package instruction:
Product Name: High Purity Xenon Xe
Other names: Helium molecular formula: Xe
UN NO.: UN 2036
CAS NO.: 7440-63-0
Product purity: 99.999%, 99.9999%
Packing instructions: 2L, 4L, 8L, 10L, 40L high pressure steel bottle packaging
Application areas:
Widely used in the electronic and electric light source industries. Compared with an argon-filled bulb of the same power, a bulb filled with helium has the advantages of high luminous efficiency, small volume, long life, and power saving. Because of its fog-permeable ability, it is often used as a foggy navigation light, and is widely used in airports, stations, and terminals. The concave surface of the xenon lamp can generate 2500 ° C high temperature for welding or cutting refractory metals such as titanium and molybdenum. In medicine, sputum is a contrast agent for deep anesthetic X-ray photography without side effects.
Lighting industry
Xenon has a very high light-emitting intensity. Lamps filled with helium gas include iodine lamps, arc lamps, flash lamps, cinema projection lamps, and space simulation lamps. Helium is a high-pressure xenon arc discharge lamp developed in 1958. It is divided into long-arc xenon lamp, short-arc xenon lamp and pulse xenon lamp. The long-arc xenon lamp filled with helium gas is very close to the daylight. The common name is "small sun". It is particularly strong in fogging and is often used in station, dock and square lighting. The color of the "short arc xenon lamp" is similar to the noon daylight, high color temperature (5600K), easy to use, is currently the ideal artificial "sun lamp" for square, street, film screening and stage lighting. "Pulse Xenon Lamp" is a kind of light source that emits light in a short time. It is often called "flash lamp", which is used to emit light by using xenon pulse discharge. This kind of small xenon lamp is widely used in photography.
Medical industry
A mixture of hydrazine and oxygen (20% Xe, 80% O2, volume) is an anesthetic for the human body. It can dissolve in the cytoplasmic oil, causing anesthesia and swelling of the cells, thus temporarily stopping the nerve endings.