Register     Login
Ask@  
ASK@ENGINEERING.com Ask@ENGINEERING.com
Ask@ENGINEERING.comAll CategoriesFull LeaderboardEmail a QuestionGetting Started
Ask@ENGINEERING.com is a great place to get an answer to your practical engineering question or to share a fun puzzle. To ask or answer a question, you must login to your ENGINEERING.com account. If you are not a member, please register now. Find out more information on how to get started now.
 
Ask@ENGINEERING.com
*Please put your question
in the subject line
Ask a Question
Register today to get your ENGINEERING.com email account!
QUICK LINKS
All Categories
Unanswered Questions
Fun & Puzzles
General Engineering
Mechanical/Automotive
Civil/Structural
Chemical/Material
Electrical/Electronics
Industrial
Computer Engineering
View All Categories
Full Leaderboard
rahul gopinath
Level: 3
1529
Geomancer
Level: 3
1082
Jake Banman
Level: 3
1029
View Full Leaderboard

Q&A

shai
How does a CFL (bulb) work? View All


4 months ago - 8 months left to answer. - 1 response - Report Abuse
Respond to question
    0      [lnkReport]        0       0       
  Responses


HAMZA
There are two main parts in a CFL: the gas-filled tube (also called bulb or burner) and the magnetic or electronic ballast. An electrical current from the ballast flows through the gas, causing it to emit ultraviolet light. The ultraviolet light then excites a phosphor coating on the inside of the tube. This coating emits visible light.
Electronic ballasts contain a small circuit board with rectifiers, a filter capacitor and usually two switching transistors connected as a high-frequency resonant series DC to AC inverter. The resulting high frequency, around 40 kHz or higher, is applied to the lamp tube. Since the resonant converter tends to stabilize lamp current (and light produced) over a range of input voltages, standard CFLs do not respond well in dimming applications and special lamps are required for dimming service. CFLs that flicker when they start have magnetic ballasts; CFLs with electronic ballasts are now much more common.


4 months ago

Source:


  0     0         

ENGINEERING.com does not provide engineering advice. The Ask@ service is a forum for members to exchange ideas relating to the world of engineering. We caution users not to accept any responses that they receive without further validation, and not to rely on any engineering advice that they may get from other members of the Ask@ forum. ENGINEERING.com specifically disclaims any obligation to validate or verify any information posted within the Ask@ service. ENGINEERING.com encourages users to seek the services of a professional engineer for any engineering advice they may require.

ABOUT US INVESTORS PRIVACY POLICY ADVERTISE WITH US CONTACT US FEEDBACK