There’s no question that LED illumination represents the next
technological step in home lighting. But how many consumers feel the
same way? Opinions are divided as they weigh the tradeoffs between LED
price, performance, lifecycles, and environmental impacts.
The
early attempts at home LED lighting failed. Its light output and color
characteristics both were below standard. Today’s LEDs have improved,
though, and their output and color performance probably are better than
conventional light sources.
Despite those advantages, consumers
still vacillate over LED prices. They also remain dubious about how long
these products last and how much they’ll save in power costs after
making that initial purchase. Environmental considerations are further
down on their list of priorities.
LEDs will last between 50,000
and 100,000 hours. With 8760 hours in a year, an LED operating 24 hours a
day would have a lifespan of 5.7 years. An LED operating just eight
hours a day would last 17.1 years. Consumers often wonder how we know
that these LEDs will last that long, though.
An LED’s true
lifespan is related to lumen depreciation. According to the Illuminating
Engineering Society, once an LED hits 30% depreciation, its lifespan is
over. In other words, an LED specified with a 100,000-hour lifespan
could be used effectively for about 70,000 hours. It would still work
after that, but with reduced lumen output.
Lifespan and junction
temperature are key elements in LED reliability. Junction temperature is
the temperature at the point where an individual diode connects to its
base. Maintaining a low junction temperature increases output and slows
LED lumen depreciation.
The junction temperature typically should
be maintained below 120°C, requiring a number of heat dissipation
strategies. The three principal means of heat transfer are conduction,
convection, and radiation. Generally, LEDs are encapsulated in a resin
that happens to be a lousy thermal conductor
The heat issues that
LEDs create stem from the P-N junction, which is formed in
semiconductors by the doping process, in effect creating two
semiconductors. The boundary between the two is the P-N junction, which
forms a one-way street for the current to pass through.
As
electrons move from one crystal to another within the structure of the
semiconductor, they fill electron holes and emit photons (light). The
heat is generated from the P-N junction by electrical energy that has
not been converted into light. This heat must be conducted to the
atmosphere via a heatsink. The junction temperature drops when the total
thermal resistance from the junction point to atmospheric release is
minimized.
Drive current and ambient temperature also can
influence the junction temperature. The higher the drive current, the
greater the heat generated at the junction. Heat must be moved away from
the junction to maintain the specified light output, lifespan, and
color. The amount of heat that can be removed depends on the ambient
temperature and the design of the thermal path from the junction to the
surroundings.
Each LED lighting design must efficiently transfer
as much heat as possible away from the LED P-N junction. A severely
heat-stressed LED will lose efficiency and light output will diminish,
possibly resulting in product failure.
There are other
advantages, too. LEDs don’t emit ultraviolet (UV) radiation, which means
that organic items like manuscripts and paintings won’t be degraded.
LEDs also are useful in the kitchen because they don’t attract insects.
Their light doesn’t flicker either, benefitting migraine sufferers as
well.
Environmentally, LEDs are way ahead of conventional
lighting systems. They don’t include toxic chemicals such as mercury,
which can be found in fluorescent lights, nor do they rely on filaments
or combustible gases to produce light. They also are manufactured from
materials that can, in the main, be recycled.
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