I'm trying to prove a lemma, so I wanted to use the next claim (which I do not know if it is true or if there is a counter example): every smooth irreducible affine variety is set theoretical complete intersection. Or if this is not true I would like to know if there is a counter example to it.
I have tried to find a counter example or find the result in the literature, but I had no luck. I suspected that this fact is true, however, I was unable to prove it.
The lemma I want to prove using this plausible claim is: Given a smooth irreducible variety $V$ of dimension $d$ with ideal $I(V) = (f_1,…,f_r)⊆k[x_1,…,x_n]$, we can construct the ideal $I ' (V) ⊆k[x_1,…,x_n,y_1,…,y_n]$ given by $I ′ (V) =(∇f_1⋅(y_1,…,y_n),…,∇f_r⋅(y_1,…y_n))$. Then every irreducible component $W$ of $Z(I ′ (V))$ such that $π(W)∩V≠∅$ has $dim(W)≥n+d$ where $π$ is the projection to the first $n$ coordinates