| The length of arc in air which this PZT ignitor can produce can give you an estimate of the order of magnitude of its output voltage
In uniform field, air requires 3kV/mm to break down with high probability, with some behavior properties :
- ionization is always a statistical phenomena, dependent also on factors like photoelectric effect and radiation
- The presence of a nearby surface of a different material, even if it is in itself dielectric, may sometimes facilitate the arc striking in a path from one electrode towards the surface, in a straight line on the surface layer, and to the other electrode
- Some surfaces of solid materials may have additional insulation breakdown mechanisms such as tracking, which will happen at way lower field strengths. However, the initial starting of tracking is a relatively slow phenomena and unlikely to happen with the fast pulse of a PZT. Air by itself does not have such mechanisms, only the basic breakdown as result of applied field
- If you are looking instead for a distance which is safe to NOT break down, that would be no more than few 100's V/mm, and that's without any surface related mechanisms. The AC voltage ratings vs. contact opening distance of small low current relays may give you an estimate here
In non uniform field, the electric field will be concentrated near sharp edges. This means that even if your real voltage and distance between electrodes would calculate as lower field strength, there still will be a region of field way above the 3kV/mm. Once a small region is ionized, it is easy for the arc to spread from there to anywhere else as needed to complete the circuit, even where initially the field is weak
The lamp glass wall have up to 10x the permittivity of air, alumina (HPS arctubes) also 10x, and quartz 4x. (abridged explanation : imagine the 1mm glass wall behaving as a 10mm air gap etc)
The atmosphere in the lamp outer is generally vacuum or nitrogen, which have permittivity same as air
With this said, try to imagine if the arc would reach the lamp electrodes if you would zap it as you do, from the same position, if there would be no lamp or arctube or outer envelope there, but just the PZT and bare lamp electrodes at the respective distances (with the extra air distances that represent the arctube and lamp walls)
If it does, odds are it can strike the arc. If it does not, it may still strike it, because there may be additional conditions which reduce the extra "push" the lamp needs in the 1st place
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