Gas Mantle
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Basics
- A Device that Dramatically Improves the Brightness of Flame Based Lanterns / Lamps
- Mainly:
- Gas Lamps (Traditionally Town Gas , but now mainly Methane , or Propane )
- These should also run off of DME , experimentation needed with Syngas , Hydrogen , and Raw Biogas (Sulfur Deposits / SOx Emissions ?)
- Pressurized Liquid Fuel Lanterns ( Kerosene Lanterns / White Gas Lanterns )
- Experimentation needed with running these off of various Alcohols
- Gas Lamps (Traditionally Town Gas , but now mainly Methane , or Propane )
- They work via using the flame to heat Incandescent Materials and/or Candoluminescent Materials that are chosen for their high light output and/or white light output (Akin to gas Mixtures in Plasma Lamps )
- The mantles are made via some sort of Gauze / Mesh of a cloth, typically Rayon or Nitrocellulose although other options exist
- A Tie String / Tie Wire is typically added, although clips and/or Pre-Attatched Metal or Ceramic Mounting Brackets also exist
- Cone or Thimble Shaped Mantles are most common, however Coleman came out with “Northstar” Mantle Lanterns which utilized a Tubular Lantern Amchored on Each End
- The tubular mantle has the advantage of needed little processing other than being taken off the Circular Knitting Machine and having the seams/mounting points attatched (if they are not designed into the knitting pattern)
- Thus rather than optimizing a flame for brightness, the flame can be adapted for Clean Combustion / Efficiency
- Research into Premixed Combustion and Air Fuel Ratio’s Impact on Emissions is worthwhile
- Also Light Production vs Emissions; Candle flames, and Carbide Lamps partially require Particulate Matter as the Candoluminescent Media
- As with Lean Burn Internal Combustion Engines , A Leaner Flame may be more efficient, but this may produce less light / increase emissions (again further testing required)
Design
Mantle Dopants
- Most Commercial Options Used Thorium dioxide
- 99% thorium dioxide and 1% cerium dioxide
- Due to the challenges of working with Radioactive Materials (especially in Powder Form, re Fugitive Dust Emissions ) most companies changed formulas over to nonradioactive (yet still not exactly Appropriate Materials ) Yttrium / Cerium Salts
- There was SOME concern about Consumer Radiation Exposure, but the production of Radon Gas was minimal/would diffuse in an outdoor/well ventilated environment
- As with Americium smoke detectors etc, due to Aplha Particles having poor penetration power, radiation risk is minimal short of ingestion/inhalation
- The exposure to Radioactive Dust in terms of “Burnt In” mantles disintegrating etc is quite valid though
Current “State of the Art” Non-Radioactive Mixes
- Figuring out what Current / Before being cancelled due to low sales etc Coleman / Other Lantern Mantles used for dopants is a worthwhile endeavor
- Also reverse engineering mesh size / composition would be of use
- Supposedly the “Aladin Lamps”, which were slightly hotter but otherwise conventional Oil Lamps that used mantles, were potentially coated in Collodion / Nitrocellulose which aided in their pre-burn in rigidity, and aided in a successful “burn in” (ie easy to light + less chance of implosion/tear and thus a failed burn in)
Potential Novel Improvements
To Dopant Mix
- Using less scarce materials would be great; the temperature may not be high enough, but attempting a Limelight but via Gas Mantle would be interesting
- Probably wouldn’t work, but in search of novel materials could Quantum Dots work?
- If not other salts that may not give white light, but would give bright enough light
- Something akin to an “adjuvant” that doesn’t produce light, but helps maintain mesh stability/rigidity may be worth looking into, Ceramic Powders etc
To Cloth Structure
- Aforementioned Collodion
- Variations in Mesh Size/Form
- If using a Northstar style tubular mantle, optimal tube length vs light output etc
- Design for Burn-In Shrinkage
Non-Consumable Mantles
- Stainless Steel Mesh WITHOUT Dopants has been used, albeit very dim
- Stainless Steel Coated in a Heavy Dopant to Ceramic Slurry Mix MAY work as a Durable Permanent Mantle (this may be limited by higher Thermal Mass / Less Surface Area of Dopants, but further experimentation required)
- LVP / Resin 3D Printing with Ceramic Resin of the aforementioned high dopant ceramic mix could allow for 3D Printed Gas Mantles
- While less strong, these would have less thermal mass/could be made far thinner
- Encased/Encapsulated Mantles
- One Forum Post described putting a metal mesh around torn up mantles, this worked about half as well supposedly as a PROPER mantle, but would be far more rugged
- A design reminiscent of a Pebble Bed Nuclear Reactor but with Optically Transparent Synthetic Diamond coated salt pellets would be one HELL of an engineering challenge, but could potentially work!
- Stuffed tubes, potentially made of Glass or Synthetic Sapphire are a similar level of outlandish but may work
- A design reminiscent of a Pebble Bed Nuclear Reactor but with Optically Transparent Synthetic Diamond coated salt pellets would be one HELL of an engineering challenge, but could potentially work!
- One Forum Post described putting a metal mesh around torn up mantles, this worked about half as well supposedly as a PROPER mantle, but would be far more rugged
- Porous Gas Burner technology, but doped with the same mix
- If done with the coated metal mesh, or a porous ceramic brick doped to the right extent, this may allow for LED Like Flat Emitters, but Gas Powered
Mounting Mechanism
- Having a Cam Lock type mechanism, or some sort of other improved metal or ceramic ring (especially in portable devices) would be novel
Internal Links
External Links
- The Wikipedia Page on Gas Mantles
- The Wikipedia Page on Clamond Baskets (Used Magnesium Oxide rather than other minerals)
- A Video by the YouTube Channel "Technology Connections" Titled "How the gas mantle made lamps 10X brighter"
- The Oil Field Wiki Page on Gas Mantles
- A Wayback Machine Archive of the Page "Pressure Lamps International A Brief History of the Incandescent Mantle Pressure Lamp"