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White lighting: Organic light-emitting diodes like this could be the future of lighting, thanks to very high efficiencies, which outperform even fluorescent lights.
F. Erler / N. Seidler
OLEDs could soon give fluorescent lighting a run for its money.
An organic light-emitting diode (OLED) developed in Germany has the potential to produce the same quality of white light as incandescent bulbs but with power efficiencies considerably better than even fluorescent lighting.
The prototype OLED could emerge as an ultra-efficient light source for displays and general lighting, says Sebastian Reineke, who led the research at the Institute for Applied Photophysics, in Dresden, Germany. The long-term goal is to fabricate the device using conventional low-cost roll-to-roll printing.
In recent years, many countries have begun looking to switch from incandescent lighting to compact fluorescent bulbs because the latter are so much more energy efficient. There has also been a lot of interest in using light-emitting diodes (LEDs) for displays and general lighting, again because of the potential energy savings they offer.
But with both fluorescent and LED lighting, the quality of white light produced has always left something to be desired. Fluorescent lighting can make people appear unhealthy because less red light is emitted, while most white LEDs on the market today have a bluish quality, making them appear cold.
In contrast, OLEDs can be made from a wide range of materials, so achieving good-quality white light is less challenging, says Reineke. It has not been the quality of light that has let OLEDs down but rather their efficiencies. Fluorescent lighting typically operates at around 60 to 70 lumens per watt, while incandescent bulbs operate at about 10 to 17 lumens per watt. In contrast, says Reineke, the best reported power efficiency of an OLED until now was 44 lumens per watt.
In this week's issue of the journal Nature, Reineke and his colleagues report a novel structural design for an OLED that exhibits efficiencies of 90 lumens per watt and shows potential to go up to 124 lumens per watt.
"These efficiencies are very compelling," says Peter Kazlas, director of device development for QD Vision, a company based in Cambridge, MA, that's developing quantum-dot-based LED lighting.
"OLEDs have the potential to grow into a really very energy-efficient light source," adds Kristin Knappstein, business-development manager at Philips Lighting, in Aachen, Germany. Her company already has an OLED lighting product on the market called Lumiblade. "In production, we achieve levels of between 15 and 20 lumens per watt," she says, adding that the ultimate potential is for the technology to reach efficiencies as high as 150 lumens per watt.
It's just a matter of time until the OLEDs get the same longevity as LEDs. But the question is if developing this technology is useful. I don't believe that the problem of the LEDs is that they emit blue light, at lest is not a big problem.
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if they are designed wrong.
they are particulary heat sensitive. in discussion of another article on this site a person had dissected a LED headlight after it failed, found it was designed wrong, and would blow out early no matter what.
if they overheat the semiconductor atoms which are loosely bound migrate and cause failure like letting your pentium run without a heat sink.
Philips has made a good job with his Lumibledes.Only commercial OLED light panel.
See here http://www.oledgadgets.com/oled-lighting.html.
I think that very soon we can expect more companies will have OLED lighting products.
Tremendous research is on on LEDs especially Organic. It is hoped they will revolutionalise lighting and will be affordable in developing countries.
Dr.A.Jagadeesh Nellore(AP),India
E-mail: anumakonda.jagadeesh@gmail.com
Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.
javs
97 Comments
Disruptive Light?
"Our devices have lifetimes of just a few hours"
Disruptive technologies start like that. What are the posibilities to increase lifetimes? Will they compete with high efficiency and short life (i.e. 500 hrs.)? Could be! It is just a matter of having the economics right in a world of expensive energy.
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Guest (quatermass)
Re: Disruptive Light?
Surely they've solved the lifetime aspect of OLED?
Sony and Samsung already sell OLED TVs with a lifetime of 10,000+ hours.
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