This is delightful news. We all know the difference in light quality and naturally prefer a broader spectral output closer to the sun's available output which is caused by a lot of hot gases radiating.
Modern fabrication allows for the manufacture of an infrared reflector that sends that portion back into the hot filament for another round of absorption and emission. This ends up increasing efficiency and although 40% may be totally unattainable it is plausible that a superior percentage will be that makes our present technology obsolete.
They will not be cheap though and they will need to be also robust as well. Yet we may soon have a superior lighting source that runs cold..
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An incandescent light bulb, the most efficient bulb
http://motls.blogspot.ca/2016/01/an-incandescent-light-bulb-most.html
One of the things that the government bureaucracy can't do is to
predict the direction that the free scientific and technological
progress will take in the future. No one can really do it, not even the
best minds let alone stupid arrogant aßholes that have to be employed as
regulators within the government structures.
MIT researchers have reminded us about one striking example. The Wikipedia contains a page titled Phase-out of incandescent light bulbs whose first sentence says:
Governments around the world have passed measures to phase out incandescent light bulbs for general lighting in favor of more energy-efficient lighting alternatives.
You see, governments across the world "passed measures"
based on their belief – a dogma, to be more precise – that there's
something intrinsically and unavoidably wrong about incandescent light
bulbs when it comes to their energy efficiency and this defect can't go
away.
But the energy is conserved. It can't get lost, it may only be converted
from one form to another. What we care about is whether the form of the
energy that we get is "useful". Heat is often considered useful by many
people – but sometimes it's not.
Incandescent light bulbs are based on the conversion of the electric
current to heat which gets converted to light because heated objects
emit electromagnetic radiation. The emitted light nicely carries all the
frequencies, especially those within the interval of the visible
spectrum, but also some frequencies that are "not useful", like the
infrared waves. Those don't help us to see and only propagate as a form
of heat.
But there's no reason to think that this problem can't be circumvented.
There's no reason to be confident that the incandescent light bulbs
won't return as the most widespread light bulbs. Yesterday, an MIT group
has issued a press release ("Recycling light") which reports their results on the construction of a light
bulb that that is going to be almost 3 times more efficient than the
best LED light bulbs. The latter only convert 7-15 percent of the energy
to light; the new MIT technology is estimated to get to 40 percent soon
although with the efficiency of 6.6%, the prototypes only "match" some
of the weaker LED competitors so far. That's still a 3-fold improvement
from "bare" conventional light bulbs whose efficiency is 2-3 percent.
Fluorescents stand at 5-13 percent.
To make things really old-fashioned, the most important light-emitting
component of their light bulb is... a wolfram (tungsten) filament, the
same one people have been using since the 19th century. It is heated to
3,000 kelvins. So far, everything sounds conventional. What's added is
the stuff around, a cold-side nanophotonic interference system which is designed so that it simply transmits the visible
light while it reflects the infrared light. So the "invisible" infrared
light that would normally escape and turn its energy into heat losses is
(partly) reflected back to the filament and helps to increase the
temperature of this filament so that you don't have to pump too much
electricity into it. When the filament gets another chance (or another
chance afterwards, and so on), it may emit the same energy in the form
of the visible light.
In this way, Ilic, Bermel, Chen, Joannopoulos, Celanovic, and Soljacic
simply "recycle the light". Some light that has the wrong frequency gets
returned to the source and has an increased chance to come out as the
light at a "right" frequency. The know-how behind the materials that may
return one frequency and transmit another is known as the photonic crystals.
They are periodic or nearly periodic nanostructures that act on the
light of different frequencies much like the ordinary crystals.
The advantages of incandescent light bulbs are obvious. The flawless
white light contains the electromagnetic radiation of all visible
frequencies – pretty much fairly represented – and the light bulb has
the right color and intensity a split second after you turn it on. I am
sure that many people would welcome the comeback of Edison's light
bulbs.
There exists a general reason to think that all similar plans to "switch
the world's technology" from one type of a product to another (e.g.
from incandescent bulbs to LED) is completely counterproductive: such
communist-style planning doesn't work well at any timescales. What do I mean?
Well, such transitions can't be "prescribed" too quickly because the
transition costs and the hassle would obviously be too high. You would
need hundreds of millions of people to replace their light bulbs
quickly. You don't even have this many new light bulbs and so on. So
these regulators typically define a deadline – five years in the future
or something like that – by which point the transition should take
place.
However, this delayed implementation paradigm is completely flawed, too.
It's flawed because the research in labs such as the MIT labs often
takes place more quickly than that – more quickly than the time
needed to replace products in the real world. And in five years,
completely different products may be ready that totally change the game
and that can make the bulbs (or other technologies) rendered obsolete
the winners again.
Similar comments apply to much more serious questions than the light
bulbs – such as the fossil fuels. Whether fossil fuels are going to be
the best solution in 2040 or not depends on the answers to many
questions that are currently unknown. Fossil fuels seem to be the most
convenient source of energy today but this may very well be the case in
the future, too. Many discoveries may take place. The CO2 climate
sensitivity may turn out to be extremely low. CO2 may be captured in a
way that will shut the mouth of the climate alarmists even if the
sensitivity is high. Fossil fuels may become renewable and people will
produce them from something else (plus another source of energy). And so
on. Whenever something like that happens, it will mean that the
rational way for the people to adapt will be different than before. It's
totally harmful to predetermine how the people should behave in the
next 5, 10, or 20 years.
It is a form of a terrorist attack for someone to try to eliminate
the incandescent light bulbs or fossil fuels or anything else from the
spectrum of competing technologies. People trying to ban whole segments
of technology must be treated as Luddites and on par with other
terrorists.
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