• DocumentCode
    79420
  • Title

    The Lighting Revolution: If We Were Experts Before, We´re Novices Now

  • Author

    Cole, Marty ; Driscoll, Tom

  • Author_Institution
    Hubbell Canada, Pickering, ON, Canada
  • Volume
    50
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    March-April 2014
  • Firstpage
    1509
  • Lastpage
    1520
  • Abstract
    Electrical lighting has seen many advancements since Edison first patented his version of the incandescent lamp. From those early days, lighting technology eventually changed with the introduction of mercury vapor, fluorescent, metal halide, and high-pressure sodium lamps. While each of these new light sources offered tremendous benefits over the incandescent lamp, their acceptance and any further advancement happened over a number of decades. Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) as a method of general lighting entered the market in the early 2000s. They were expensive and not very energy efficient. Within a few years, these lighting LEDs had dramatically improved. By 2006, they became trendy for residential and commercial applications, crossing over into the roadway lighting market a couple of years later. By 2010, they had become very “popular” as an industrial light source. In 2011, LEDs became mainstream and more affordable. Moving forward, LEDs are poised to dominate. Over the next decade, it is expected that LEDs will render most other light sources obsolete. The dilemma is that just about every evaluation method used for the past 140 years for every other light source cannot be applied directly to LED light sources. This paper will examine the LED revolution and what you need to know to survive.
  • Keywords
    LED lamps; filament lamps; fluorescent lamps; mercury vapour lamps; LED light sources; commercial applications; electrical lighting; evaluation method; fluorescent lamps; general lighting; high-pressure sodium lamps; incandescent lamp; light-emitting diodes; mercury vapor lamps; metal halide lamps; residential applications; roadway lighting market; Fixtures; Fluorescent lamps; High intensity discharge lamps; Light emitting diodes; Light sources; Standards; Inorganic light-emitting diodes (LEDs); LED lamps; LEDs; light sources; lighting; organic LEDs;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0093-9994
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TIA.2013.2288210
  • Filename
    6654313