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Title: LED's efficiency exceeds 100%
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.physorg.com/news/2012-03-efficiency.html
Published: Mar 9, 2012
Author: Lisa Zyga
Post Date: 2012-03-09 11:38:30 by gengis gandhi
Keywords: None
Views: 157
Comments: 4

LED's efficiency exceeds 100% March 5, 2012 by Lisa Zyga

Enlarge An LED’s power conversion (wall-plug) efficiency varies inversely with its optical output power. Wall-plug efficiency can exceed 100%, the unity efficiency, at low applied voltages and high temperatures. Image credit: Santhanam, et al. ©2012 American Physical Society

(PhysOrg.com) -- For the first time, researchers have demonstrated that an LED can emit more optical power than the electrical power it consumes. Although scientifically intriguing, the results won’t immediately result in ultra- efficient commercial LEDs since the demonstration works only for LEDs with very low input power that produce very small amounts of light.

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The researchers, Parthiban Santhanam and coauthors from MIT, have published their study in a recent issue of Physical Review Letters. As the researchers explain in their study, the key to achieving a power conversion efficiency above 100%, i.e., “unity efficiency,” is to greatly decrease the applied voltage. According to their calculations, as the voltage is halved, the input power is decreased by a factor of 4, while the emitted light power scales linearly with voltage so that it’s also only halved. In other words, an LED’s efficiency increases as its output power decreases. (The inverse of this relationship - that LED efficiency decreases as its output power increases - is one of the biggest hurdles in designing bright, efficient LED lights.)

In their experiments, the researchers reduced the LED’s input power to just 30 picowatts and measured an output of 69 picowatts of light - an efficiency of 230%. The physical mechanisms worked the same as with any LED: when excited by the applied voltage, electrons and holes have a certain probability of generating photons. The researchers didn’t try to increase this probability, as some previous research has focused on, but instead took advantage of small amounts of excess heat to emit more power than consumed. This heat arises from vibrations in the device’s atomic lattice, which occur due to entropy. This light-emitting process cools the LED slightly, making it operate similar to a thermoelectric cooler. Although the cooling is insufficient to provide practical cooling at room temperature, it could potentially be used for designing lights that don’t generate heat. When used as a heat pump, the device might be useful for solid-state cooling applications or even power generation. Theoretically, this low-voltage strategy allows for an arbitrarily efficient generation of photons at low voltages. For this reason, the researchers hope that the technique could offer a new way to test the limits of energy-efficiency electromagnetic communication.

More information: Parthiban Santhanam, et al. “Thermoelectrically Pumped Light- Emitting Diodes Operating above Unity Efficiency.” Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 097403 (2012). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.097403 Physics Synopsis

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 4.

#1. To: All (#0)

are we seeing the pattern yet?

gengis gandhi  posted on  2012-03-09   11:38:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: gengis gandhi (#1) (Edited)

are we seeing the pattern yet?

The pattern I'm seeing with LEDs for general lighting so far, is very bad. I just installed a 16" LED encapsulated strip light and it's already starting to fail after 3 months. It's dimmed to about 50% brightness and about 10% of the SMD LEDs have failed completely.

The worst experience I've had was with some LED F40 4 foot flourescent tube replacements. They were about a hundred bucks apiece and the lifespan was less than 3 days max. I actually saw one of them fail, it went off like a zipper burning out from one end to the other in about a second. Ziiiiiiiiiiiiiiip! Dead.

The only LEDs I've had any luck with are some 5 LED nightlight bulbs I got from SuperBrightLEDs. They're in my front-load washer and dryer, replacing the 10 Watt appliance bulb originals. I've also had good luck with some GE bulbs I got from Sam's club. They look like a standard bulb but smaller, and only put out maybe the equivalent of 15 Watts. That's it, every other bulbs I've tried have been an epic fail. I've tried dozens.

I don't see what the big problem is, the loop and arm LEDs in my DTI Datura alarm keypads in my house have been running for over 30 years now with the only problem a cold solder joint on one of the LEDs. The loop LEDs are on almost constantly, probably about 30,000 hours plus by now.

It's probably just planned obsolescence/value-based engineering like everything else. I'm running into that every day now and it's starting to piss me off. I don't like covering the same scorched earth time after time. Recently, I've had to replace the DVD drive in my 400-disc DVD player for the second time. The drive is only a hundred bucks, but it's one of the most challenging jobs I've ever had to do (twice). You have to work with a magnifying hood, and the space is so tight it's like trying to get a baseball bat through the holes of a salt shaker.

I really had high hopes for that LED striplight I put in a few months ago, it was the perfect size/shape, good color and it put the light right where it needed to be, but with an average $10/month replacement cost, not including my time, it's not worth it.

Esso  posted on  2012-03-09   13:15:52 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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