LEDs And Smart Lighting Could Save Trillions Of Dollars, Spark Global Innovation
![R, G, and B LEDs [7]. R, G, and B LEDs [7].](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/cb/RBG-LED.jpg/202px-RBG-LED.jpg)
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ScienceDaily (Dec. 20, 2008)
A “revolution” in the way we illuminate our world is imminent, according to a paper published this week by two professors at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.
Innovations in photonics and solid state lighting will lead to trillions of dollars in cost savings, along with a massive reduction in the amount of energy required to light homes and businesses around the globe, the researchers forecast.
A new generation of lighting devices based on light-emitting diodes (LEDs) will supplant the common light bulb in coming years, the paper suggests. In addition to the environmental and cost benefits of LEDs, the technology is expected to enable a wide range of advances in areas as diverse as healthcare, transportation systems, digital displays, and computer networking.
“What the transistor meant to the development of electronics, the LED means to the field of photonics. This core device has the potential to revolutionize how we use light,” wrote co-authors E. Fred Schubert and Jong Kyu Kim.
Schubert is the Wellfleet Senior Constellation Professor of Future Chips at Rensselaer, and heads the university’s National Science Foundation-funded Smart Lighting Center. Kim is a research assistant professor of electrical, computer, and systems engineering. The paper, titled “Transcending the replacement paradigm of solid-state lighting,” will be published in the Dec. 22, 2008 issue of Optics Express.
Researchers are able to control every aspect of light generated by LEDs, allowing the light sources to be tweaked and optimized for nearly any situation, Schubert and Kim said. In general LEDs will require 20 times less power than today’s conventional light bulbs, and five times less power than “green” compact fluorescent bulbs.
If all of the world’s light bulbs were replaced with LEDs for a period of 10 years, Schubert and Kim estimate the following benefits would be realized:
- Energy savings of 1.9 × 1020 joules
- Electrical energy consumption would be reduced by terawatt hours
- Financial savings of $1.83 trillion
- Carbon dioxide emissions would be reduced by 10.68 gigatons
- Crude oil consumption would be reduced by 962 million barrels
- The number of required global power plants would be reduced by 280
With all of the promise and potential of LEDs, Schubert and Kim said it is important not to pigeonhole or dismiss smart lighting technology as a mere replacement for conventional light bulbs. The paper is a call to arms for scientists and engineers, and stresses that advances in photonics will position solid state lighting as a catalyst for unexpected, currently unimaginable technological advances.
“Deployed on a large scale, LEDs have the potential to tremendously reduce pollution, save energy, save financial resources, and add new and unprecedented functionalities to photonic devices. These factors make photonics what could be termed a benevolent tsunami, an irresistible wave, a solution to many global challenges currently faced by humanity and will be facing even more in the years to come,” the researchers wrote. “Transcending the replacement paradigm will open up a new chapter in photonics: Smart lighting sources that are controllable, tunable, intelligent, and communicative.”
Possible smart lighting applications include rapid biological cell identification, interactive roadways, boosting plant growth, and better supporting human circadian rhythms to reduce an individual’s dependency on sleep-inducing drugs or reduce the risk of certain types of cancer.
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I really notice some benefits of LED’s. For example, LED headlamps that you use for camping or hiking at night. They use a fraction of the batteries and are much lighter than the crummy incandescent lamps we used to have to use.
Though the one thing I dont’ like is LED Christmas lights. Yes, I know they’er supposed to save money. (And theoretically, if we were good Citizens of the earth, we wouldn’t put up Christmas lights in the fist place!)
But I LIKE Christmas ligths. And I like them bright. And the cold, forlorn-looking LED’s just dont’ cut it!
With those financial savings, we might be able to pay off all the bailouts!
I have so much hope for the future, if our leaders will just develop some political will.
Oh, wait, that’s our job, isn’t it…to be their “political will”?
Beth Partin’s last blog post..Two Conversations in Denver
LED’s are awesome – the backlight on a lot of the newer laptops is LED, which is brighter *and* uses less power – so you can see even outside in the sun, and the battery lasts longer.
Also, LED’s are better than CFL’s as they have fewer hazardous materials and work better in cold weather than CFL’s.
Brett Legree’s last blog post..viking fridays – burning logs and reindeer bones.
Friar: I’m with you on the Christmas lights thing. I love bright, warm sparkly ones!
Beth: I’m afraid those financial savings will be a pittance compared to the debt! Though some saving is better than nothing!
Brett: Hey, I didn’t know that. Hmmm.
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