The phosphor coating is usually distributed unevenly near the ends of the tube where the metal caps are allowing the UV out and direct viewing of the electrodes. Tubes specifically designed for UV output like germicidal and EPROM eraser lamps use a glass which is more transparent to UV. Quartz is needed for the 254nm mercury line and synthetic quartz is needed for the 184nm mercury line. There are a number of different phosphors which emit yellow near the 589nm sodium line which is safe for industrial photoresists. The lower frequency safelight cutoff frequencies are 625nm (deep ortho-red), 610nm (ortho-red), 580nm (amber), and 555nm (amber-yellow). I think we used amber for black and white enlarging paper in a darkroom. On Mon, 22 Jul 2013 20:06:46 -0400, Jim Hancock <jhancock1@...> wrote: >Probably not yellow glass but yellow phosphor coating. All fluorescent >lamps work by using UV from a mercury vapor light source to excite a >phosphor coating on the inside of the tube. Any missing phosphor will >allow some UV to escape although most glass does block some UV rays. >For what it's worth, Amazon has some 60 w bug lamps.
Message
Re: [Homebrew_PCBs] Yellow CFL bulb
2013-07-23 by David
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.