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21 June 2009
Fluorescent lighting
lighting
The invention: A form of electrical lighting that uses a glass tube
coated with phosphor that gives off a cool bluish light and emits
ultraviolet radiation.
The people behind the invention:
Vincenzo Cascariolo (1571-1624), an Italian alchemist and
shoemaker
Heinrich Geissler (1814-1879), a German glassblower
Peter Cooper Hewitt (1861-1921), an American electrical
engineer
Celebrating the “Twelve Greatest Inventors”
On the night of November 23, 1936, more than one thousand industrialists,
patent attorneys, and scientists assembled in the main
ballroom of the Mayflower Hotel in Washington, D.C., to celebrate
the one hundredth anniversary of the U.S. Patent Office.Atransport
liner over the city radioed the names chosen by the Patent Office as
America’s “Twelve Greatest Inventors,” and, as the distinguished
group strained to hear those names, “the room was flooded for a
moment by the most brilliant light yet used to illuminate a space
that size.”
Thus did The New York Times summarize the commercial introduction
of the fluorescent lamp. The twelve inventors present were
Thomas Alva Edison, Robert Fulton, Charles Goodyear, Charles
Hall, Elias Howe, Cyrus Hall McCormick, Ottmar Mergenthaler,
Samuel F. B. Morse, George Westinghouse, Wilbur Wright, and Eli
Whitney. There was, however, no name to bear the honor for inventing
fluorescent lighting. That honor is shared by many who participated
in a very long series of discoveries.
The fluorescent lamp operates as a low-pressure, electric discharge
inside a glass tube that contains a droplet of mercury and a
gas, commonly argon. The inside of the glass tube is coated with
fine particles of phosphor. When electricity is applied to the gas, the
mercury gives off a bluish light and emits ultraviolet radiation.When bathed in the strong ultraviolet radiation emitted by the mercury,
the phosphor fluoresces (emits light).
The setting for the introduction of the fluorescent lamp began at
the beginning of the 1600’s, when Vincenzo Cascariolo, an Italian
shoemaker and alchemist, discovered a substance that gave off a
bluish glow in the dark after exposure to strong sunlight. The fluorescent
substance was apparently barium sulfide and was so unusual
for that time and so valuable that its formulation was kept secret
for a long time. Gradually, however, scholars became aware of
the preparation secrets of the substance and studied it and other luminescent
materials.
Further studies in fluorescent lighting were made by the German
physicist Johann Wilhelm Ritter. He observed the luminescence of
phosphors that were exposed to various “exciting” lights. In 1801,
he noted that some phosphors shone brightly when illuminated by
light that the eye could not see (ultraviolet light). Ritter thus discovered
the ultraviolet region of the light spectrum. The use of phosphors
to transform ultraviolet light into visible light was an important
step in the continuing development of the fluorescent lamp.
Further studies in fluorescent lighting were made by the German
physicist Johann Wilhelm Ritter. He observed the luminescence of
phosphors that were exposed to various “exciting” lights. In 1801,
he noted that some phosphors shone brightly when illuminated by
light that the eye could not see (ultraviolet light). Ritter thus discovered
the ultraviolet region of the light spectrum. The use of phosphors
to transform ultraviolet light into visible light was an important
step in the continuing development of the fluorescent lamp.
The British mathematician and physicist Sir George Gabriel Stokes
studied the phenomenon as well. It was he who, in 1852, termed the
afterglow “fluorescence.”
Geissler Tubes
While these advances were being made, other workers were trying
to produce a practical form of electric light. In 1706, the English
physicist Francis Hauksbee devised an electrostatic generator, which
is used to accelerate charged particles to very high levels of electrical
energy. He then connected the device to a glass “jar,” used a vacuum pump to evacuate the jar to a low pressure, and tested his
generator. In so doing, Hauksbee obtained the first human-made
electrical glow discharge by “capturing lightning” in a jar.
In 1854, Heinrich Geissler, a glassblower and apparatus maker,
opened his shop in Bonn, Germany, to make scientific instruments;
in 1855, he produced a vacuum pump that used liquid mercury as
an evacuation fluid. That same year, Geissler made the first gaseous
conduction lamps while working in collaboration with the German
scientist Julius Plücker. Plücker referred to these lamps as “Geissler
tubes.” Geissler was able to create red light with neon gas filling a
lamp and light of nearly all colors by using certain types of gas
within each of the lamps. Thus, both the neon sign business and the
science of spectroscopy were born.
Geissler tubes were studied extensively by a variety of workers.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, the practical American
engineer Peter Cooper Hewitt put these studies to use by marketing
the first low-pressure mercury vapor lamps. The lamps were quite
successful, although they required high voltage for operation, emitted
an eerie blue-green, and shone dimly by comparison with their
eventual successor, the fluorescent lamp. At about the same time,
systematic studies of phosphors had finally begun.
By the 1920’s, a number of investigators had discovered that the
low-pressure mercury vapor discharge marketed by Hewitt was an
extremely efficient method for producing ultraviolet light, if the
mercury and rare gas pressures were properly adjusted. With a
phosphor to convert the ultraviolet light back to visible light, the
Hewitt lamp made an excellent light source.
Impact
The introduction of fluorescent lighting in 1936 presented the
public with a completely new form of lighting that had enormous
advantages of high efficiency, long life, and relatively low cost.
By 1938, production of fluorescent lamps was well under way. By
April, 1938, four sizes of fluorescent lamps in various colors had
been offered to the public and more than two hundred thousand
lamps had been sold.
During 1939 and 1940, two great expositions—the New York World’s Fair and the San Francisco International Exposition—
helped popularize fluorescent lighting. Thousands of tubular fluorescent
lamps formed a great spiral in the “motor display salon,”
the car showroom of the General Motors exhibit at the New York
World’s Fair. Fluorescent lamps lit the Polish Restaurant and hung
in vertical clusters on the flagpoles along theAvenue of the Flags at
the fair, while two-meter-long, upright fluorescent tubes illuminated
buildings at the San Francisco International Exposition.
When the United States entered World War II (1939-1945), the
demand for efficient factory lighting soared. In 1941, more than
twenty-one million fluorescent lamps were sold. Technical advances
continued to improve the fluorescent lamp. By the 1990’s,
this type of lamp supplied most of the world’s artificial lighting.
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