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A
cold cathode is an element used within some
Nixie tubes, gas discharge lamps,
gas filled tubes, and
vacuum tubes. Cold cathodes do not employ a cathode heater.
Cold cathode fluorescent lamps (
CCFL) usually also called as
cold cathodes.Neon lamps are a very common example of a cold cathode lamp.
Electron emission
A
cathode is any
electrode that emits electrons. When used in electrical and electronic devices (most
fluorescent lamps, vacuum tubes, etc.), the cathode is explicitly heated, creating a hot cathode. By taking advantage of
thermionic emission, this decreases the work function of the cathode and makes it easier for an
electric field to strip electrons out of the cathode. But if sufficient voltage is present, electrons can still be stripped even out of a cathode operating at
Room temperature. Because it is not deliberately heated, such a cathode is referred to as a cold cathode, although several mechanisms may eventually cause the cathode to become quite hot once it is operating. Most cold cathode devices are filled with a
gas which can be
Ion. A few cold cathode devices contain a vacuum.
Details
Before looking at cathode ray tubes of any kind, a few basic terms must be defined:
The Cathode is the negative electrode. Any gas discharge lamp has a pair of electrodes, acting as cathode and anode (the positive electrode). Both electrodes act alternating as anode and cathode because the 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 a pair of cathodes. Examples are common
fluorescent lamps, high pressure discharge lamps and - completely evacuated - electron tubes and
vacuum fluorescent displays.
The interior surface of
cold cathodes are capable of producing
secondary electrons at a ratio greater than unity (amplification) upon electron and ion impact. For accelerating of the ions to a sufficient velocity for creating free electrons from the cathode material cold cathode discharge lamps need higher voltages than hot cathode ones, causing a strong electric field near the cathodes.
Another mechanism for generating free electrons from a cold metallic surface is field emission. It is used in some
x-ray tubes and the
field electron microscope.
Cold cathodes sometimes have
Rare earth element coating on them for enhancing electron emission. Some types contain a source of
beta radiation to start
ionization of the gas that fills the tube. In such a tube, glow discharge around the cathode is usually minimized, in favor of a so called positive column, filling the tube. The best example is the humble neon lamp. Another good example is
Nixie tubes. Nixie tubes too are cold cathode, neon displays that also happen to be in-line, but not in-plane display devices.
computer case fitted with blue/green Cold Cathode tubes.A common cold cathode application is in neon signage. Other examples include the thyratron, krytron,
sprytron, and ignitron tubes. Large-scale 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. Nowadays, miniature CCFLs are extensively used as
backlights for
computer liquid crystal displays.Additionally, CCFLs are used by
Case modding to light the insides of their customized computer cases.
Despite their name, cold cathodes don't necessarily remain cold as they operate; they can get painfully hot. In systems using alternating current but without separate
anode structures, the cathodes alternate as anodes and the impinging electrons can cause substantial localized heating, often to red heat. The cathode may or may not take advantage of this heating to facilitate the thermionic emission of electrons when it is acting as a cathode. (
Instant start fluorescent lamps definitely do employ this aspect; they start as cold-cathode devices but soon localized heating of the fine tungsten wire cathodes causes them to operate as ordinary
hot cathode lamps.)
Typically cold cathode devices use a complex high-voltage power supply with some mechanism for limiting current flow. Although 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 resistance to current flow begins to drop, requiring a gradually lower voltage to maintain operation. In the case of tubes with an ionizing gas, the gas can become a very hot
plasma (physics) where electical resistance greatly reduced. In a simple power supply without current limiting protection, this reduction in operational resistance can lead to damage to the power supply or the tube electrodes from overheating.
See also
Patents
- - Philo Farnsworth - Cold cathode electron discharge tube
- - Philo Farnsworth - Cold cathode electron discharge tube
- - Clarence Hansell - Cold cathode electron discharge device and circuits therefore
External links
- Pulse Power Switching Devices - An Overview- by John Pasley
- Replacing the CCFL of a notebook - a step by step procedure
Cold cathode - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A cold cathode is an element used within some Nixie tubes, gas discharge lamps, gas filled tubes, and vacuum tubes. Cold cathodes do not employ a cathode heater.
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