Posted on 05/02/2002 9:07:50 AM PDT by Bobber58
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. Tungsten-filament bulbs the most widely used light source in the world burn hands if unscrewed while lit. The bulbs are infamous for generating more heat than light.
Now a microscopic tungsten lattice in effect, a tungsten filament fabricated with an internal crystalline pattern developed at the Department of Energys Sandia National Laboratories has been shown to have potential to transmute the majority of this wasted infrared energy (commonly called heat) into the frequencies of visible light.
This would raise the efficiency of an incandescent electric bulb from 5 percent to greater than 60 percent.
By doing so, it would greatly reduce the worlds most vexing and important power problem the required excess electrical generating capacity and costs to homeowners caused by inefficient lighting, as well as the environmental damage accompanying unnecessary power generation.
The advance also opens the possibility of increased efficiencies in thermal photovoltaic applications (TPV). Photovoltaics work best when they are provided with energy from heat-generators with energy emission wavelengths transposed into the most optimal frequencies. (Using a tungsten lattice as an emitter at desirable frequencies, model calculations showed that the TPV conversion efficiency reached 51 percent compared with 12.6 percent efficiency with a blackbody emitter.)
The first step toward this goal, achieved at Sandia by Shawn Lin and Jim Fleming, is reported in the May 2 Nature.
Fabrication of the device was accomplished by an extension of well-known MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) technologies that themselves have been derived from mature semiconductor technologies. As a result, fabrication of such devices could be cheap and easy.
History of photonic lattices
Since the existence of photonic crystals was postulated by Eli Yablonovitch of UCLA more than a decade ago, the most common idea for their use was based on their capability to transmit beams of light at selected frequencies and bend their paths without losing any energy. The structures, most often made out of silicon, consist of tiny bars fabricated to sit astride each other somewhat like Lincoln Logs at regular pre-set distances and angles that form in effect an artificial crystal. Spacing of the bars allows passage of only certain wavelengths; other wavelengths too big for the rafters, so to speak, cannot pass through. Desirable wavelengths not only pass through but also can be changed in direction by creating defects in the artificial crystal that cause the light to follow the defect along like a car passing through a curving tunnel. This meant photonic crystals had potential in optical communications, in which light beams currently carrying telephone messages and data must be converted to electrons an expensive process for certain tasks.
Meltdown? Apparently not
A further question considered by Lin and Fleming, with assistance from colleagues Ihab El-Kady, Rana Biswas, and Kai-Ming Ho at Ames Laboratories in Iowa, shifted emphasis from a photonic lattices ability to guide light to its capability of stopping other frequencies from passing through it. What happens to these other energies that enter the interior of a three-dimensional crystal? If the crystal were built of tungsten fabricated by creating a structure of polysilicon, removing some silicon and using chemical vapor deposition to deposit tungsten as a kind of backfill in the mold the metal could handle quite high temperatures and have a large and absolute photonic band gap in the visible range where it is already known to emit light. But what would happen to the other, lower-wavelength energies brought in by an electric current? Would the structure melt through the buildup of heat? Or, more desirably, would the thermally excited tungsten atoms somehow prefer to reinforce emissions at higher wavelengths, such as in the visible frequency range?
Energy at the edge of the photonic band was observed to undergo an order-of-magnitude absorption increase, or enhancement. This meant that energy was being preferentially absorbed into a selected frequency band. Meanwhile periodic metallic-air boundaries led to an extraordinarily large transmission enhancement. Experimental results showed that a large photonic band gap for wavelengths from 8 to 20 microns proved ideally suited for suppressing broadband blackbody radiation in the infrared and has the potential to redirect thermal excitation energy into the visible spectrum.
The imaginative work seems logical in retrospect, though the theory for the effect re-partitioning energy between heat and visible light remains unexplained. Its not theoretically predicted, says Fleming. Possible explanations may involve variations in the speed of light as it propagates through such structures.
The work was performed with a photonic crystal operating in the mid-infrared range, but no theoretical or practical difficulties are known to exist to downsizing the structure into the visible light range.
All work was performed on commercially available, monitor-grade 6-inch silicon wafers. These photonic devices were fabricated in Sandias Microelectronics Development Laboratory using modifications of the standard CMOS processes originally developed for Sandias radiation-hardened CMOS (complementary metal-oxide semiconductor) technologies.
The work was funded by the Laboratory-Directed Research and Development program through project manager James Gee. Co-principal investigator Jim Moreno modeled.
Sandia Media Relations Contact: Neal Singer, nsinger@sandia.gov, (505) 845-7078
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This is big news; and surely not good news for the Sheik of Araby.
Besides these ever increasing efficiencies,
if the carmakers are allowed to use high-pressure EFI{developed as far back as WW II & sat on by Sneakyman Inc. & his 7 little Sisters} each molecule of fuel would be surrounded in a tornadic field of air{93+% clean burn}, we could do without imported earth goo.
But, & oh what a big B U T T, you know who holds the slimy cards.
Still it is bright enough to see the trail just ahead of my feet and is not so bright that it makes seeing the stars harder.
Current white LEDS can beat flashlight bulbs, match large incandescents, but don't come close to fluorescents. They cost much more than any of them.
Click here: tech_index
There are several online suppliers of LED flashligh bulbs. Until they come down from their current $30 price (or until batteries begin costing $10 each), these will be attractive only to survivalists and special purpose users. The same logic applies to special "energy saving" bulbs and the cost of electricity. It just ain't worth my while to buy a lightbulb that takes five or six years of energy savings to pay for itself.
"So it hasn't ACTUALLY worked yet. But we're sure it will."
Wait and see.
Mine either! One of the articles I read promised that ultimately we'd see a powerful but compact LED flashlight that would give you a month's worth of continuous service on a single AAA battery. That's what I'm holding out for! None of the LED flashlights I've looked at on the web so far come anywhere close to that. Twelve hours seems to be the norm.
I'm sorry I didn't bookmark it because I can't find it now, but right after posting that I actually found a big LED flashlight discussion forum on the web where all they talk about is LED flashlights: Where to get the best ones, where to get the best deals, uses for (and no one mentioned spelunking!), new developments in, etc., etc.
LED flashlights! Six months ago I'd never heard of 'em. And I definitely never heard of this cool tungsten stuff. I live in mortal fear that one day I'll wake up, 100-years old, and somebody will tell me that men landed on Mars twenty years ago. Like that poor old drooling centenarian I saw on tv once who couldn't believe we had landed on the moon.
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