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Everlasting light (new highly efficient light bulb on the drawing board)
economist ^ | 9/6/2007

Posted on 09/21/2007 5:55:06 AM PDT by Uncledave

Everlasting light Sep 6th 2007 From The Economist print edition

Energy: Researchers have developed an environmentally friendly light bulb that uses very little energy and should never need changing

ALTHOUGH it symbolises a bright idea, the traditional incandescent light bulb is a dud. It wastes huge amounts of electricity, radiating 95% of the energy it consumes as heat rather than light. Its life is also relatively short, culminating in a dull pop as its filament fractures. Now a team of researchers has devised a light bulb that is not only much more energy-efficient—it is also expected to last longer than the devices into which it is inserted. Moreover, the lamp could be used for rear-projection televisions as well as general illumination.

The trick to a longer life, for light bulbs at least, is to ensure that the lamp has no electrodes. Although electrodes are undeniably convenient for plugging bulbs directly into the lighting system, they are also the main reason why lamps fail. The electrodes wear out. They can react chemically with the gas inside the light bulb, making it grow dimmer. They are also difficult to seal into the structure of the bulb, making the rupture of these seals another potential source of failure.

Scientists working for Ceravision, a company based in Milton Keynes, in Britain, have designed a new form of lamp that eliminates the need for electrodes. Their device uses microwaves to transform electricity into light. It consists of a relatively small lump of aluminium oxide into which a hole has been bored. When the aluminium oxide is bombarded with microwaves generated from the same sort of device that powers a microwave oven, a concentrated electric field is created inside the void.

If a cylindrical capsule containing a suitable gas is inserted into the hole, the atoms of the gas become ionised. As electrons accelerate in the electric field, they gain energy that they pass on to the atoms and molecules of the gas as they collide with them, creating a glowing plasma. The resulting light is bright, and the process is energy-efficient. Indeed, whereas traditional light bulbs emit just 5% of their energy as light, and fluorescent tubes about 15%, the Ceravision lamp has an efficiency greater than 50%.

Because the lamp has no filament, the scientists who developed it think it will last for thousands of hours of use—in other words, for decades. Moreover, the light it generates comes from what is almost a single point, which means that the bulbs can be used in projectors and televisions. Because of this, the light is much more directional and the lamp could thus prove more efficient than bulbs that scatter light in all directions. Its long life would make the new light ideal for buildings in which the architecture makes changing light bulbs complicated and expensive. The lamps' small size makes them comparable to light-emitting diodes but the new lamp generates much brighter light than those semiconductor devices do. A single microwave generator can be used to power several lamps.

Another environmental advantage of the new design is that it does not need mercury, a highly toxic metal found in most of the bulbs used today, including energy-saving fluorescent bulbs, fluorescent tubes and the high-pressure bulbs used in projectors. And Ceravision also reckons it should be cheap to make. With lighting accounting for some 20% of electricity use worldwide, switching to a more efficient system could both save energy and reduce emissions of climate-changing greenhouse gases.


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: energy; invention; kanzius; lightbulbs
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To: HangnJudge

I know, I almost took a job there a few years ago


61 posted on 09/21/2007 9:20:35 AM PDT by Freep EE
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To: Uncledave

Three words: LED


62 posted on 09/21/2007 9:44:47 AM PDT by El Sordo
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To: Dumpster Baby

Great observation on the amount of energy used upstream. You don’t need huge cooling fins on a diode lamp.

This thing may be practical only at larger luminens


63 posted on 09/21/2007 9:56:02 AM PDT by FastCoyote
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To: wizr
Many years ago, this strange brain of mine thunk “Hey, why can’t we use clothes dryer heat (exhaust) to warm and add moisture to a home in cold, dry climates. I know it would still have to be filtered and vented, but?

I was thinking of doing something this for my home. Did you figure out a way to do it?

64 posted on 09/21/2007 10:15:17 AM PDT by Uncledave
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To: Uncledave

I like mmichaels1970 answer (#56) in the short term. But, no, I don’t know what the exhaust might contain that may harm us.

Another idea was to vent swamp coolers through the attic access; thereby cooling and moving attic heat at the same time. Also turned down.


65 posted on 09/21/2007 10:27:06 AM PDT by wizr (A step in Faith will set you free.)
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To: Uncledave
Because the lamp has no filament, the scientists who developed it think it will last for thousands of hours of use—in other words, for decades.

Thousands doesn't equate to decades. A 2000 hour lamp will last a couple of years.

I'd like to see the specifics.

66 posted on 09/21/2007 10:35:59 AM PDT by ovrtaxt (Sworn to oppose control freaks, foreign and domestic.)
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To: Uncledave

yeah, in the winter chill i like to sit next to an incandescent lamp while i’m reading and soak up the heat.


67 posted on 09/21/2007 10:57:44 AM PDT by ken21 ( people die + you never hear from them again.)
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To: Uncledave

UV curing is done in a similar fashion and has been around for a long time.


68 posted on 09/21/2007 12:16:52 PM PDT by Malsua
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To: Uncledave
Oddly this reminds me of John Kanzius work. He uses radio waves to crack hydrogen out of salt water. the result is an electrical flame. Here's more detail on Kanzius hydrogen fuel project.
69 posted on 09/21/2007 12:56:46 PM PDT by ckilmer
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To: alicewonders
"I realize the lowly incandescent bulb is not energy efficient, but I love it's warm, amber light. I hate those bright curly-cue light bulbs that everyone keeps pushing on me."

I finally ran into one of those curly bulbs this summer on vacation - there was one in the lamp next to the bed. I wouldn't have noticed it except when I was in bed reading at night. I looked up at the light bulb when I noticed how bad the light was for reading. They are bad light to read by so none in my office/reading room.

70 posted on 09/21/2007 1:04:21 PM PDT by joebuck
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To: Freep EE
and has products already

Where may I buy them?

71 posted on 09/21/2007 1:26:03 PM PDT by mbraynard (FDT: Less Leadership Experience than any president in US history)
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To: HamiltonJay
It is a dud in the context here.

What would you think if 95% of every gallon of gasoline you poured into your car leaked out the bottom?

72 posted on 09/21/2007 1:27:57 PM PDT by mbraynard (FDT: Less Leadership Experience than any president in US history)
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To: Eagles Talon IV
Don't be so rediculous.

Energy use continues to grow rapidly. Besides, the percentage of profit on the gross revenues of a power company are tiny.

73 posted on 09/21/2007 1:29:15 PM PDT by mbraynard (FDT: Less Leadership Experience than any president in US history)
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To: Hegewisch Dupa

Get them a NuWave oven. :)


74 posted on 09/21/2007 2:48:57 PM PDT by Politicalmom (Of the potential GOP front runners, FT has one of the better records on immigration.- NumbersUSA)
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To: Uncledave

75 posted on 09/21/2007 3:12:53 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: reagan_fanatic

Where do think the other 50% went?


76 posted on 09/21/2007 3:13:28 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: loungitude

I’ve got one of the original SCR shop battery chargers 6/12V; it has a built-in light bulb in the circuit that acts as a resistor.

I’ve had it for 30 years now, still works although the cooling fan is getting quite noisy; the original incandescent bulb (about the size of a half dollar, shaped like a laboratory flask) is still burning bright.


77 posted on 09/21/2007 3:23:23 PM PDT by Old Professer (The critic writes with rapier pen, dips it twice, and writes again.)
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To: mmichaels1970
You got panty "hoes"???

: )

78 posted on 09/21/2007 4:17:39 PM PDT by Publius6961 (MSM: Israelis are killed by rockets; Lebanese are killed by Israelis.)
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To: mbraynard

Calling the lightbulb a DUD of an invention in any context is rediculous.. .thats like calling the Transistor a Dud, or the telephone... or the automobile

Only a nut job can claim one of the greatest inventions of humanity is a dud.

The incandecent light did exactly what it was designed and intended to do, it is not nor ever was a “dud” in any context.


79 posted on 09/21/2007 4:38:56 PM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: robertpaulsen
In the antique lamp catalogs I've looked at, they sell the Victorian light bulbs using a carbon filament rather than tungsten.

Do you see a difference?

The ones I've tried are clear glass with a thicker filament & pointed end on the top of the bulb. They come on slowly and put off a lovely warm glow, different than the usual incandescent. They don't put off a bright light, but they're not dim and they do make the room look great.

80 posted on 09/21/2007 4:46:31 PM PDT by alicewonders (Duncan Hunter. Seriously.)
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