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Light Emitting Diodes
Carmanah's lighting and illumination products use an array of high brightness Light Emitting Diodes (LEDs) to create light, as opposed to the traditional use of incandescent bulbs or fluorescent lamps. Below is a brief discussion of the three common lighting technologies and the advantages of LEDs:
1. Incandescent Bulbs
A 100-year-old inefficient light technology...
Incandescent bulbs use a 100-year-old technology that generates light by passing a large amount of electrical current through a small wire. This wire glows white-hot (almost) and radiates energy in all directions. A consequence of this method of generating light is that only 15% of the energy produced is visible light; the remaining 85% is dissipated as heat!
Out of the rainbow of colors that make up white light, you have to filter out all of the light, except the color you want the lantern to emit (i.e., a blue lens blocks or filters out all light except blue). In the end, very little of the energy emitted by the incandescent lamp is seen by the observer through the colored filter.
As illustrated above, for filtered interior incandescent bulbs, the intensity depends on the color. For blue, the filtered transmission is about 0.4%, for green, about 1%, and for red, about 1.5%. The rest of the energy is wasted in heat dissipation.
2. Compact Fluorescent Lamps
Convenient, but fragile, complex and environmentally hazardous...
Compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) were developed as a relatively efficient alternative to incandescent bulbs and many solar-powered outdoor lighting products utilize these lamps as their light source.
In short, fluorescent lamp technology consists of a thin glass tube filled with argon/mercury vapor. At each end of the tube are metal electrodes coated with an alkaline-earth oxide that gives off electrons easily. When a current is passed through the ionized gas between the electrodes, the fluorescent lamp emits ultraviolet radiation. The inside surface of the fluorescent tube is coated with phosphors, typically zinc silicate or magnesium tungstate. These phosphors absorb the ultraviolet radiation and re-radiate the energy as visible light. A fluorescent lamp will operate until the alkaline-earth oxide coating on its electrodes is depleted.
When starting a fluorescent lamp, the unit requires a "boost" in the form of a starter and ballast that provide up to four times the operating voltage in the beginning.
Disadvantages of CFLs:
- Unfocused illumination. Similar to incandescent bulbs, CFLs create unfocused light, and produce an uneven illumination. To compensate, systems using fluorescent lamps typically install reflectors to redistribute the output, which is inefficient and creates an additional level of complexity and cost to the product.
- High energy consumption. CFLs can consume up to 20 watts, depending on their application (although the tubes are listed at a lower wattage, it is important to consider that the driving ballasts use energy as well). This level of power consumption requires large, expensive solar modules and associated installation hardware to generate the required energy. In addition, large batteries are required for power storage and typical reserves are less than a week - this doesn't leave enough autonomy to compensate for seasonal or poor climatic conditions.
- Difficult to power manage. CFLs tend to be either "on" or "off". Although it is not impossible to adjust the output dynamically, it is a complicated process. This makes power management difficult, imprecise, or non-existant, which is a liability for solar-powered lighting products where the source of power varies according to seasonal fluctuations and prevailing weather conditions.
- Short operational life. The rated life of typical CFLs is about a year and products using them require regular maintenance. This increases the life cycle cost of the product in terms of servicing labor, storage costs and proper disposal (fluorescent tubes and their ballasts are considered hazardous materials).
- Temperature degradation. Manufacturers of CFLs conduct their rated life and light output calculations under ideal operating conditions and temperatures that usually do not reflect the actual environmental conditions. The performance and lifespan of CFLs is dramatically degraded by extremes in ambient temperature.
- Fragility. Another drawback with CFLs is that they are composed of fragile glass tubing. If the fixture is impacted with minimal force, the tube will break and the lamp will cease to operate. Moreover, the resulting glass fragments are sharp and dangerous.
- Hazardous materials. The EPA in the United States regulates the disposal of CFLs because of they contain highly toxic mercury. The ballasts are also regulated under the Toxic Substance Control Act (TSCA) and Comprehensive Environmental Response Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA) because they contain PCB's and other toxic components.
3. LEDs
An efficient, state-of-the-art light technology...
At the heart of a Light Emitting Diode (LED) lamp is a silicon "chip" about the size of a grain of salt and made of a special blend of crystals. When a small electrical current is passed through the chip it generates light.
LEDs offer a number of technical advantages over any other type of lighting, including:
In addition to being robust, efficient producers of light, LEDs are low voltage devices that are naturally suited to solar power. Further, with recent advancements in LED technology, including increased color choices and brightness capability, LEDs provide a natural technical synergy for producing solar-powered LED lighting.
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