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Argon sign tube
By touching this home-made argon tube on a small inverter can sufficiently load the circuit and tune the driver frequency to create these resonant striations.
Keywords: Miscellaneous

Argon sign tube

By touching this home-made argon tube on a small inverter can sufficiently load the circuit and tune the driver frequency to create these resonant striations.

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Lamp/Fixture Information
Manufacturer:me
Model Reference:home-made
Lamp
Lamp Type:low pressure Argon
File information
Filename:stiration.jpg
Album name:Tuopeek / Misc
Keywords:Miscellaneous
Filesize:319 KiB
Date added:Oct 06, 2024
Dimensions:2400 x 1563 pixels
Displayed:12 times
DateTime Original:2020:07:27 13:40:26
Exposure Time:1/125 sec
FNumber:f/4.5
File Source:Digital Still Camera
Flash:No Flash
Focal length:32 mm
ISO:5600
Model:NIKON D3400
Software:Adobe Photoshop Elements 2.0
White Balance:0
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=550
Favorites:Add to Favorites

Comment 1 to 10 of 10
Page: 1

Ria   [Oct 06, 2024 at 11:14 PM]
Fascinating, how did you make this..?
Sammi   [Oct 06, 2024 at 11:23 PM]
As I said on one of Max's pictures, I just love these experiments.! We're lucky to have you as members of the site.! Mind Blown Love
Tuopeek   [Oct 07, 2024 at 09:38 AM]
Ria, I bought some electrodes and glass tubing from a neon supplier during 'lock-down'. I have a vacuum pump and I think I filled this one with argon welding gas. Not ideal as it isn't pure but still works ok. The glass is just workable with a butane blow torch. As for the high voltage side that's easy. Smile

Awe, thanks Sammi, I just love doing experiments, perhaps too much.
Ria   [Oct 07, 2024 at 03:31 PM]
We'll have to come and visit one day, and hopefully you can get here as well sometime Neon Sign
Max   [Oct 09, 2024 at 06:29 AM]
Really neat experiment. At what pressure did you fill the tube?
Tuopeek   [Oct 09, 2024 at 10:23 PM]
Thanks. Good question Max, but to he honest I can't be sure. When making these I was having a bit of an issue with leaks and I would vacuum down to around 0.1 Torr and bombard and then fill to about 0.2 torr and seal off quickly. Generally it could be 0.6Torr by the time it was sealed. I quite often ended up with too low a pressure and the electrode sputter quickly with the rise in voltage and further gas absorption in the sputter coating.
Max   [Oct 10, 2024 at 06:59 AM]
0.6 Torr is rather low for the argon fill, and it explains why you have such nice "sausage" striations in your discharge. That effect is caused by the periodic modulation of the electron energy in the positive column, and this can be achieved only in conditions where there is limited electron-atom collisions in the plasma. Such striation gets destroyed at higher gas pressures as a result of the "randomization" of the electron motions due to a critically high collision frequency (we can see those collisions as the scattering of electrons, especially at low electron energies resulting only in elastic interactions with atoms).
Sammi   [Oct 10, 2024 at 02:56 PM]
Excellent information.!
Tuopeek   [Oct 11, 2024 at 10:40 AM]
Max , I suspected this has to tie in with the frequency of the supply applied too, hence tuneable by loading. I think the driver was over 20kHz here.
Max   [Oct 14, 2024 at 09:40 PM]
True, the supply frequency is what causes those striations in the first place, but for this to happen electrons in the discharge must not be scattered to much by background atoms or the spatial modulation of the electron energy will lose its coherence.

Comment 1 to 10 of 10
Page: 1