DOE Shines $21M on Advanced Lighting Research 238
coondoggie writes to mention that the US Department of Energy is planning to fork over close to $21 million for 13 projects promising to advance solid-state lighting research and development. "SSL lighting is an advanced technology that creates light with considerably less heat than incandescent and fluorescent lamps, allowing for increased energy efficiency. Unlike incandescent and fluorescent bulbs, SSL uses a semi-conducting material to convert electricity directly into light, which maximizes the light's energy efficiency, the DOE said in a release. Solid-state lighting encompasses a variety of light-producing semi-conductor devices, including light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs). "
SSL (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SSL (Score:5, Funny)
Until you shine it on a black hat (Score:2)
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And you have to accept a new SSL certificate whenever you change the lightbulb.
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Re:SSL (Score:5, Funny)
10 One to change the lightbulb and one to make a bad binary joke.
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, we need to think about our light placement and usage.
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Lit streets and parking lots are a matter of public safety. There's nothing wrong with it.
Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a lot more we could do about night lighting. A hundred years ago, almost everyone lived in a Bortle scale 1 area. Now, almost nobody in the first world does, and even much of the third world has elevated Bortle limits. What percentage of Americans do you think have ever seen zodiacal light, gegenschein, shadows cast from Scorpius and Sagittarius, or had Jupiter and Venus affect their dark adaptation? It doesn't have to be this way. Some types of lights are subject to far less atmospheric scattering. Properly designed fixtures can eliminate most of the overhead glow and even give you more light for the areas you're trying to illuminate. And so on.
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Lighting a parking lot or a dangerous stretch of the road is for saftey. The problem is if an old man with cataracts can't see then it isn't bright enough and we simply double the wattage until all is well.
When you can simply place the lights in better locations with shiny reflectors and you can solve the same problem with lower costs. The answer isn't more light but better light. In many
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"In Future News, misleb died last night after being hit in the neck with a throwing star. Hir last words reportedly were, 'If... only... I had listened.'"
Realistically, if you're trying not to be seen, do you:
A) Stand in the light, or
B) Stand in the shadows, or
C) Pat Buchanan
Besides, it isn't just about seeing a potential attacker it is about being seen by others in case you are attacked.
So... we now are in a world where people can see you clearly enough to t
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Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:2)
=Smidge=
Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:5, Insightful)
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There are people that will commit the crime anyways and it does nothing to deter those peiople.
Where I live, there are too many and they are too bright.
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Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a streetlight right in front of my house, but have still had a couple minor criminal incidents.
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Sure, right up until somebody steals it.
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Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:5, Interesting)
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Damn, I guess I need to switch to whiskey. There's not nearly as much in it.
Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:Save energy: don't send so much light into spac (Score:2)
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No problem. Just make streets out of the darkest material yet created [slashdot.org].
Um, no. (Score:2)
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It certainly ruins naked-eye astronomy. I still remember the first time I was far enough away from city lights that I could look up and see how breathtaking the sky is on a clear night. In a city you see a couple of stars, even when the moon's not up and forget about the constellations.
It makes me sad to realize that so many people will grow up and never realize how fsking *AMAZING* a sky full of stars is when they can see it with their own eyes, wonder what's out there, be drawn to astronomy, physics,
SSL lighting (Score:3, Funny)
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Can I take my car with the CVT Transmission to buy SSL Lighting?
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Re:SSL lighting (Score:4, Insightful)
For example, without those trailing words, you could have been talking about an encryption technology (Secure Sockets Layer) illuminating a network layer (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) connecting to a branch of the Vietnamese military (Vietnam People's Navy).
Sure the last one is a bit of a stretch, but there are a ton of acronyms that get re-used that can end up being ambiguous. If I say SOA architecture or SOA authority, it's clear whether I'm using marketing-speak or whether I'm talking about configuring a DNS system (which itself, without the trailing "system" could have been referring to a computational fluid dynamics simulation).
You can only really leave off the trailing word when there is either no other possible meaning for the acronym (e.g. SCUBA) or when the context in which you're speaking precludes any other meaning (context being both the people you're speaking with and the rest of what you're saying).
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Of course. You have to be able to see well enough to enter your PIN number, right?
Color Issues?? (Score:2)
Does anyone have a good lreference to the current sate-of-the-art?
Re:Color Issues?? (Score:4, Informative)
Oh, sorry, I had a top secret flashback for a moment. White LEDs, iirc, are essentially fluorescent light sources which use the LED to stimulate emission in several bands based on the phosphors used. As such, they are still discrete (though not monochromatic) frequency lights and cannot creat and exact replica of incandescent (i.e. blackbody) radiation. I've not seen much on LED CRIs or color temps...most people are just so amazed that they produce "white" light that they don't seem to care. White LEDs, as a result of how they work, are only about 1/2 as efficient per watt as their more efficient monochromatic counterparts.
Re:Color Issues?? (Score:4, Informative)
And, no, LEDs are not fluorescent. Fluorescent bulbs stimulate mercury to emit UV light. The UV light hits the phosphorus which makes it fluoresce and produce visible light. LEDs work by jumping electrons across a band gap and a photon is emitted when it jumps back down. The high efficiency comes into play because it doesn't take much more energy than that of the band gap to make an electron jump.
Re:Color Issues?? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Hmm... if you have trichromatic light of wavelengths 570nm, 540nm, and 430nm shining on an object that absorbs everything except 550nm, then the object will appear black won't it? Whereas if true white light were shining on it, it would reflect the 550nm wavelengths and our eye would interpret that as... yellow or something. Is that wrong?
I believe you are correct.
There has been some work on front-projection screens to produce material that reflects only the specific wavelengths that a (matched) projector produces. The goal being to use such a screen in a bright environment where it will absorb almost all of the visible spectrum, and thus appear black, except for the specific RGB wavelengths in the projected image. Thus greatly reducing the "washout" effect of using a projector in a brightly lit room.
I think sony has a half-assed implemen
White LEDs are different (Score:5, Informative)
*White* LEDs don't work that way. You might assume that white LEDs are simply three (or more) normal LEDs combined in a single package. While it is possible to make white LEDs this way, it's not the method usually used (for several reasons, including "color integrity").
Instead, white LEDs are typically made by coating a BLUE indium-gallium-nitride (InGaN) LED with phosphorous. This is not all that different from a fluorescent bulb, which is what the GP postulated.
Different color temperatures can be achieved by varying the phosphorous coverage. Lower coverage lets more blue through (cooler temperature), whereas higher coverage causes more blue to be absorbed and thus more of the phosphorous emission spectrum to be emitted. The dominant line in the most commonly used phosphorous for LEDs is around 580nm (yellow).
It's also possible to get white LEDs that are made by coating a near ultra-violet LED with phosphorous (thus getting even closer to the fluorescent bulb of the GP).
This might change in the future, with serious work being conducted in the field to improve on reliability, efficiency and color characteristics. To the best of my knowledge, however, none of the new methods (go search for yourself) are commercially available and as we all know, many things that seem promising in the lab never make it to market for any number of reasons.
For reference, red diodes emit at ~ 630nm, blue diodes at 470nm, green at 530nm. The exact wavelength of the emitted light depends on the materials used in the LED, of course.
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Sure, in most in-home uses, LEDs are (once the manufacturing costs come down a bit more) going to be great; but I've got, for example, a friend who does lighting-design for plays and such; and she FLIPS OUT over LEDs because they do not interact properly for what she tries to do with color.
But that, I think, is an edge case; she can keep using incandescents (although she'll need a bigger budget when production is scaled back.)
Color Issues. (Score:3, Informative)
The spectral composition of light sources is far from irrelevant. The only case where it doesn't matter is when you look directly at the light source (TV, computer monitor) or at a surface which reflects the spectrum of the light source evenly (e.g. a projection screen or a white wall.) In every other case, a spiky light source spectrum results in improper color perception. One red color (e.g. a flower) can modulate the spectrum in a completely different way from another red (e.g. a shirt),
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From the (Score:3, Funny)
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FTFY
Can't beat incandescents (Score:3, Insightful)
What rubbish (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Can't beat incandescents (Score:5, Informative)
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Care to provide a link where I can get the LED you speak of? Certainly this summary of lighting efficiencies [wikipedia.org] do not agree with your thesis. Perhaps in a few years.
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And they are not _extremely_ directional. Or have you never seen a led besides those 5mm ones?
Nice nearly lambertian 180 degree leds are easily available, and that helps total efficiency a lot, because you dont need a reflector.
Fluorescent have mercury == bad (Score:5, Insightful)
LEDs might have heavy metals in them but this is well encapsulated and amortized over a far longer lifetime (100k hours vs 10k hours).
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Today's fluorescents have less mercury than that bluefin sushi you just ate for lunch.
-nB
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$21M paltry sum for such a large energy concern (Score:3, Interesting)
It's astonishing to me that the energy and environmental problems are so obvious, but so little effort is put into the solutions.
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it's not a large concern (Score:4, Insightful)
For that matter, only about 20% of our entire energy usage is represented by electricity, the rest being direct use of thermal energy (i.e. burning stuff like oil and gas) in factories, home heating furnaces, and in cars, trucks and railroad engines.
So overall the amount of our energy usage that goes to household lighting is 0.09 x 0.20 = about 2% of our total energy usage. If you manage to make lighting that is, say, 10 times more efficient than incandescent, then you will replace 2% with 0.2%, for a grand savings of 1.8%. Not impressive.
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Not by itself, and for that matter, it's unlikely that any single energy-saving technology is going to make a significant difference. But what if we were able to get a 2% reduction in energy usage on 5 different fron
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Let's put it another way: divide that world consumption by the world population to see what your share is. The answer is less than a tenth of a barrel, or about 4 gallons of oil a year. You probably burn 100 times more
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-Rick
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My dryer shorted out a few months ago. It was an ancient hand me down from a friend. We replaced it with a new more efficient model with auto shutoff and moisture d
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Those that don't care.
Luddites that use the environmental movement as an excuse to say that everyone should live a retro lifestyle.
Those that are looking for control of other people.
People that don't understand the issue at all, but think that being 'environmental' is cool. Even if their actions are worse than what was happening before.
The number of people that understand the issue, want to solve the problem, and still
The Real Questions (Score:5, Insightful)
Where do I buy them now?
Do they fit into my regular sockets, including BR30 form factors?
Will they give me at least as much focused light?
How much do they cost?
How long do they last?
How much better than fluorescents?
Are they dimmable?
Are they protected against lightening strikes near by?
What toxic materials do they contain?
Will they let me adjust for the color balance I desire (a highly desirable feature)?
Who is exploited in their manufacture, and which country is getting all my money from them?
Going to a new lightening system is seldom as simple as unscrewing one and screwing in another. Many trade-offs exist.
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Where do I buy them now
EarthLED Light Bulbs [thinkgeek.com] which are more efficient, last longer, use less energy, and are greener to produce than even CFLs (which are greener than incans).
Do they fit...
Yes!
... as much ... light?
Yes! I own two (would own more but see price). etc. etc. Read the page, it answers your questions. They are dimmable, etc. etc.
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This is an article about money being allocated for future research. Ergo, they're not making them yet and really don't know their capabilities, much less price.
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http://www.superbrightleds.com/edison.html [superbrightleds.com]
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Excellent Points (Score:2)
- The cost of manufacture and disposal of SSL fixtures vs incandescent bulbs, at the scale of production for incandescent bulbs.
If we wind up with something that is more efficient in the socket, but three times as energy expensive cradle to grave, then watt's* the point?
(* so sorry)
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Here's the latest (albeit dismal) report from the field:
http://fins.actwin.com/aquatic-plants/month.200801/msg00059.html [actwin.com]
DoE ACTUALLY doing energy work (Score:2)
Not so much research (Score:3, Interesting)
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Unsigned (Score:2, Funny)
In other news, Alice and Bob figure out how to screw in a lightbulb.
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Sound like you need one of these [scopestuff.com].
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How many Irishmen does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
Three: one to hold the bulb and two to drink until the room spins.
How many blondes does it take?
Three, one to hold the bulb and two to turn the ladder... oh you heard that one already?
How many women does it take to change a light bulb? None, they just ask a man to do it for them.
How many psychaitrists does it take to change a light bulb? Only one
Okay... (Score:2, Insightful)
Right now- LED lighting is great for some applications, especially portable lighting, automotive/truck lighting, and small things like night/marker lights in the home. It is ridiculously expensive for home lighting, even when you consider the lifespan of the lamp assemblies. Then again- CFL lights used to cost 3-4x what they do now too, so maybe cheaper manufacturing processes can be develo
Money Well Spent (Score:3, Interesting)
Now if our government would start looking into algae to power vehicles it would show that they're really interested in finding alternate and more efficient ways of powering our everyday devices.
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Hint: the power in a car is DC, if you need to pulse the LED to get more brightness, please use something above 250Hz, preferably >1KHz.
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Either they use Pulse-width modulation [wikipedia.org], or I think I recall a method to increase the brightness of the LED using pulses, but my google-fu is weak.
In either case, 60Hz is horribly low, and should be much higher.
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Except, of course, for the fact that they aren't...
Fluorescent lights are significantly more efficient than LEDs.
Yes, those DECADES and DECADES of research they've put into it clearly prove they hate the idea...
My holy grail (Score:2)
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I can imagine a whole new category of stage lights.
Imagine panels of pixels, with each pixel being a small, independent spotlight, steerable by software. Cover the front of the balcony, and the upper lighting balcony, with these panels. Then the software can steer the required amount of light (number of pixels) of the required color(s), to any point on the stage, for each independent scene in the show. Floods could be simulated by hundreds of parallel spots, or some of the individual sources could be w
The Future- Photonic Bandgap Materials (Score:2)
I had one as a child 40 years ago (Score:2)
Didn't Heinlein write a shortstory about this... (Score:2)
Sometimes heat is good. (Score:2)
suckered! (Score:4, Informative)
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Technically they could be drawing 1.1V at 1,000,000 amps and not be lying.
-nB