Before the invention of the light
bulb, illuminating the world after the sun went
down was a messy, arduous, hazardous task. It took a bunch of
candles or torches to fully light up a good-sized room, and
oil lamps, while fairly effective, tended to leave a residue
of soot on anything in their general vicinity.
When
the science of electricity really got going in the mid 1800s,
inventors everywhere were clamoring to devise a practical,
affordable electrical home lighting device. Englishman Sir
Joseph Swan and American Thomas Edison both got it right
around the same time (in 1878 and 1879, respectively), and
within 25 years, millions of people around the world had
installed electrical lighting in their homes. The easy-to-use
technology was such an improvement over the old ways that the
world never looked back.
The amazing thing about this
historical turn of events is that the light bulb itself could
hardly be simpler. The modern light bulb, which hasn't changed
drastically since Edison's model, is made up of only a handful
of parts. In this edition ofHowStuffWorks
, we'll see how these parts come together to produce
bright light for hours on end.
Light Basics
Light is a form of
energy that can be released by an atom. It
is made up of many small particle-like packets that have
energy and momentum but no mass. These particles, called light
photons, are the most basic units of
light. (For more information, see How Light Works.)
Atoms release light photons when their electrons become excited. If
you've read How Atoms Work, then you know that electrons are
the negatively charged particles that move around an atom's
nucleus (which has a net positive charge). An atom's electrons
have different levels of energy, depending on several factors,
including their speed and distance from the nucleus. Electrons
of different energy levels occupy different orbitals.
Generally speaking, electrons with greater energy move in
orbitals farther away from the nucleus. When an atom gains or loses
energy, the change is expressed by the movement of electrons.
When something passes energy on to an atom, an electron may be
temporarily boosted to a higher orbital (farther away from the
nucleus). The electron only holds this position for a tiny
fraction of a second; almost immediately, it is drawn back
toward the nucleus, to its original orbital. As it returns to
its original orbital, the electron releases the extra energy
in the form of a photon, in some cases a light photon.

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The wavelength of the emitted light (which
determines its color) depends on how much energy is released,
which depends on the particular position of the electron.
Consequently, different sorts of atoms will release different
sorts of light photons. In other words, the color of the light
is determined by what kind of atom is excited.
This is the basic mechanism at work in nearly all light
sources. The main difference between these sources is the
process of exciting the atoms. In the next section, we'll see
how atoms are excited in a light bulb.
The Bulb
Light bulbs have a very simple
structure. At the base, they have two metal contacts, which
connect to the ends of an electrical circuit. The metal
contacts are attached to two stiff wires, which are attached
to a thin metal filament. The filament sits in the
middle of the bulb, held up by a glass mount. The wires
and the filament are housed in a glass bulb, which is filled
with an inert gas, such as argon.
When the bulb is hooked up to a power supply, an
electric current flows from one contact to the other,
through the wires and the filament. Electric current in a
solid conductor is the mass movement of free electrons
(electrons that are not tightly bound to an atom) from a
negatively charged area to a positively charged area.
As the electrons zip along through the filament, they are
constantly bumping into the atoms that make up the filament.
The energy of each impact vibrates an atom -- in other
words, the current heats the atoms up. A thinner
conductor heats up more easily than a thicker conductor
because it is more resistant to the movement of electrons.
Bound electrons in the vibrating atoms may be boosted
temporarily to a higher energy level. When they fall back to
their normal levels, the electrons release the extra energy in
the form of photons. Metal atoms release mostly
infrared light photons,
which are invisible to the human eye.
But if they are heated to a high enough level -- around 4,000
degrees Fahrenheit (2,200 degrees C) in the case of a light
bulb -- they will emit a good deal of visible light.
The filament in a light bulb is made of a long, incredibly
thin length of tungsten metal. In a typical 60-watt
bulb, the tungsten filament is about 6.5 feet (2 meters) long
but only one-hundredth of an inch thick. The tungsten is
arranged in a double coil in order to fit it all in a
small space. That is, the filament is wound up to make one
coil, and then this coil is wound to make a larger coil. In a
60-watt bulb, the coil is less than an inch long.
Tungsten is used in nearly all incandescent light bulbs
because it is an ideal filament material. In the next section,
we'll find out why this is, and we'll examine the role of the
glass bulb and inert gas.
The Right Materials
As we saw in the last
section, a metal must be heated to extreme temperatures before
it will emit a useful amount of visible light. Most metals
will actually melt before reaching such extreme
temperatures -- the vibration will break apart the rigid
structural bonds between the atoms so that the material
becomes a liquid. Light bulbs are manufactured with tungsten
filaments because tungsten has an abnormally high melting
temperature.
But tungsten will catch on fire at
such high temperatures, if the conditions are right.
Combustion is caused by a reaction between two
chemicals, which is set off when one of the chemicals has
reached its ignition temperature. On Earth, combustion
is usually a reaction between oxygen in the atmosphere
and some heated material, but other combinations of chemicals
will combust as well.
Bright, Brighter,
BrightestLight bulbs
are ranked by their power -- the amount of light
they put out in a certain period of time (measured in
watts). Higher-watt bulbs have a bigger filament,
so they produce more light.
A three-way bulb has two filaments of different wattage --
typically a 50-watt filament and a 100-watt filament.
The filaments are wired to separate circuits, which can
be closed initially using a special three-way socket.
The switch in the three-way socket lets you choose
from three different light levels. On the lowest level,
the switch closes only the circuit for the 50-watt
filament. For the medium light level, the switch closes
the circuit for the 100-watt filament. For the brightest
level, the switch closes the circuits for both
filaments, so the bulb operates at 150
watts.
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The
filament in a light bulb is housed in a sealed, oxygen-free
chamber to prevent combustion. In the first light bulbs, all
the air was sucked out of the bulb to create a near
vacuum -- an area with no matter in it. Since there
wasn't any gaseous matter present (or hardly any), the
material could not combust.
The problem with this approach was the evaporation
of the tungsten atoms. At such extreme temperatures, the
occasional tungsten atom vibrates enough to detach from the
atoms around it and flies into the air. In a vacuum bulb, free
tungsten atoms shoot out in a straight line and collect on the
inside of the glass. As more and more atoms evaporate, the
filament starts to disintegrate, and the glass starts to get
darker. This reduces the life of the bulb considerably.
In a modern light bulb, inert gases, typically
argon, greatly reduce this loss of tungsten. When a tungsten
atom evaporates, chances are it will collide with an argon
atom and bounce right back toward the filament, where it will
rejoin the solid structure. Since inert gases normally don't
react with other elements, there is no chance of the elements
combining in a combustion reaction.
Cheap, effective and easy-to-use, the light bulb has proved
a monstrous success. It is still the most popular method of
bringing light indoors and extending the day after sundown.
But by all indications, it will eventually give way to more
advanced technologies, because it isn't very efficient.
Incandescent light bulbs give off most of their energy in
the form of heat-carrying infrared light photons -- only about
10 percent of the light produced is in the visible spectrum.
This wastes a lot of electricity. Cool light sources, such as
fluorescent lamps and LEDs,
don't waste a lot of energy generating heat -- they give off
mostly visible light. For this reason, they are slowly edging
out the old reliable light bulb.
For more information about
incandescent light bulbs and other lighting technologies,
check out the links on the next page.