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Clear-Vu LED Lighting Earns LEED ID Credit for Lighting at Harvard Art Museum |
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July 5, 2012...Philips has contracted U-Tech Technology Corp., an LED startup wholly owned by shipbuilder Ching Fu Shipbuilding Co., Ltd., to supply LED lighting equipment, according to a CENS article. In the article, U-Tech’s vice president, A.D. Wu says that the company makes the lighting equipment using Ching Fu’s and its strategic partner Hui Hwa Industrial Co., Ltd.’s metal and mold technologies as well as Philips’ electronics technology.
Wu reported that the company’s contract products have been installed at U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (U.S. NASA) facilities and gas stations run by China Petrochemical Corp. of mainland China. Wu added that the company has won major quality certificates, including CNS, CSA, UL, CE, PSE and EN, making the company’s products very competitive in major markets, including the United States, Europe, mainland China and Japan.
Wu noted that enterprises and factories are the company’s primary potential customers. The company will double its annual output in the near future from current 5,000 lamps. As part of the expansion plan, the company will add production lines in the third quarter.
July 5, 2012...Lumenpulse Inc. announced the expansion of its strategic partnership agreement with Technolite of Singapore. Technolite, which has been the exclusive supplier of Lumenpulse's range of LED lighting fixtures to the Singapore market since 2011, will also now supply Lumenpulse's LED fixtures to Hong Kong, Malaysia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Thailand, Brunei and the Philippines. Technolite also offers technical and commercial assistance ensuring that architects, designers and engineers are actively supported. Lumenpulse says that the expanded partnership will ensure the Lumenpulse brand and portfolio is strongly represented throughout South East Asia.
"We have experienced a significant demand for Lumenpulse products from across the region," said Michael Chia, Managing Director at Technolite. "This agreement enables us to fully support specifiers throughout South East Asia with Lumenpulse's high quality architectural fixtures."
"Our partnership in Singapore has proven so positive and successful that it is natural for us to extend it to a broader geographical area," said Gorm Teichert, Executive Vice President International Sales for Lumenpulse.
"Technolite's focus on customer service together with in-depth technical knowledge means the company is a perfect fit for Lumenpulse, and together we offer an outstanding value proposition in the region."
July 5, 2012...Iluminarc of Atlantic City, New Jersey USA employed its Ilumipod Logic 6 as the LED light source for a permanent interactive installation at an Atlantic City resort spanning over six million square feet of beachfront destination encompassing a spa, casino, clubs, restaurants, and retail shops.
The resort’s ocean-side walkway is home to “Sonic Fireflies”, created by architect and composer Christopher Janney, who serves as artistic director for PhenomenArts, Inc. Inspired by the sounds of the sea and the flashes of fireflies, the piece engages guests as they enter the resort.
Environmental sounds and acoustic instruments greet you as you walk in. This composition is a “sonic portrait of a soothing ocean environment” that also changes throughout the course light, sounds like marimbas, drums, and flutes emit softly from audio speakers.
According to the company, the interaction is a personal experience between you and the ‘firefly’—enveloping you in a shaft of light and sound.
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July 5, 2012...WAC Lighting based in Garden City, New York USA has introduced the Vela Organic LED chandelier with a matching OLED wall sconce. “Designed and engineered to stimulate curiosity and aesthetic appeal among the design and specification community, our next generation OLED luminaires raise the bar with a unique lighting experience of vision and sustainability,” explained WAC Lighting president, Shelley Wald.
The Vela OLED Chandelier has a dramatic contemporary profile laser-crafted of aluminum, with 12 OLED panels that illuminate surfaces below, and 12 additional OLEDs that shine upward to render a soft ambiance.
The chandelier delivers a high light output of 2040 lumens with a CRI (color rendering index) of 80 and an efficacy of 35.2 lumens per watt. The luminaire features 24 OLEDs with a CCT (correlated color temperature) of 4000K while using just 58 watts of power. Aircraft cables suspend the chandelier from the ceiling with a height adjustment up to 36 inches.
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Commentary & Perspectives...
July 10, 2012...In June of 2012, the US Department of Energy released Part 2 of it's Life-Cycle Assessment of Energy and Environmental Impacts of LED Lighting Products (you can download the 78-page PDF here). Part 2 of the project produced a more detailed and conservative assessment of the manufacturing process of an LED product and provided a life cycle assessment (LCA) in comparison to other lighting products. Part 2 based its assessment on an improved manufacturing analysis and took into consideration a wider range of environmental impacts, including energy use for production as well as the environmental impacts of disposal that took into account the waste generated in the manufacturing of the product and component materials.
It's no surprise that the dominant factor when it comes to environmental impact is due to the energy consumption during the use phase of the products. When energy is sourced from fossil fuels, the stuff that comes from the ground that isn't carbon gets a free ride into the atmosphere. I've always found it interesting that mercury is "just there" when you burn coal, for instance, and it can become humorous at times when we hear the hyperventilation over the "dangerous mercury" from the rare in-home CFL breakage. Granted, a few milligrams of mercury on your carpet is a more recognizable hazard than the relatively large amount of mercury released from generating the power that runs the incandescent equivalent over the same x thousand hours, but this whole "impact" thing is about the big picture and not about what happens in any one home or business. The great news for the LED lighting industry, of course, is that it is hyperventilation-less in that arena, and is simply causing some consumers heart attacks when they get their first glance at LED replacement lamp prices plastered on the shelves of their local big-box store. Don't worry, that's getting fixed in a very progressive and rapid manner.
Interestingly, the greatest environmental impact after energy-in-use for the LED sources comes from manufacturing the aluminum heat sink. The heat sink is the main reason that the LED currently exceeds the CFL in the category of hazardous waste generation, and that is driven by the upstream energy and environmental impacts from manufacturing the aluminum from raw materials. Although end-of-life was evaluated in a conservative way for this report, recycling efforts could further reduce the adverse impact of manufacturing the aluminum heat sink. Since heat sinks are there to get rid of waste heat, and there will be less of it in the future, even that drawback will continue to diminish pretty rapidly. We've covered this in detail before, but the upshot is that at 100 lumens/watt, an LED emitter is converting roughly 30% of the input energy into light, with the other 70% or so becoming heat. That's a factor of 2-3 better than incandescents, but it's still a fair amount of heat. However, in a future where 200 lumens/watt is not out of the question, that equation reverses. Not only that, but we also need less energy to produce the required amount of light. That 1000 lumen lamp that uses 10 watts here in the near future is implied to be sloughing off 7 watts of waste heat. At 200 lumens/watt, we'll only need a total of 5 watts to do that same 1000 lumens, of which only about 1.5-2 watts is wasted heat. Twice the efficacy results in 1/4 the waste heat that needs to be managed, implying 1/4 the amount of heat sinking (standing by for correction from our thermal engineer friends, but I believe that part of the physics is close enough to linear for this discussion...). See? Good news.
As a side note to the main point here, Sections 5.2 and 5.3 (pages 32-46) cover the step by step manufacturing process, from raw materials to LEDs and then to replacement lamps. From the energy and waste impact sides, It's easy to jump to the bottom line there, but wait... save that PDF as it's one of the best semi-technical primers ever on how LED lamps come to life. Except for the whizzing machines and dancing test probes, it's like the "How It's Made" TV program on steroids. It also includes the anticipated improvements in the technology in processing over the next 5 years, which will probably find some use for a lot of COO- and CTO-oriented PowerPoints for years to come...
When it comes to the 15 metrics that have been compiled for the three different types of lamps, it probably comes as no surprise that the portion attributable to the use phase, as opposed to raw materials, manufacturing, transport or disposal, represents 93% of the lifetime impact purely as a result of energy use. What is surprising is that for CFLs, energy represents 78% of the impact, and with assumed LED replacement lamps, the impact is still only down to 81% (yes, slightly behind CFLs, because of the LED manufacturing processes). Even with the 130 lumen/watt assumptions for the LED lamp of 2017, the energy effects remain substantial at 78% of the total impact. As far as the overall assessment, the report summarizes:
Overall, the impacts of the LED lamp in 2017 are significantly less than the incandescent, and about 70% lower than the CFL and approximately 50% lower than the LED lamp in 2012, which itself is the best available technology in 2012. The important finding from these graphs is not necessarily the minor relative differences between the [current] CFL and LED lamps, but instead the very significant reduction in environmental impacts that will result from replacing an incandescent lamp. Environmental impact reductions on the order of 3 to 10 times are possible across the indicators through transitioning the market to these more efficacious light sources.
So guess what? The LED lamps win, and will continue to improve as we head into the future. It's a good place to be.
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