arauca Posted December 1, 2013 Share Posted December 1, 2013 When a helium atom is in a field between cathode and anode at a about 30 volt Question will the helium atom aquire a nefative charge ? and then release the quired electron at the anode ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
decraig Posted December 2, 2013 Share Posted December 2, 2013 (edited) You can buy 12 volt neon lamps. The neon is at low pressure. I would expect that it is much harder to ripe an electron out of an orbital, such that it would require a higher voltage, less pressure, or smaller distance between electrodes. You can purchase helium lamps requiring perhaps 15 thousand volts with a tube length maybe 15 inches. 15K/15 gives you 1000 volts per inch of electric field strength. It's not the applied voltage that matters, but the voltage per inch, or voltage per centimeter. That means you need an anode-cathode gap of less than .033 inches. (Hmm. That seems a little large to me.) But it gets a little more complicated than what I've written: There is an ignition voltage to get the arc started, but a significantly lower sustaining voltage. Once you get it kick started it takes less voltage to keep the arc going. By the way, with a missing electron, the helium would acquire a positive charge. Edited December 2, 2013 by decraig Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
arauca Posted December 2, 2013 Author Share Posted December 2, 2013 By the way the anode cahode gap is about 0.5 mm the gap is filled with Helium , Cathode is graphite and the anode is graphite and in the process there is a deposition of carbonateous material at the cathode . In a way it becomes something like sputtering. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Cuthber Posted December 2, 2013 Share Posted December 2, 2013 You can buy 12 volt neon lamps. Where? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
decraig Posted December 3, 2013 Share Posted December 3, 2013 (edited) Where? Good catch. These things have nearly gone obsolete for a long time now. I should have said, 120 VAC. Edited December 3, 2013 by decraig Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hoola Posted December 23, 2013 Share Posted December 23, 2013 I thought that the firing voltage with even a small neon lamp was 70.7V.......you can buy 12V neon lamps for the car, but they have a small step-up power supply included in the lamp assembly.....edd Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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