Thursday, May 7, 2009

Tiny Dots Make New LEDs Easier on the Eyes

Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) are prime candidates for replacing inefficient incandescent bulbs but have a few things working against them. They can provide a pleasing warm light or they can be energy-efficient, but they haven't been able to be both at the same time.

On Tuesday, two small companies showed off an LED lamp that's both very power-efficient and produces a light similar to that of a standard tungsten or halogen bulb.

Tiny Dots

The LEDs in the lamp shine through a thin layer of "quantum dots," a scattering of particles of very small but precisely controlled size. When light hits them, they emit light of a different color, much like the "phosphor" layer of a fluorescent tube. The magic of quantum dots is that the color they emit can be controlled very accurately by adjusting their size, which means less wasted energy and more pleasing color.

The dots are so small that more than 10,000 of them could be could be lined up over the width of a human hair. The Quantum Light lamp is made by Nexxus Lighting of Charlotte, N.C., which demonstrated it at the Light Fair trade show in New York. The lamp will go on sale late this year at an as yet undetermined price. Nexxus already sells a version of it that lacks quantum dots, yielding a bluer, harsher light, for around US$100.

The more pleasing light produced by quantum dots could allow LEDs to outshine compact fluorescent bulbs, which are energy-efficient but have taken time to win over consumers, said Bill Blackley, vice president at Nexxus.

"A hundred years, incandescents have been around. That's what people want," Blackley said.