Thanks Borek!
As a follow-up question, is it a bad idea to have fluorescent light bulbs in a lab in general? After all, they've got mercury in them and they make a big current with a big energy transfer at start-up. Has anyone ever had problems with fluorescent lighting in a lab?
I googled "ammonia lightbulbs" and I found a bunch of reports of rioters throwing ammonia-filled fluorescent light bulbs as explosives. It seems controversial whether this works or not from the articles, and I can't find any scholarly articles discussing such a phenomenon. The closest phenomenon that has been studied an documented is the oxidation of ammonia using UV light, Fenton's reagents, hydrogen peroxide, and sodium hypochlorite to remove ammonia from waste water as N2. According to one source1, the process is just 2NH3 -> 6H+ + N2 catalyzed by HOCl. In short, ammonia is oxidized by hypochlorite to produce some chloride; the chloride gets oxidized to chlorine radical and then to hypochlorite by hydroxyl radical; the hydroxyl radical is produced by the ferrous-catalyzed dissociation of hydrogen peroxide in UV light (Fenton's reaction).
There isn't any hydrogen peroxide floating around in the air, but there is plenty of water and oxygen. This is a bit far-fetched, but bear with me:
1) H2O + O2 + hv -> HO2 + *OH
2) HO2 + H2O -> *OH + H2O2
3) H2O2 -> *OH + OH-
4) *OH + NH3 -> *NH2 + H2O
And so on. Doesn't seem likely to me, but after all the light bulbs did die out in the presence of ammonia (and I haven't had this happen with them before or since).
1 Brito, Nubia Natalia de; Jose Euclides Stipp Paterniani; Giovanni Archanjo Brota; Ronaldo Teixeira Pelegrini. "Ammonia Removal from Leachate by Photochemical Process Using H2O2".