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One of the drawbacks of the GEC SOI/H lamps was the tendency for sodium to migrate along the discharge tube during life, leaving some parts of the lamp devoid of sodium and with reduced light output. This was due to the natural effect that the heat generation near the electrodes caused that end to operate at high temperature, while the reduced thermal insulation at the U-bend caused that to run cooler. In the evacuated outer bulb of the Integral lamps, there is no gas convection effect to homogenise the temperatures.
To a certain extent this also affected the dewar type lamps, and was partly overcome by Philips' 1958 invention of the Sodium Dimples. These naturally ran cooler and slowed the rate of sodium distillation, leading to better lumen maintenance and life. However, dimples could not be used with GEC SOI lamps in which a close-fitting glass insulation sleeve was placed over each limb of the discharge tube.
In this experimental lamp, small holes have been melted in the sleeves through which heat can escape. It is evident from the sodium position that the technique was not successful - presumably the cooling effect was not great enough to encourage sodium condensation. Consequently this design was not marketed, and GEC's SOI lamps were prone to sodium migration until the problem was solved with the SOX lamps having graded insulation along the length. Incidentally, Philips later introduced dimpled SOI/H lamps, achieved by employing a glass heat-reflection sleeve large enough to accommodate the entire dimpled discharge tube. However the reduced thermal insulation vs the GEC lamps required narrower bore discharge tubes, operating at higher current density and consequently with lower lamp efficacy. |