IMRE BRÓDY (1891 - 1944)
Born in Gyula, Imre Bródy was university educated in Budapest and became
a physicist. He wrote his doctoral dissertation on the chemical constant of
monoatomic gases. First he taught high school, then he became an assistant professor
in the department of applied physics at the University of Sciences. Early in
his career he accomplished valuable theoretical work investigating specific
heat and molecular heat. For a short period beginning in 1920 he worked with
Max Born as assistant to the professor in Göttingen. They jointly worked
out the dynamic theory of crystals. He returned home in 1923 and worked at Tungsram
as an engineer until the end of his life.
His most important invention dates from 1930. He filled lamps with krypton gas
in lieu of argon. Since the new gas was expensive, he developed a process with
his colleagues to obtain krypton from air. Production of krypton filled lamps
based on his invention started at Ajka in 1937.
Subsequently Bródy worked on new light source problems. He remained with
his family after the German occupation of Hungary in 1944, and despite of the
immunity the factory provided for him, he succumbed to certain death. He died
on December 20, 1944 in Mühldorf as a victim of fascism.
The Eötvös Loránd Society of Physics named a prize after him,
thus commemorating his life's work.
Gas filled metal filament incandescent lamp (1930)
Late in the last century, scientists engaged in the radiation theory of incandescent
bodies had already proved that an incandescent body radiates its energy mostly
in the form of heat, and only a small part as light.
Bródy put his finger on the most important problems of incandescent lamp
production. According to his hypothesis, the exit of evaporating tungsten atoms
from the incandescent filament through the medium of gas was regulated not by
diffusion only, as it was assumed, but was also influenced by other laws of
nature. To eliminate such problems, he used gas of great molecular weight, thus
attaining a longer life for the lamp. He chose the length and diameter of the
incandescent wire in such a way that the filament's glowing heat be increased
without reducing the lamp's life span. By using krypton gas, he developed an
up-to-date lamp with longer life and better performance.
He also developed a new process to ascertain the krypton content of air. At
the cost of a few years' work he demonstrated that krypton gas could be mass-produced
at a cheap rate. Advantage of the krypton lamp was to emit more light without
increased energy consumption.
Its display at the Budapest Industrial Fair in 1936 was a technical sensation.