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Registered Member #3414
Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
Gases like neon and argon are much easier to ionise than gases like oxygen and nitrogen (air), and at resuced pressure are again even easier to ionise (see Paschen curves for more detail).
When placed in an electric field, the neon ionises due to 'capacitive coupling', rather than 'inductive coupling' (at least, this is the conventional thinking. I think TC's are capable of inducing currents as well as the secondary winding is an inductor, so maybe it's not so clear cut, but it's generally accepted that it's capacitive coupling that does all the work here.)
Generally, with capacitively inducted plasmas, the atoms of neon (in this case) are pulled apart by the rising electric field, with electrons pulled in one direction, and Ne+ ions pulled in the other direction. These ions and electrons can collide with more neon atoms to create more ions. When the field reverses they are pulled in the other direction. The light is produced as neon ions and electrons re-combine to produce atoms again, When this happens a photon is released.
Inductively coupled plasmas, on the other hand, tend to cause the ions and electrons to move in circles or spirals, first in one direction, then in the other.
Basically, as the voltage on the topload rises the electrons in the neon bulb are attracted to the topload and the positive ions repelled. As the voltage on the topload reverses, the electrons are repelled and the ions are attracted, and light is emitted as these ions and electrons re-combine, producing photons.
I hope I got it all 'the right way round', I've at least supplied a few other terms for you to google
Registered Member #55171
Joined: Fri Jun 05 2015, 06:44AM
Location:
Posts: 9
Thank you guys, it still took me quite a while to understand everything even with your great explanations. But I would just like to confirm what I understand:
So a neon bulb is always excited through capacitive coupling, no matter if it has an electric arc jumping to it or if it's further back in the electric field of the TC. The only difference is that the electric arc
Uspring wrote ... causes the high electric field of the TC top to be transported into the vicinity of the tube.
So a neon bulb is always excited through capacitive coupling, no matter if it has an electric arc jumping to it or if it's further back in the electric field of the TC. The only difference is that the electric arc
Uspring wrote ... causes the high electric field of the TC top to be transported into the vicinity of the tube.
?
Yes, and the field drops off at larger distances from the TC top. At sufficiently large distances the neon bulb will stop emitting light. I should have said more accurately, that the charge of the top of the TC is transported near to the bulb, if an arc hits it. The charge of the top is causing the field and a conductive path like an arc will transport it close to the bulb increasing the field there.
If the other side of the tube is grounded, you'll have a direct current path from the top through the tube to ground. In this case capacitive effects are negligible and the tube will become very bright.
Registered Member #4362
Joined: Sat Jan 21 2012, 03:44AM
Location: Texas
Posts: 98
I placed a small laser pointer on top of my toroid once and the laser diode fired right up. It only worked for a short time so I'm not sure what was actually going on.
When a coil illuminates a bulb you’re holding it’s because a circuit is completed through the bulb, continuing through your body (mainly the surface of your skin), which is also capacitively coupled to ground. When this is happening, the bulb and your body is the path of least resistance (or in this case impedance) to ground. If you want to take your body out of the equation, you can do so by connecting one side of the bulb to some foil sheet sitting on the ground, and suspending the bulb near the coil.
Registered Member #54263
Joined: Thu Jan 15 2015, 09:54AM
Location: Perth
Posts: 35
Guys, thats just a radio transmission. If your neon tube has any electrodes - they work like antennas. If not - gas itself, especially when ionised, is conductive. Try to touch one electrode by hand (which means grounding) or attach a wire (antennae) to it - bulb will ligh up brighter / on a longer distance. Spark between bulb and coil acts like a wire. LED acts like a rectifier, its terminals - like antennas.
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