Friday, September 28, 2012

LED light bulb to last more than 20 years


Light bulbs that are said to last for more than two decades while consuming very little energy may go on sale later this year.
US firm General Electric, Dutch company Philips and Sylvania all showcased their products at the Light Fair industry conference in Las Vegas.
Using light-emitting diodes (LEDs) instead of filaments, the bulbs are meant to produce as much light as a 100-watt incandescent alternative.
However, LEDs are not usually cheap.
In April, Philips introduced its LPrize LED that will cost $60 (£37) - but consumes only 9.7 watts while giving off the same amount of light as a 60-watt incandescent lamp.
The company has arranged discounts with shops that will sell the bulb priced at around $20 (£12).
The new EnduraLED from Philips looks similar, but is said to be equivalent to a 100-watt incandescent bulb while consuming only a quarter of the energy.
Both Philips and Sylvania said their products are due to appear in stores later this year, while GE plans to sell its bulb early next year. The firm currently sells a 9-watt LED bulb that is made to replace a 40-watt incandescent, for about $50 (£31).
All three bulbs are meant to last more than 20 years, if used about three hours per day.
Light-emitting diodes have been around for years.
Traditionally, they have been used as indicators on electrical devices, such as standby lights on TVs.
White light (used for general lighting) using LEDs can be created via a number of techniques. One example is mixing red, green and blue LEDs.
It is suggested that LEDs can last for up to 100,000 hours, compared with the 1,000 hours of traditional incandescent light-bulbs and compact fluorescent lamps' (CFLs) 15,000 hours.
The technology is also much more energy efficient, using up to 90% less energy than incandescent bulbs.
The long lifespans and low energy use make LEDs economically attractive because even though the fittings cost more, the running and maintenance bills are lower.
Saving energy
In 2011, the UK's Energy Saving Trust (EST) carried out a study, measuring the performance of more than 4,250 LED light fittings installed at 35 sites around the UK.
The authors of the report claim the technology can deliver huge energy savings, reduce costs and makes residents feel safer.
"LEDs promise to be the way forward for the whole sector," explained James Russill, EST's technical development manager, in an earlier interview with the BBC.
"There are so many benefits: they can be smaller, brighter; it is one of those rare technologies where the trial has shown it performs better than the lighting systems it is replacing but, at the same time, uses less energy."
Mr Russill said LED light bulbs are more efficient than traditional, incandescent ones because there is less energy loss through heat.
Traditional light bulbs pass electricity through a filament, which results in energy being released as both heat and light, leading to a lot of heat being wasted.
But LEDs are made from a semiconductor material, and are able to emit much more light for the same amount of electricity.
"LEDs are the most efficient light source currently available, and are increasingly used in domestic, commercial and automotive applications," said Mr Russill.
"They can last tens of thousands of hours compared to 1,000 hours for typical incandescent lamps.
"This is due to the use of solid state technology - they have no moving parts, no glass and no filament breakage."
The ongoing results of tests currently underway by the EST show that "lifetimes of more than 15 years are expected to be achieved", he added.
LED challenges
One of the main challenges faced by LED lighting manufacturers is dealing with waste heat produced by the bulb.
Although a lot less energy is wasted through heat than in the case of a traditional light bulb, some heat loss still occurs.
So that the intense heat does not degrade the long life promised by the companies, the lamps need some kind of a cooling mechanism.

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

LED Lighting Makes Food Look More Appetizing

The next time you shop for groceries, take a closer look at your fruits and vegetables. Hold them up and you may be surprised at their dazzling appearance. Grocers are now discovering a secret that jewelers and actors have known for years: lighting matters.
New kinds of LED lighting technology are invading retail stores with a dual purpose: saving energy and luring shoppers. And as old-style incandescent bulbs are being phased out by the U.S. government, the race for a replacement is on between LEDs and compact fluorescents.
"We're turning oranges into diamonds," said Paul Kelly, senior vice president of business development for Nualight, an Irish firm that is pushing its way into the U.S. retail marketplace. "We want to create a fabulous space, to get (customers) to feel like they are eating the food, tasting the food -- all with the lighting."
Nualight has its lights in the California-based Fresh and Easy chain, as well as another in New England. Other companies are installing LED lights in stores throughout Texas and the southeast. Kelly said he can nearly replicate the true color of the sun's illumination using digital LED lighting. Kelly says his firm is able to program the LED bulbs to accent individual colors on food -- reds for meat, yellows and greens for veggies or fruits. That's important because LEDs put out less lighting power than fluorescents.
The Star Market in Chestnut Hill, Mass., went all-LED in October 2009 and has seen a big reduction in both energy and maintenance costs since then, says store director Liam Flanagan. There's also the appearance.
"It really makes the food pop compared to a fluorescent light," Flanagan said. "A few customers commented saying the fruit looks more colorful than other stores."
Several states have adopted a rule promulgated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that limits certain kind of lighting as deceptive, according to an FDA spokeswoman in Washington, D.C. The rule states that "food or color additives, colored overwraps, or lights may not be used to misrepresent the true appearance, color, or quality of a food."
Judging whether lighting is misrepresenting or simply enhancing a food is subjective, although some LED makers said they remain concerned about the FDA rule.
"I don't think it's going to stop LED lighting," said Terry Roberts, president of Merchandising by Design, a Dallas-based retail consulting firm. "The big issue is just how its color corrected and that it doesn't cross the line. The good news with LED is you have ability to program it and correct it."
While LEDs last longer, use less energy, have no toxic mercury and produce less heat than other kinds of bulbs, they are more expensive. As with many technologies, advocates say their pricetag will lower over time as they become more widespread. Roberts says won't be long before LEDs make it to the home market.
"They will be more palatable to the consumer because the lighting will be more correct," Roberts said. "It's really a big advance."
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Monday, September 24, 2012

LED Lighting Makes Food Look More Appetizing

The next time you shop for groceries, take a closer look at your fruits and vegetables. Hold them up and you may be surprised at their dazzling appearance. Grocers are now discovering a secret that jewelers and actors have known for years: lighting matters.
New kinds of LED lighting technology are invading retail stores with a dual purpose: saving energy and luring shoppers. And as old-style incandescent bulbs are being phased out by the U.S. government, the race for a replacement is on between LEDs and compact fluorescents.
"We're turning oranges into diamonds," said Paul Kelly, senior vice president of business development for Nualight, an Irish firm that is pushing its way into the U.S. retail marketplace. "We want to create a fabulous space, to get (customers) to feel like they are eating the food, tasting the food -- all with the lighting."
Nualight has its lights in the California-based Fresh and Easy chain, as well as another in New England. Other companies are installing LED lights in stores throughout Texas and the southeast. Kelly said he can nearly replicate the true color of the sun's illumination using digital LED lighting. Kelly says his firm is able to program the LED bulbs to accent individual colors on food -- reds for meat, yellows and greens for veggies or fruits. That's important because LEDs put out less lighting power than fluorescents.
The Star Market in Chestnut Hill, Mass., went all-LED in October 2009 and has seen a big reduction in both energy and maintenance costs since then, says store director Liam Flanagan. There's also the appearance.
"It really makes the food pop compared to a fluorescent light," Flanagan said. "A few customers commented saying the fruit looks more colorful than other stores."
Several states have adopted a rule promulgated by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that limits certain kind of lighting as deceptive, according to an FDA spokeswoman in Washington, D.C. The rule states that "food or color additives, colored overwraps, or lights may not be used to misrepresent the true appearance, color, or quality of a food."
Judging whether lighting is misrepresenting or simply enhancing a food is subjective, although some LED makers said they remain concerned about the FDA rule.
"I don't think it's going to stop LED lighting," said Terry Roberts, president of Merchandising by Design, a Dallas-based retail consulting firm. "The big issue is just how its color corrected and that it doesn't cross the line. The good news with LED is you have ability to program it and correct it."
While LEDs last longer, use less energy, have no toxic mercury and produce less heat than other kinds of bulbs, they are more expensive. As with many technologies, advocates say their pricetag will lower over time as they become more widespread. Roberts says won't be long before LEDs make it to the home market.
"They will be more palatable to the consumer because the lighting will be more correct," Roberts said. "It's really a big advance."

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Friday, September 21, 2012

C-TICK certificate of LED power supplies

September 26, 2011, Buddy Lighting's dimmable and non dimmable constant current LED power supply series got the Australia C-Tick certificate successfully. The new power supply series mainly used for LED down lights etc as exterior power supply.
The dimmable PS series can be used with trailing edge, leading edge and universal dimmer. during the dimming, no flickering, no buzzing, dimming smoothly. It can comply with the most of dimmer in the worldwide.
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Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Color mixing enables high CRI and high LED efficacy

When amber LEDs are combined with phosphor-converted blue LEDs, warm white light with both high CRI and high efficacy can be attained simultaneously.
Marc Dyble, product marketing manager of SSL products at Osram Opto Semiconductors discussed the potential of mixing monochromatic LEDs with phosphor-converted LEDs (PC-LEDs) to achieve high CRI and high efficacy at the same time. He presented this approach at the LED Show in Las Vegas last week. Dyble stated that color mixing, marketed as Brilliant Mix by Osram Opto, provides an alternative method of achieving high CRI for applications such as high-end retail. He explained that typical approach today to attaining warm/neutral white light with LEDs and high CRI (>90) comes with a penalty of luminaire efficacy in the 75 lm/W range. Instead, if a combination of monochromatic LEDs (amber) are placed alongside phosphor-converted blue LEDs either in a multichip chip-on-board or multichip array, luminaire efficacy in the 90 lm/W range (up to 110 lm/W at the LED level) can be attained at 2700K.
Color rendering components
Color rending components
Dyble noted that there are some caveats to taking this approach. For instance, an optical mixing chamber may be required to obtain the necessary color consistency. In addition, the correlated color temperature (CCT) over temperature may vary. To improve stability, light and temperature sensors can be installed and compensation circuitry can be implemented.
However, Dyble contends that a color mixing approach should definitely prove better than methods that overdrive the LEDs and lead to early luminaire failure. In addition, from a user standpoint a tradeoff can be made between efficiency and color rendering by adjusting the monochromatic to PC-LED driving ratio. “One of the reasons we’ve been able to do this is because we’ve been able to linearize the efficiency of monochromatic LEDs,” said Dyble.
He added that Osram Opto and Cree have cross-licensing agreements in the area of color mixing.
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Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Cooper Lighting launches sleek line of outdoor luminaires

The Navion LED luminaire is offered in various lumen and optical packages to meet the output and light distribution of different street and area lighting applications.
Cooper Lighting has added the new Navion LED luminaire to its line of Lumark LED outdoor area, site and roadway lighting fixtures. The Navion luminaire's application-specific design allows lumen output and energy consumption to be configured to fit the lighting needs various applications, from single fixture to large office parking lots and roadway lighting. Energy savings is 30-70% over high-intensity discharge (HID) fixtures.
Cooper's Navion LED street/area luminaire.
Cooper's Navion LED street/area luminaire.
The luminaire's size and construction is scaled to the specific lumen package in five configurations from 3600 to 22,000 lm, or HID equivalents from 70W HPS up to 400W MH. The Navion luminaire features a 4000K color temperature and CRI of 70, with an optional 6000K (70 CRI) and 3000K (80 CRI) available. Rated lifetime is 60,000 hours at 90% lumen maintenance (16 yr at 10 hr/day).
The luminaire uses Cooper Lighting’s AccuLED optics system to achieve optical efficiency as high as 95%, while eliminating uplight, glare, obtrusive spill light and overlit hot spots. The user selects from ten optical packages.
With its die-cast aluminum construction and durable powder-coat finish, the luminaire is designed to withstand harsh environments over an operating range of -40[deg]C to 40[deg]C (50[deg]C optional package). Other features include tool-less door entry and quick electrical disconnects. Installation is performed with simple tools. The fixture is 3G vibration rated and comes standard with 10kV dual-mode surge protection
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Sunday, September 9, 2012

Classic LED Down Light (cutout: 165mm)

  • Brand:
  • Buddy
  • Model:
  • SL165W-18W22
  • Material:
  • Aluminum
  • Color:
  • White
  • Voltage:
  • 230v
  • Light Source:
  • LED
  • Shape:
  • Round
* Power Cosumption: 30V DC
It can work with 570mA constant current dimmable or no dimmable PS ( the PS is alternative item )
For more information about the PS, please visit our website LED power supplies
* No. of LEDs: 36pcs Bridgelux chip high power LEDs
* Beam angle: 120degrees
* Luminous flux ( lm ):
1438 ( Cool White 6000-6500K )
1373 ( Neutral White 5000-5500K )
1308 (Warm White 3000-3500K )
* CRI: 80+
* Working Temperature: -20℃- +40℃
Advantages:
* Low power consumption.
* Long operating lifespan.
* Easy to install.
* Ideal for residential and architecture lighting.
* No UV or IR.
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