Krypton-85-free spark gap with photo-emission

US10103519B2 · US · B2

Patent metadata
FieldValue
Publication numberUS-10103519-B2
Application numberUS-201615239561-A
CountryUS
Kind codeB2
Filing dateAug 17, 2016
Priority dateAug 17, 2016
Publication dateOct 16, 2018
Grant dateOct 16, 2018

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  1. Title

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  2. Abstract

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  3. Assignees and inventors

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  4. Key dates

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  5. First independent claim

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  6. CPC / IPC classifications

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  7. Citations and related patents

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Abstract

Official abstract text for this publication.

An approach is disclosed for generating seed electrons at a spark gap in the absence of 85Kr. The present approach utilizes the photo-electric effect, using a light source with a specific nominal wave length (or range of wavelengths) at a specific level of emitted flux to generate seed electrons.

First claim

Opening claim text (preview).

The invention claimed is: 1. A system comprising: a spark gap, comprising: a first electrode having a first surface; a second electrode having a second surface offset from and facing the first surface; and a light source configured to emit light toward at least the first surface such that photons emitted by the light source when the spark gap is operated are incident on the first surface and cause electron emission from the first surface; and a second source to apply a voltage across the first and the second electrode, wherein the voltage is ramped from a value that is below an intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap to the intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap and then to a second voltage at which the spark gap closes, wherein the second voltage is higher than the intrinsic breakdown voltage. 2. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the light source is a tunable light source. 3. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the light source is a light emitting diode. 4. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap is not substantially altered by the operation of the light source. 5. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the light source emits at a nominal wavelength of approximately 465 nm or less. 6. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the light source is operated at a threshold current that causes generation of a quantity of seed electrons at a gap between the first electrode and second electrode that results in a consistent breakdown voltage. 7. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the first electrode comprises a cathode and the second electrode comprises an anode. 8. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the spark gap does not include a radioactive component. 9. The spark gap of claim 1 , wherein the light source is operated at a threshold current that causes generation of a quantity of seed electrons at a gap between the first electrode and second electrode that results in a breakdown voltage distribution within a specified tolerance. 10. An ignition device, comprising: one or more igniters configured to ignite a fuel stream or vapor during operation; and one or more exciter components, each connected to a respective igniter, wherein each exciter component comprises a spark gap that does not include a radioactive component, wherein the spark gap comprises: a first electrode having a first surface; and a second electrode having a second surface offset from and facing the first surface; and a light source configured to emit light toward at least the first surface such that photons emitted by the light source when the spark gap is operated are incident on the first surface and cause electron emission from the first surface; and wherein the ignition device further comprises a second source to apply a voltage across the first and the second electrode, wherein the voltage is ramped from a value that is below an intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap to the intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap and then to a second voltage at which the spark gap closes. 11. The ignition device of claim 10 , wherein the spark gap is configured to generate free electrons via a photo-electric effect. 12. The ignition device of claim 10 , wherein the light source is a tunable light source. 13. The ignition device of claim 10 , wherein the first electrode is a cathode and the second electrode is an anode. 14. The ignition device of claim 10 , wherein the light source is a light emitting diode configured to emit at a nominal wavelength of 465 nm or less. 15. The ignition device of claim 10 , wherein the intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap is not substantially altered by the operation of the light source. 16. A method for generating a conductive plasma, comprising: applying a voltage across a spark gap comprising a first electrode and a second electrode; emitting tight from a light source configured to emit light toward at least one of the first electrode or the second electrode such that photons emitted by the light source are incident on at least one of the first electrode or the second electrode, thereby generating free electrons at a surface of at least one of the first electrode or second electrode via a photo-electric effect when the spark gap is operated; and subsequent to generating the free electrons, generating the conductive plasma across the spark gap; wherein the voltage is ramped from a value that is below an intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap to the intrinsic breakdown voltage of the spark gap and then to a second voltage at which the spark gap closes. 17. The method of claim 16 , further comprising igniting a fuel stream or vapor at a downstream igniter component in response to the conductive plasma bridging the spark gap. 18. The method of claim 16 , wherein free electrons are not generated by a radioactive isotope.

Assignees

Inventors

Classifications

  • for aircraft propulsion, e.g. jet engines · CPC title

  • Details of spark gaps · CPC title

  • Electric (sparking plugs H01T) · CPC title

  • H01T15/00Primary

    Circuits specially adapted for spark gaps, e.g. ignition circuits (ignition circuits for internal-combustion engines F02P; electric spark ignition for combustion apparatus F23Q; protection circuits using spark gaps H02H9/06) · CPC title

  • F02P23/04Primary

    Other physical ignition means, e.g. using laser rays · CPC title

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Frequently asked questions

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What does patent US10103519B2 cover?
An approach is disclosed for generating seed electrons at a spark gap in the absence of 85Kr. The present approach utilizes the photo-electric effect, using a light source with a specific nominal wave length (or range of wavelengths) at a specific level of emitted flux to generate seed electrons.
Who is the assignee on this patent?
Gen Electric
What technology area does this patent fall under?
Primary CPC classification H01T15/00. Mapped technology areas include Electricity.
When was this patent published?
Publication date Tue Oct 16 2018 00:00:00 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) (B2). Legal status and post-grant events are not shown on this page.
What related patents are in patentsdb?
We list 2 related publications on this page (citations in our corpus or others sharing the same primary CPC).