A cold cathode is a cathode that is not electrically heated
by a filament. A cathode may be considered "cold" if it emits more
electrons than can be supplied by thermionic emission alone. It is used in
gas-discharge lamps, such as neon lamps, discharge tubes, and some types of
vacuum tube. The other type of cathode is a hot cathode, which is heated by
electric current passing through a filament. A cold cathode does not
necessarily operate at a low temperature: it is often heated to its operating
temperature by other methods, such as the current passing from the cathode into
the gas.
Contents
1
Cold-cathode devices
1.1
Lamps
2
Details
3
Applications
3.1
Effects of internal heating
4 See
also
5
References and notes
Cold-cathode devices
A cold-cathode vacuum tube does not rely on external heating
of an electrode to provide thermionic emission of electrons. Early cold-cathode
devices included the Geissler tube and Plucker tube, and early cathode ray
tubes. Study of the phenomena in these devices led to the discovery of the
electron.
Neon lamps are used both to produce light as indicators and
for special-purpose illumination, and also as circuit elements displaying
negative resistance. Addition of a trigger electrode to a device allowed the
glow discharge to be initiated by an external control circuit; Bell
Laboratories developed a "trigger tube" cold cathode device in 1936.
Many types of cold-cathode switching tube were developed,
including various types of thyratron, the krytron, cold cathode displays (Nixie
tube) and others. Voltage regulator tubes rely on the relatively constant
voltage of a glow discharge over a range of current, and were used to stabilize
power supply voltages in tube-based instruments. A Dekatron is a cold-cathode
tube with multiple electrodes that is used for counting. Each time a pulse is
applied to a control electrode, a glow discharge moves to a step electrode; by
providing ten electrodes in each tube and cascading the tubes, a counter system
can be developed and the count observed by the position of the glow discharges.
Counter tubes were used widely before development of integrated circuit counter
devices.
The flash tube is a cold-cathode device filled with xenon
gas, used to produce an intense short pulse of light for photography or to act
as a stroboscope to examine the motion of moving parts.
Lamps
Cold-cathode lamps include cold-cathode fluorescent lamps
(CCFLs) and neon lamps. Neon lamps primarily rely on excitation of gas
molecules to emit light; CCFLs use a discharge in mercury vapor to develop
ultraviolet light, which in turn causes a fluorescent coating on the inside of
the lamp to emit visible light.
Cold-cathode lamps are used for backlighting of LCDs, for
example computer monitors and television screens.
In the lighting industry, “cold cathode” historically refers
to luminous tubing which is larger than 20mm in diameter and operates on a
current of 120 to 240 milliamps. This larger diameter tubing is often used for
interior alcove and general lighting .The term "neon lamp" refers to
tubing that is smaller than 15 mm diameter and typically operates at
approximately 40 milliamps. These lamps are commonly used for neon signs.
Details
The cathode is the negative electrode. Any gas discharge
lamp has a positive (anode) and a negative electrode. Both electrodes alternate
between acting as an anode and a cathode when these devices run with
alternating current.
A cold cathode is
distinguished from a hot cathode that is heated to induce thermionic emission
of electrons. Discharge tubes with hot cathodes have an envelope filled with
low pressure gas and containing two electrodes. Examples are most common
fluorescent lamps, high pressure discharge lamps and vacuum fluorescent
displays.
The surface of cold
cathodes can emit secondary electrons at a ratio greater than unity
(breakdown). An electron that leaves the cathode will collide with neutral gas
molecules. The collision may just excite the molecule, but sometimes it will
knock an electron free to create a positive ion. The original electron and the
freed electron continue toward the anode and may create more positive ions. The
result is for each electron that leaves the cathode, several positive ions are
generated that eventually crash onto the cathode. Some crashing positive ions
may generate a secondary electron. The discharge is self-sustaining when for
each electron that leaves the cathode, enough positive ions hit the cathode to
free, on average, another electron. External circuitry limits the discharge
current. Cold cathode discharge lamps use higher voltages than hot cathode
ones. The resulting strong electric field near the cathode accelerates ions to
a sufficient velocity to create free electrons from the cathode material.
Another mechanism to generate free electrons from a cold
metallic surface is field electron emission. It is used in some x-ray tubes,
the field electron microscope (FEM), and field emission displays (FEDs).
Cold cathodes
sometimes have a rare earth coating to enhance electron emission. Some types contain
a source of beta radiation to start ionization of the gas that fills the tube.
In some tubes, glow discharge around the cathode is usually minimized; instead
there is a so-called positive column, filling the tube. Examples are the neon
lamp and nixie tubes. Nixie tubes too are cold-cathode neon displays that are
in-line, but not in-plane, display devices.
Cold cathode devices
typically use a complex high-voltage power supply with some mechanism for
limiting current. A lthough creating the initial space charge and the first arc
of current through the tube may require a very high voltage, once the tube
begins to heat up the electrical resistance drops, thus increasing the electric
current through the lamp. To offset this effect and maintain normal operation,
the supply voltage is gradually lowered. In the case of tubes with an ionizing
gas, the gas can become a very hot plasma and electrical resistance is greatly
reduced. If operated from a simple power supply without current limiting,this
reduction in resistance would lead to damage to the power supply and
overheating of the tube electrodes.
Applications
Cold cathodes are
used in cold-cathode rectifiers, such as the crossatron and mercury-arc valves,
and cold cathode amplifiers, such as in automatic message accounting and other
pseudospark switching applications. Other examples include the thyratron,
krytron, sprytron, and ignitron tubes.
A common
cold-cathode application is in neon signs and other locations where the ambient
temperature is likely to drop well below freezing, The Clock Tower, Palace of
Westminster (Big Ben) uses cold-cathode lighting behind the clock faces where
continual striking and failure to strike in cold weather would be undesirable.
Large cold-cathode fluorescent lamps (CCFLs) have been produced in the past,
and are still used today when shaped, long-life linear light sources are
required. As of 2011, miniature CCFLs were extensively used as backlights for
computer and television liquid crystal displays. CCFL lifespans vary in LCD
televisions depending on transient voltage surges and temperature levels in
usage environments.
Due to its
efficiency, CCFL technology has expanded into room lighting. Costs are similar
to those of fluorescent lighting,] but with several advantages. The light
emitted is easier on the eyes, bulbs turn on instantly to full output and are
also dimmable.
Effects of internal heating
In systems using
alternating current but without separate anode structures, the electrodes
alternate as anodes and cathodes, and the impinging electrons can cause
substantial localized heating, often to red heat. The electrode may take
advantage of this heating to facilitate the thermionic emission of electrons
when it is acting as a cathode. (Instant startfluorescent lamps employ this
aspect; they start as cold-cathode devices, but soon localized heating of the fine
tungsten wire cathodes causes them to operate in the same mode as hot cathode
lamps.)
This aspect is
problematic in the case of backlights used for LCD TV displays. New energy
efficiency regulations being proposed in many countries will require variable
backlighting—this also improves the perceived contrast range highly desirable
for LCD TV sets. However, CCFLs are strictly limited in the degree to which
they can be dimmed, both because a lower plasma current will lower the
temperature of the cathode, causing erratic operation, and because running the
cathode at too low a temperature drastically shortens the life of the lamps.
Much research is being directed to this problem [but high-end manufacturers are
now turning to high-efficiency white LEDs as a better solution.
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