's shop in Menlo Park Historians Robert Friedel and
Paul Israel list inventors of incandescent lamps prior to
Joseph Swan and
Thomas Edison of
General Electric. They conclude that
Edison's version was the first practical implementation, able to outstrip the others because of a combination of four factors: an effective
incandescent material; a
vacuum higher than other implementations; a high
resistance that made power distribution from a centralized source economically viable, and the development of the associated components required for a large-scale lighting system. However, Joseph Swan's incandescent light bulb pre-dated Edison's and was sufficiently practical that it was actually installed and in daily use in London in 1881. Historian
Thomas Hughes has attributed Edison's business success to his development of an entire, integrated system of electric lighting. {{blockquote
Early pre-commercial research In 1761,
Ebenezer Kinnersley demonstrated heating a wire to
incandescence. However such wires tended to melt or oxidize very rapidly (burn) in the presence of air.
Limelight became a popular form of
stage lighting in the early 19th century, by heating a piece of
calcium oxide to incandescence with an
oxyhydrogen torch. In 1802,
Humphry Davy used what he described as "a
battery of immense size", consisting of 2,000 cells housed in the basement of the
Royal Institution of Great Britain, to create an incandescent light by passing the current through a thin strip of
platinum, chosen because the metal had an extremely high
melting point. It was not bright enough nor did it last long enough to be practical, but it was the precedent behind the efforts of scores of experimenters over the next 75 years. Davy also demonstrated the
electric arc, by passing high current between two pieces of charcoal. For the next 40 years much research was given to turning the
carbon arc lamp into a practical means of lighting. The carbon arc itself was dim and violet in color, emitting most of its energy in the
ultraviolet, but the positive electrode was heated to just below the melting point of carbon and glowed very brightly with incandescence very close to that of sunlight. Arc lamps burned up their carbon rods very rapidly, expelled dangerous
carbon monoxide, and tended to produce outputs in the tens of kilowatts. Therefore, they were only practical for lighting large areas, so researchers continued to search for a way to make lamps suitable for home use. Over the first three-quarters of the 19th century, many experimenters worked with various combinations of platinum or
iridium wires,
carbon rods, and evacuated or semi-evacuated enclosures. Many of these devices were demonstrated and some were patented. In 1838, Belgian lithographer
Marcellin Jobard invented an incandescent light bulb with a vacuum atmosphere using a carbon filament. In 1840, British scientist
Warren De la Rue enclosed a coiled platinum filament in a
vacuum tube and passed an electric current through it. The design was based on the concept that the high melting point of platinum would allow it to operate at high temperatures and that the evacuated chamber would contain fewer gas molecules to react with the platinum, improving its longevity. Although a workable design, the cost of the platinum made it impractical for commercial use. In 1841, Frederick de Moleyns of England was granted the first
patent for an incandescent lamp, with a design using platinum wires contained within a vacuum bulb. He also used carbon. In 1845, American
John W. Starr patented an incandescent light bulb using carbon filaments. His invention was never produced commercially. In 1851,
Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin publicly demonstrated incandescent light bulbs on his estate in Blois, France. His light bulbs are on display in the museum of the
Château de Blois. In 1859,
Moses G. Farmer built an electric incandescent light bulb using a platinum filament. Thomas Edison later saw one of these bulbs in a shop in Boston, Massachusetts, and asked Farmer for advice on the electric light business. on 1951 Soviet postal stamp In 1872, Russian
Alexander Lodygin invented an incandescent light bulb and obtained a Russian patent in 1874. He used as a burner two carbon rods of diminished section in a glass receiver, hermetically sealed, and filled with nitrogen, electrically arranged so that the current could be passed to the second carbon when the first had been consumed. Later he lived in the US, changed his name to Alexander de Lodyguine and applied for and obtained patents for incandescent lamps having
chromium,
iridium,
rhodium,
ruthenium,
osmium,
molybdenum and
tungsten filaments. On 24 July 1874, a Canadian patent was filed by
Henry Woodward and
Mathew Evans for a lamp consisting of carbon rods mounted in a nitrogen-filled glass cylinder. They were unsuccessful at commercializing their lamp, and sold rights to their patent to Thomas Edison in 1879. (Edison needed ownership of the novel claim of lamps connected in a parallel circuit.) The government of Canada maintains that it is Woodward and Evans who invented the lightbulb.
Commercialization Carbon filament and vacuum Joseph Swan (1828–1914) was a British physicist and chemist. In 1850, he began working with carbonized paper filaments in an evacuated glass bulb. By 1860, he was able to demonstrate a working device but the lack of a good vacuum and an adequate supply of electricity resulted in a short lifetime for the bulb and an inefficient source of light. By the mid-1870s better pumps had become available, and Swan returned to his experiments. , the first house to be lit by electric lights With the help of
Charles Stearn, an expert on vacuum pumps, in 1878, Swan developed a method of processing that avoided the early bulb blackening. This received a British Patent in 1880. On 18 December 1878, a lamp using a slender carbon rod was demonstrated at a meeting of the
Newcastle Chemical Society though it only worked for a few minutes. Swan repeated the demonstration at another meeting on 17 January 1879 where it worked successfully. It was shown to 700 who attended a meeting of the
Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne on 3 February 1879. In 1881, the
Savoy Theatre in the
City of Westminster, London was lit by Swan incandescent lightbulbs, which was the first theatre, and the first public building in the world, to be lit entirely by electricity. The first street in the world to be lit by incandescent lamps was Mosley Street,
Newcastle upon Tyne,
United Kingdom in 1880. with a light bulb from 1883.
Thomas Edison began serious research into developing a practical incandescent lamp in 1878. Edison filed his first patent application for "Improvement in Electric Lights" on 14 October 1878. After many experiments, first with
carbon in the early 1880s and then with
platinum and other metals, in the end Edison returned to a carbon filament. The first successful test was on 22 October 1879, and lasted 13.5 hours. Edison continued to improve this design and by 4 November 1879, filed for a US patent for an electric lamp using "a carbon filament or strip coiled and connected ... to platina contact wires." Although the patent described several ways of creating the carbon filament including using "cotton and linen thread, wood splints, papers coiled in various ways," In 1880, the
Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company steamer,
Columbia, became the first application for Edison's incandescent electric lamps (it was also the first ship to use a
dynamo). Albon Man, a New York lawyer, started
Electro-Dynamic Light Company in 1878 to exploit his patents and those of
William Sawyer. Weeks later the
United States Electric Lighting Company was organized. This company made their first commercial installation of incandescent lamps in the fall of 1880, at the Mercantile Safe Deposit Company in New York City, about six months after the Edison incandescent lamps had been installed on the
Columbia.
Hiram S. Maxim was the chief engineer at the US Electric Lighting Company. After the great success in the United States, the incandescent light bulb patented by Edison also began to gain widespread popularity in
Europe; among other places, the first Edison light bulbs in the
Nordic countries were installed at the weaving hall of the
Finlayson's textile factory in
Tampere, Finland in March 1882. On 4 March 1880, just five months after Edison's light bulb,
Alessandro Cruto developed a process to create thin carbon filaments by heating thin platinum filaments in the presence of gaseous
ethyl alcohol to coat them with pure graphite, and then
sublimating the platinum at high temperatures. In 1882 at the Munich Electrical Exhibition in Bavaria, Germany Cruto demonstrated bulbs that were more efficient than Edison's and produced a better, whiter light.
Lewis Latimer, employed at the time by Edison, developed an improved method of heat-treating carbon filaments which reduced breakage and allowed them to be molded into novel shapes, such as the characteristic "M" shape of Maxim filaments. On 17 January 1882, Latimer received a patent for the "Process of Manufacturing Carbons", an improved method for the production of light bulb filaments, which was purchased by the United States Electric Light Company. Latimer patented other improvements such as a better way of attaching filaments to their wire supports. In Britain, the Edison and Swan companies merged into the
Edison and Swan United Electric Company (later known as Ediswan, and ultimately incorporated into
Thorn Lighting Limited). Edison was initially against this combination, but he was eventually forced to cooperate and the merger was made. Eventually, Edison acquired all of Swan's interest in the company. Swan sold his US patent rights to the
Brush Electric Company in June 1882. for an improved electric lamp, 27 January 1880 The
United States Patent Office issued a ruling 8 October 1883, that Edison's patents were based on the prior art of
William Sawyer and were invalid. Litigation continued for a number of years. Eventually on 6 October 1889, a judge ruled that Edison's electric light improvement claim for "a filament of carbon of high resistance" was valid. In 1893,
Heinrich Göbel claimed he had designed the first incandescent light bulb in 1854, with a thin carbonized
bamboo filament of high resistance, platinum lead-in wires in an all-glass envelope, and a high vacuum. Judges of four courts raised doubts about the alleged Göbel
anticipation, but there was never a decision in a final hearing due to the expiration of Edison's patent. Research work published in 2007 concluded that the story of the Göbel lamps in the 1850s is fictitious. The main difficulty with evacuating the lamps was moisture inside the bulb, which
split when the lamp was lit, with resulting oxygen attacking the filament. In the 1880s,
phosphoric anhydride was used in combination with expensive
mercury vacuum pumps. However, about 1893, Italian inventor (1865–1939), who lacked these pumps, discovered that phosphorus vapours did the job of chemically binding the remaining amounts of water and oxygen. Twice as efficient as carbon filament lamps, Nernst lamps were briefly popular until overtaken by lamps using metal filaments.
Metal filament, inert gas US575002A patent on 01.Dec.1897 to Alexander Lodyguine (Lodygin, Russia) describes filaments made of rare metals, amongst them was tungsten. Lodygin invented a process where rare metals such as tungsten can be chemically treated and heat-vaporized onto an electrically heated thread-like wire (platinum, carbon, gold) acting as a temporary base or skeletal form. (US patent 575,002). Lodygin later sold the patent rights to General Electric. In 1902,
Siemens developed a
tantalum lamp filament that was more efficient than even graphitized carbon filaments since they could operate at higher temperature. Since tantalum metal has a lower resistivity than carbon, the tantalum lamp filament was quite long and required multiple internal supports. The metal filament gradually shortened in use; the filaments were installed with large slack loops. Lamps used for several hundred hours became quite fragile. Metal filaments had the property of breaking and re-welding, though this would usually decrease resistance and shorten the life of the filament. General Electric bought the rights to use tantalum filaments and produced them in the US until 1913. From 1898 to around 1905,
osmium was also used as a filament in lamps made by
Carl Auer von Welsbach. The metal was so expensive that used lamps could be returned for partial credit. It could not be made for 110 V or 220 V so several lamps were wired in series for use on standard voltage circuits. These were primarily sold in Europe.
Tungsten filament advertising of the
Tungsram bulb from 1906. The inscription reads:
wire lamp with a drawn wire – indestructible. On 13 December 1904,
Hungarian Sándor Just and
Croatian Franjo Hanaman were granted a Hungarian patent (No. 34541) for a
tungsten filament lamp that lasted longer and gave brighter light than the carbon filament. Filling a bulb with an
inert gas such as
argon or
nitrogen slows the evaporation of the tungsten filament compared to operating it in a vacuum. This allows for greater temperatures and therefore greater
efficacy with less reduction in filament life. In 1906,
William D. Coolidge developed a method of making "ductile tungsten" from
sintered tungsten which could be made into filaments while working for
General Electric Company. By 1911 General Electric had begun selling incandescent light bulbs with ductile tungsten wire. In 1913,
Irving Langmuir found that filling a lamp with
inert gas (nitrogen at first, and later argon) instead of a vacuum resulted in twice the luminous efficacy and reduced bulb blackening. He patented his device on April 18, 1916. image of a coiled coil
tungsten filament In 1917,
Burnie Lee Benbow was granted a patent for the
coiled coil filament, in which a coiled filament is then itself wrapped into a coil by use of a
mandrel. In 1921,
Junichi Miura created the first double-coil bulb using a coiled coil tungsten filament while working for
Hakunetsusha (a predecessor of
Toshiba). At the time, machinery to mass-produce coiled coil filaments did not exist. Hakunetsusha developed a method to mass-produce coiled coil filaments by 1936. Between 1924 and the outbreak of the Second World War, the
Phoebus cartel attempted to fix prices and sales quotas for bulb manufacturers outside of North America. In 1925,
Marvin Pipkin, an American chemist, patented a process for
frosting the inside of lamp bulbs without weakening them. In 1947, he patented a process for coating the inside of lamps with
silica. In 1930,
Hungarian Imre Bródy filled lamps with krypton gas rather than argon, and designed a process to obtain krypton from air. Production of krypton filled lamps based on his invention started at
Ajka, Hungary in 1937, in a factory co-designed by Polányi and Hungarian-born physicist
Egon Orowan. By 1964, improvements in efficiency and production of incandescent lamps had reduced the cost of providing a given quantity of light by a factor of thirty, compared with the cost at introduction of Edison's lighting system. Consumption of incandescent light bulbs grew rapidly in the US. In 1885, an estimated 300,000 general lighting service lamps were sold, all with carbon filaments. When tungsten filaments were introduced, about 50 million lamp sockets existed in the US. In 1914, 88.5 million lamps were used, (only 15% with carbon filaments), and by 1945, annual sales of lamps were 795 million (more than 5 lamps per person per year). ==Efficacy and efficiency==