micole66
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What are all discharge lamps that contains mercury?
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dor123
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Fluorescent, mercury vapour, high pressure sodium, metal halide and induction lamps.
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I"m don't speak English well, and rely on online translating to write in this site. Please forgive me if my choice of my words looks like offensive, while that isn't my intention.
I only working with the international date format (dd.mm.yyyy).
I lives in Israel, which is a 220-240V, 50hz country.
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micole66
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And what discharge lamps are made most of mercury vapor?
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micole66
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Fluorescent, mercury vapour, high pressure sodium, metal halide and induction lamps.
And what discharge lamps are made most of mercury vapor?
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Ash
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If you are asking what Mercury Vapor lamp is the most common, i think it is the 125W for Europe sizes and 100 or 175 for US sizes
If you ask what lamp is made mostly of Mercury Vapor, none of them is. The Mercury content in the lamp is tiny part of the lamp contents, most of them are the other materials like other Metals, Quartz, Glass, Ceramics
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micole66
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If you are asking what Mercury Vapor lamp is the most common, i think it is the 125W for Europe sizes and 100 or 175 for US sizes
If you ask what lamp is made mostly of Mercury Vapor, none of them is. The Mercury content in the lamp is tiny part of the lamp contents, most of them are the other materials like other Metals, Quartz, Glass, Ceramics
I mean if metal halide lamps are a type of mercury vapor lamp?
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dor123
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Metal halide being developed from the mercury vapor, but have metal halide salts in additional to the mercury and the argon. American lamps initially used indium, thallium and sodium iodide for the blue, green and the orange lines in the spectrum. today they uses sodium and scandium iodides, as scandium have a very high initial efficiency, less color shift, and it produces many lines in the spectrum. The europeans continued to use indium, thallium and sodium, and Osram developed dysprosium iodide for their cool daylight metal halide lamps.
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Logged
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I"m don't speak English well, and rely on online translating to write in this site. Please forgive me if my choice of my words looks like offensive, while that isn't my intention.
I only working with the international date format (dd.mm.yyyy).
I lives in Israel, which is a 220-240V, 50hz country.
|