热度 19
2015-4-23 22:09
1684 次阅读|
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It’s not news that LED-based bulbs are replacing the venerable incandescent bulb. In many jurisdictions, the basic incandescent bulb (especially for higher wattages) can no longer be sold; only “specialty” versions are still allowed. The basic bulb has served us well for over 100 years, with the standard “Edison” A19 base in the U.S. and similar versions in the rest of the world (there are other standard bases in use, as well, such as the smaller candelabra). The bulbs are available in wide array of wattages, envelopes, and configurations, and replacement bulbs are generally easy to find; even if an exact replacement is a problem, you can usually get one that is close-enough to tide you over. We’re accustomed to the 1,000-to-2,000 hour lifetime of the incandescent and accept that we’ll have to replace it. Now the market is providing LED-based replacements for the A19-base bulb. These units package the LED driver circuitry in the base, so users can directly replace the incandescent unit with the LED-based one. However, packing the needed AC/DC LED-driver circuitry into the base is a physical challenge, and the heat of the LED and its driver adversely affect the reliability of the driver's components. Sponsor video, mouseover for sound What's this? inRead™ invented by Teads.tv Yet there’s a trend that is starting to gain traction, and a recent report "Integrated LED Lighting Poised to Challenge Traditional Light Bulbs" from market researcher IHS provides some numbers. The report indicates that designers of lighting fixtures — termed “luminaires” in the industry — are now starting to produce designs which recognize the reality of LEDs: the LED itself has a lifetime of tens of thousands of hours. If you design a luminaire and assume there will be no need to replace these LEDs during its service life, you can put the driver elsewhere in the product; you are no longer constrained to the classical blub form factor, shown below (in top image). As a result, thermal management is simplified while the driver and LEDs are both in better thermal situations. The form factor of the traditional incandescent bulb (above) is being copied by the LED replacement (below), but separating them results in greater reliability and radically new luminaire designs. (Source: Intelligent Lighting and Control Solutions, Microchip Technology) Tossing out the long-standing fundamental mandate that any LED-based luminaires must use replaceable A19-style bulbs gives designers a major new degree of freedom. These new luminaires can have new forms and shapes from an esthetic perspective, and can also be freed from the issue of their own heat degrading their reliability. It’s a classic case being able to solve an old problem (in this case, luminaire design) in a very new way due to a new technology, just as the electric bulb was first retrofitted into gas and candle-based fixtures, but soon spurred entirely new types of designs as there was no longer a risk due to the open-flame source of light. Yet this ability to design without worrying about using a replaceable bulb changes more than the design basis; it also changes the meaning of longevity. If a luminaire is designed so that its LEDs are no longer replaceable — often called Least Replaceable Units, or LRUs, in mil/aero and server markets — will this meet with consumer understanding and acceptance? Yes, LEDs and their power supplies last a long time, but many luminaires are in use for five, ten, twenty, and even more years. What happens when that now-old luminaire power supply or LED gives out? Will consumers accept the fact that their luminaire likely will need to be totally replaced, or that an expensive repair is needed (many of these supplies are custom-fitted units)? Will replacement power supplies or LEDs be available after a decade? Perhaps there be specialty shops which repair those "old" LED-based luminaires, if they can get the parts, Adding to the challenge: many luminaires are hard-wired into the AC line rather than just plugged into a line socket, so taking one into the shop for repair means having to un-wire it — not a practical task for most people, or in many ceiling installations. What do you think about the transition from luminaires with standard replaceable bulbs versus those where the LEDs and supply are separate so that when either one fails, the product may have to be tossed out? Is this inevitable progress, or a short-sighted design decision?