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Optical emission of alkali metals

Optical emission spectra of special electric discharge lamps (Philips LL types) filled with alkali metals: sodium, potassium, rubidium, and cesium.


Keywords: Miscellaneous

Optical emission of alkali metals


Optical emission spectra of special electric discharge lamps (Philips LL types) filled with alkali metals: sodium, potassium, rubidium, and cesium.

uv_PCA.jpg LL_Noble_Gases.jpg LL_Alkali_Metals.jpg LL_Transition_Metals.jpg LL_Post-Transition_Metals.jpg
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Filename:LL_Alkali_Metals.jpg
Album name:Max / Spectra
Keywords:Miscellaneous
Filesize:420 KiB
Date added:10 May 2026
Dimensions:1500 x 2041 pixels
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Software:Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows
URL:https://trad-lighting.net/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=1249
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Comment 1 to 4 of 4
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Drew   [Sun 10 May 2026 at 14:49]
Very interesting to see that most of them have pretty strong infrared emissions. I always wondered if a mixture of multiple alkali metals could be used in an SOX style lamp to make a higher CRI version of LPS, looks like cesium and sodium would be the best bet for that, maybe a little rubidium for some good blue-purple. I am sure efficacy would go down the drain through
Max   [Sun 10 May 2026 at 17:13]
Although this would work in principle, the problem with mixing alkali metals is amalgamation which would have a negative impact on the vapor pressure vs temperature characteristics of the metallic fill of the lamp. A well known example of that is the sodium-potassium eutectic mixture (22/78 Na/K ratio) which is liquid at room temperature but has a lower metal vapor pressure than pure sodium. So, to make this work, the burner's operating temperature should be higher than that of a SOX lamp, which would certainly result in an accelerated glass corrosion from the alkalis (vapor and liquid).
Drew   [Sun 10 May 2026 at 19:08]
Oof, I know how much of a challenge it was to get sodium to vaporize efficiently, making that even harder certainly wouldn't be worth it. I was not aware of this vapor pressure characteristic. Maybe a high pressure approach would work better, but at that point metal halide is probably better.
Max   [Mon 11 May 2026 at 15:43]
Yes, the metal halide approach is way easier. Interestingly there was some research done on mixed metal vapor lamps using HPS burners (those can withstand much higher temperatures than glass/quartz ones). GE looked at the possibility of adding metallic elements such as cadmium or thallium to standard HPS lamps in order to improve their light color. Sylvania investigated lithium-cadmium fills for horticultural lighting. However, none of those works were successful for the reason I mentioned earlier. So, yes, it's metal halides all the way if you want to combine elements in order to produce lights of improved color (and efficacy).

Comment 1 to 4 of 4
Page: 1