ELECTRIC LIGHTING
The most important step in the electric
field, after the dynamo had been brought to a fairly
workable condition, was its utilization to make light.
It was long known prior to the discovery of practical
electric dynamos, that the electric current would
produce an intense heat.
Ordinary fuels under certain favorable
conditions will produce a temperature of 4,500 degrees
of heat; but by means of the electric arc, as high
as six, eight and ten thousand degrees are available.
The fact that when a conductor, in
an electric current, is severed, a spark will follow
the drawing part of the broken ends, led many scientists
to believe, even before the dynamo was in a practical
shape, that electricity, sooner or later, would be
employed as the great lighting agent.
When the dynamo finally reached a
stage in development where its operation could be
depended on, and was made reversible, the first active
steps were taken to not only produce, but to maintain
an arc between two electrodes.
It would be difficult and tedious
to follow out the first experiments in detail, and
it might, also, be useless, as information, in view
of the present knowledge of the science. A few
steps in the course of the development are, however,
necessary to a complete understanding of the subject.
Reference has been made in a previous
chapter to what is called the Electric Arc,
produced by slightly separated conductors, across which
the electric current jumps, producing the brilliantly
lighted area.
This light is produced by the combustion
of the carbon of which the electrodes are composed.
Thus, the illumination is the result of directly burning
a fuel. The current, in passing from one electrode
to the other, through the gap, produces such an intense
heat that the fuel through which the current passes
is consumed.
Carbon in a comparatively pure state
is difficult to ignite, owing to its great resistance
to heat. At about 7,000 degrees it will fuse,
and pass into a vapor which causes the intense illumination.
The earliest form of electric lighting
was by means of the arc, in which the light is maintained
so long as the electrodes were kept a certain distance
apart.
To do this requires delicate mechanism,
for the reason that when contact is made, and the
current flows through the two electrodes, which are
connected up directly with the coils of a magnet, the
cores, or armatures, will be magnetized. The
result is that the electrode, connected with the armature
of the magnet, is drawn away from the other electrode,
and the arc is formed, between the separated ends.
As the current also passes through
a resistance coil, the moment the ends of the electrodes
are separated too great a distance, the resistance
prevents a flow of the normal amount of current, and
the armature is compelled to reduce its pull.
The effect is to cause the two electrodes to again
approach each other, and in doing so the arc becomes
brighter.
It will be seen, therefore, that there
is a constant fight between the resistance coil and
the magnet, the combined action of the two being such,
that, if properly arranged, and with powers in correct
relation to each other, the light may be maintained
without undue flickering. Such devices are now
universally used, and they afford a steady and reliable
means of illumination.
Many improvements are made in this
direction, as well as in the ingredients of the electrodes.
A very novel device for assuring a perfect separation
at all times between the electrodes, is by means of
a pair of parallel carbons, held apart by a non-conductor
such as clay, or some mixture of earth, a form of
which is shown in Fi.
The drawing shows two electrodes,
separated by a non-conducting material, which is of
such a character that it will break down and crumble
away, as the ends of the electrodes burn away.
This device is admirable where the
alternating current is used, because the current moves
back and forth, and the two electrodes are thus burned
away at the same rate of speed.
In the direct or continuous current
the movement is in one direction only, and as a result
the positive electrode is eaten away twice as fast
as the negative.
This is the arc form of lamp universally
used for lighting large spaces or areas, such as streets,
railway stations, and the like. It is important
also as the means for utilizing searchlight illumination,
and frequently for locomotive headlights.
Arc lights are produced by what is
called the series current. This means
that the lamps are all connected in a single line.
This is illustrated by reference to Fi, in which
A represents the wire from the dynamo, and B, C the
two electrodes, showing the current passing through
from one lamp to the next.
A high voltage is necessary in order
to cause the current to leap across the gap made by
the separation of the electrodes.
THE INCANDESCENT SYSTEM.-This
method is entirely different from the arc system.
It has been stated that certain metals conduct electricity
with greater facility than others, and some have higher
resistance than others. If a certain amount of
electricity is forced through some metals, they will
become heated. This is true, also, if metals,
which, ordinarily, will conduct a current freely,
are made up into such small conductors that it is
difficult for the current to pass.
In the arc method high voltage is
essential; in the incandescent plan, current is the
important consideration. In the arc, the light
is produced by virtue of the break in the line of
the conductor; in the incandescent, the system is
closed at all times.
Supposing we have a wire A, a quarter
of an inch in diameter, carrying a current of, say,
500 amperes, and at any point in the circuit the wire
is made very small, as shown at B, in Fi, it
is obvious that the small wire would not be large
enough to carry the current.
The result would be that the small
connection B would heat up, and, finally, be fused.
While the large part of the wire would carry 500 amperes,
the small wire could not possibly carry more than,
say, 10 amperes. Now these little wires are the
filaments in an electric bulb, and originally the
attempt was made to have them so connected up that
they could be illuminated by a single wire, as with
the arc system above explained, one following the
other as shown in Fi.
It was discovered, however, that the
addition of each successive lamp, so wired, would
not give light in proportion to the addition, but at
only about one-fourth the illumination, and such a
course would, therefore, make electric lighting enormously
expensive.
This knowledge resulted in an entirely
new system of wiring up the lamps in a circuit.
This is explained in Fi. In this figure
A represents the dynamo, B, B the brushes, C, D the
two line wires, E the lamps, and F the short-circuiting
wires between the two main conductors C, D.
It will be observed that the wires
C, D are larger than the cross wires F. The object
is to show that the main wires might carry a very heavy
amperage, while the small cross wires F require only
a few amperes.
This is called the multiple
circuit, and it is obvious that the entire amperage
produced by the dynamo will not be required to pass
through each lamp, but, on the other hand, each lamp
takes only enough necessary to render the filament
incandescent.
This invention at once solved the
problem of the incandescent system and was called
the subdivision of the electric light. By this
means the cost was materially reduced, and the wiring
up and installation of lights materially simplified.
But the divisibility of the light
did not, by any means, solve the great problem that
has occupied the attention of electricians and experimenters
ever since. The great question was and is to preserve
the little filament which is heated to incandescence,
and from which we get the light.
The effort of the current to pass
through the small filament meets with such a great
resistance that the substance is heated up. If
it is made of metal there is a point at which it will
fuse, and thus the lamp is destroyed.
It was found that carbon, properly
treated, would heat to a brilliant white heat without
fusing, or melting, so that this material was employed.
But now followed another difficulty. As this intense
heat consumed the particles of carbon, owing to the
presence of oxygen, means were sought to exclude the
air.
This was finally accomplished by making
a bulb of glass, from which the air was exhausted,
and as such a globe had no air to support combustion,
the filaments were finally made so that they would
last a long time before being finally disintegrated.
The quest now is, and has been, to
find some material of a purely metallic character,
which will have a very high fusing point, and which
will, therefore, dispense with the cost of the exhausted
bulb. Some metals, as for instance, osmium, tantalum,
thorium, and others, have been used, and others, also,
with great success, so that the march of improvements
is now going forward with rapid strides.
VAPOR LAMPS.-One of the
directions in which considerable energy has been directed
in the past, was to produce light from vapors.
The Cooper Hewitt mercury vapor lamp is a tube filled
with the vapor of mercury, and a current is sent through
the vapor which produces a greenish light, and owing
to that peculiar color, has not met with much success.
It is merely cited to show that there
are other directions than the use of metallic conductors
and filaments which will produce light, and the day
is no doubt close at hand when we may expect some important
developments in the production of light by means of
the Hertzian waves.
DIRECTIONS FOR IMPROVEMENTS.-Electricity,
however, is not a cheap method of illumination.
The enormous heat developed is largely wasted.
The quest of the inventor is to find a means whereby
light can be produced without the generation of the
immense heat necessary.
Man has not yet found a means whereby
he can make a heat without increasing the temperature,
as nature does it in the glow worm, or in the firefly.
A certain electric energy will produce both light and
heat, but it is found that much more of this energy
is used in the heat than in the light.
What wonderful possibilities are in
store for the inventor who can make a heatless light!
It is a direction for the exercise of ingenuity that
will well repay any efforts.
Curious Superstitions Concerning Electricity
Electricity, as exhibited in light,
has been the great marvel of all times. The word
electricity itself comes from the thunderbolt of the
ancient God Zeus, which is known to be synonymous with
the thunderbolt and the lightning.
Magnetism, which we know to be only
another form of electricity, was not regarded the
same as electricity by the ancients. Iron which
had the property to attract, was first found near
the town of Magnesia, in Lydia, and for that reason
was called magnetism.
Later on, a glimmer of the truth seemed
to dawn on the early scientists, when they saw the
resemblance between the actions of the amber and the
loadstone, as both attracted particles. And here
another curious thing resulted. Amber will attract
particles other than metals. The magnet did not;
and from this imperfect observation and understanding,
grew a belief that electricity, or magnetism would
attract all substances, even human flesh, and many
devices were made from magnets, and used as cures
for the gout, and to affect the brain, or to remove
pain.
Even as early as 2,500 years before
the birth of Christ the Chinese knew of the properties
of the magnet, and also discovered that a bar of the
permanent magnet would arrange itself north and south,
like the mariners’ compass. There is no
evidence, however, that it was used as a mariner’s
compass until centuries afterwards.
But the matter connected with light,
as an electrical development, which interests us,
is its manifestations to the ancients in the form of
lightning. The electricity of the earth concentrates
itself on the tops of mountains, or in sharp peaks,
and accounts for the magnificent electrical displays
always found in mountainous regions.
Some years ago, a noted scientist,
Dr. Siemens, while standing on the top of the great
pyramid of Cheops, in Egypt, during a storm, noted
that an electrical discharge flowed from his hand
when extended toward the heavens. The current
manifested itself in such a manner that the hissing
noise was plainly perceptible.
The literature of all ages and of
all countries shows that this manifestation of electrical
discharges was noted, and became the subject of discussions
among learned men.
All these displays were regarded as
the bolts of an angry God, and historians give many
accounts of instances where, in His anger, He sent
down the lightning to destroy.
Among the Romans Jupiter thus hurled
forth his wrath; and among many ancient people, even
down to the time of Charlemagne, any space struck
by lightning was considered sacred, and made consecrated
ground.
From this grew the belief that it
was sacrilegious to attempt to imitate the lightning
of the sky-that Deity would visit dire punishment
on any man who attempted to produce an electric light.
Virgil relates accounts where certain princes attempted
to imitate the lightning, and were struck by thunderbolts
as punishments.
Less than a century ago Benjamin Franklin
devised the lightning rod, in order to prevent lightning
from striking objects. The literature of that
day abounds with instances of protests made, on the
part of those who were as superstitions as the people
in ancient times, who urged that it was impious to
attempt to ward off Heaven’s lightnings.
It was argued that the lightning was one way in which
the Creator manifested His displeasure, and exercised
His power to strike the wicked.
When such writers as Pliny will gravely
set forth an explanation of the causes of lightning,
as follows in the paragraph below, we can understand
why it inculcated superstitious fears in the people
of ancient times. He says:
“Most men are ignorant of that
secret, which, by close observation of the heavens,
deep scholars and principal men of learning have found
out, namely, that they are the fires of the uppermost
planets, which, falling to the earth, are called lightning;
but those especially which are seated in the middle,
that is about Jupiter, perhaps because participating
in the excessive cold and moisture from the upper circle
of Saturn, and the immoderate heat of Mars, that is
next beneath, by this means he discharges his superfluity,
and therefore it is commonly said, ‘That Jupiter
shooteth and darteth lightning.’ Therefore,
like as out of a burning piece of wood a coal flieth
forth with a crack, even so from a star is spit out,
as it were, and voided forth this celestial fire,
carrying with it presages of future things; so that
the heavens showeth divine operations, even in these
parcels and portions which are rejected and cast away
as superfluous.”