothing happened.I checked various parts of the circuit and everything seemed fine. In the photo below, notice the pink block at the left that looks like a Lego piece.This is a safety interlock that disconnects the 220 V input if the case is removed; the case has prongs that mesh with the interlock to close the circuit.Eventually, we figured out that the safety interlock had some loose screws that weren't making contact.This was tricky to find because when the case was open, the safety interlock was (of course) open.

Inside the igniter. The output transformer (reddish round unit) is at the top with the yellowish tank capacitor above it.The ceramic spark gap is the cylinder in the middle. The pink Lego-link block is the safety interlock.The HV power transformer is at the bottom (label visible).T.

After tightening all the screws, the igniter worked.Since we didn't have a xenon arc lamp, we used the unit to generate sparks instead.Marc attached a strip of copper to the center output and a white wire to the ground,bending them to form a small gap. He pulsed the power switch to produce brief sparks, as seen in the video below.(Since the text on the unit indicates the unit should be powered for under 0.5 seconds,we kept the sparks brief to prevent overheating.)Although the repair was anticlimactic, at least we got some nice sparks.

Spark gaps generate radio waves across a wide spectrum;5 inventor David Hughes first noticed this interference in 1878. Marconi experimented with spark-gap transmittersin the 1890s, discovering how to transmit telegraph signals across short distances and then between continents.This work won Marconi the Nobel Prize for inventing radio.The CuriousMarc video below explains in more detail how the spark gap generator led to radio.Vacuum tubes made spark-gap transmitters obsolete by the 1920s, but these spark-gap circuits live on, igniting xenon arcs in modern headlights.

The front of the unit is shown below. Siemens-Schuckertweke AG is a German engineering companythat I think owned Osram at the time.Under that are the warnings "Vorsicht! Hochspannung" (Danger! High voltage) and a circle labeled "In diesen Zone keine Metallteile" (No metal parts in this zone).At the center of the circled zone is a pillar with a screw terminal; this is the connection for the 40 kV output.At the bottom are connections for 220V / 50 Hz, which can be applied for a maximum of 0.5 s, as well as "zum Vorschaltgert" (to the ballast).

We measured the output from the igniter and found that it produces 2000-4000 very short spikes a second. The spikes decay very rapidly so they are about 1s long, and are random noise in the tens of megahertz. This random noise has a very wide bandwidth showing that spark gap generators produce radio noise across a wide spectrum.

I traced out the circuitry of the unit and made the rough schematic below.The unlabeled rectangle is the ceramic spark gap cylinder.The circuit is essentially the same as the Tesla coil schematic earlier, except there are two capacitors and an external ballast resistoron the output side to limit current. (We did not use a ballast resistor, but shorted the two connections.)

Larger versions of these igniters, often made by an Italian company IREM, are used in the lamphouses of cinema film projectors in order to strike the xenon lamp. Typically the lamp is rated from 1kw upwards. I came across your page when recently repairing just such an igniter that had stopped striking. They are not cheap units to replace, so I was happy to find that the fault lay with the spark generator.

Thanks for your useful explanation of the circuitry, which helped me out here.
cheers! Phil

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