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Ordinary Hydrogen ( H1
) is also known as Protium, the nucleus of which contains one
Proton.
Hydrogen also has two isotopes, Deuterium ( H2 ) which has a
Proton and a Neutron in its nucleus,
and Tritium ( H3 ) which has one Proton and two Neutrons in
its nucleus.
Deuterium is a stable isotope just like ordinary Hydrogen (Protium).
Tritium however is an unstable/ radioactive isotope of Hydrogen.
High pressure Tritium gas is sealed inside these small borosilicate
glass vials, that continuously emit low energy Beta radiation
(electrons). These electrons impact a special phosphor coating on the
inside of the tube, which in turn emits a visible GREEN glow.
Each Tritium
Light Source is a laser sealed borosilicate glass vial which has been coated
internally with phosphor. In one single process, the unit is sealed by
a CO2 laser and injected with gaseous Tritium. The low energy electrons
emitted by the Tritium, excite the phosphor and this creates a safe, low
level light without filaments or heat dissipation and no risk of fire or
explosion.

These
low level light sources have unique properties, they are unaffected by
water, oil and most corrosive materials. They
will continuously glow, and will do so for 10 to 20 years. They are
totally fail-safe and maintenance free.
They require
no
external power source or
exposure to light in order to work.
Tritium Light
Sources
go through a labor intensive manufacturing process with quality control
being a dominant consideration. They are 100% inspected for dimensions,
brightness, temperature, thermal shock and Tritium leakage. Random
sample testing is performed continually for discoloration, brightness
decay, reduced pressure and vibration effects.
The
glass tube is sealed in a hexagonal shaped clear acrylic housing which
makes them virtually indestructible. Only a very small quantity of
Tritium gas in sealed within the tube... and the low-level Beta
radiation cannot penetrate the inner glass tube, nor the thick
acrylic housing.
They are
completely safe for all uses.
Should you actually manage to break the inner tube (by smashing
the it with a hammer or similar impact), the tiny amount of Tritium gas will
simply disperse and the unit will cease to function.

These have infinite variety practical uses... attach one to
anything you want to find in the dark.
Attach one to your flashlight so you can locate it when the lights are
out... your pet's collar in case he wanders off into the darkness...
your keychain... mount them on the corners of walls to find your way in
the darkness, etc., etc.
Some advanced experimenters extract the Tritium gas inside the tube and
mix it with Deuterium gas.
They use this mixture inside homemade Fusor
devices - a device that demonstrates nuclear fusion on a very small
scale.
Most of us though, simply use these for what they are intended -
providing reliable, visible light.
The light emitted by Tritium Light Sources can be seen
up to about 20 feet away in total darkness.
Very unique, unusual & useful.
Sorry -
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Tritium Light Source:
$29.00
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