Home › Electrical Engineering Forum › General Discussion › Energy efficient lighting : CFL vs LED
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2013/02/22 at 2:31 pm #10878Steven MillParticipant
Artificial lighting was first invented to illuminate a room in times of darkness. But recently, beyond just the purpose of illumination, artificial light is more of being used as an aesthetic element in the modern architecture of many kinds of spaces. Conservation of energy is also one of the main considerations in the modern life of the human race. Artificial lighting accounts to about 15% of the energy consumption of a typical building. It is then obvious that it depends on the supply of energy and this energy – which is mostly of electrical form – should be used efficiently.
Old model bulbs were made of incandescent globes which use a tungsten filament enclosed in an air-tight clear glass case filled with an inert gas. A high electrical current is used to heat the filament until it glows while the inert gas protects the filament from oxidation. This process is estimated to use around 5% of the electrical energy to produce light and the rest is converted to heat.
New electrical bulb inventions mostly concentrate on improving this disadvantage. Two of the most common such electrical bulbs are the Light Emitting Diode (LED) bulb and Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) bulb. These new-tech bulbs are designed to replace the incandescent bulb in form and function but with a much improved efficiency of converting electrical energy to light. However the use of any of the two has its own pros and cons.
[caption id="attachment_5494" align="aligncenter" width="450"] Typical incandescent, CFL and LED bulbs (as they appear from left to right)[/caption]
Light Emitting Diode (LED) Bulb
These bulbs are made from a cluster assembly of small solid state light emitting semiconductors that work by the principle of electroluminescence. Even though these diodes were originally small in size and produce a weak intensity of light, they have been improved to be brighter. The grouping design is also made to resemble the shape of the incandescent lamp and the connector is made to fit outlets that were designed for the incandescent lamp. These bulbs are advertised to use only a third to a tenth of the amount of energy other kinds of lamps will use to produce the same amount of light.
Compact Fluorescent Light (CFL) Bulb
As their name indicates these lamps are fluorescent lamps constructed in a compact shape and size. The working principle here is using electrical discharge to excite a small trace of mercury vapor – which is trapped in a glass tube that is coated with a fluorescent material – so that it produces ultraviolet light. The ultraviolet light causes the fluorescent coating to produce bright visible light. In order to support the discharge across the tube, electronic ballast is housed in the base of the bulb. This process uses only one third to one fifth of the energy an incandescent lamp would use to produce equivalent amount of light.
Comparison between LED and CFL
- Efficiency: LED bulbs use close to a third of the amount of power CFL bulbs would use to produce the same amount of light. This makes them the ideal choice in portable applications for the purpose of extended battery life.
- Durability: LED bulbs last ten times longer than CFL bulbs. Additionally, the lifetime of a CFL bulb tends to drop drastically when it is used in a frequently cycled application. LED bulbs also exhibit a far better performance in a vibratory application.
- Cost: The complex manufacturing process of semiconductors makes LED bulbs expensive on the market. LED manufacturers rationalize this fact by the bulbs longer life time and energy efficiency.
- Environment: The traces of mercury in CFL bulbs will be spilled when the glass is broken. The smallest amounts of mercury vapor are toxic to the human body and cause nervous system problems. Mercury is not used in LED bulbs.
- Versatility: CFL bulbs are limited to general lighting applications while LED bulbs could range in size, color and shape. LED bulbs could be used from decorative to heavy duty industrial applications.
What do you think about this comparison between LED and CFL? Is there any others pros or cons in terms of efficiency, durability, cost, environment or versatility?
2013/02/27 at 10:10 am #13101AnonymousGuestThe IEC recently issued an interresting paper about how to appreciate the efficiency and comfort of these lighting bulbs: “Watt? No. Think Lumen!”.
The paper is accessible here : http://www.iec.ch/etech/2013/etech_0113/tech-4.htm
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2013/02/28 at 5:45 am #13105AnonymousGuestThe link is not opening, or either you can say page is not found.
2013/02/28 at 8:41 am #13107AnonymousGuestAppart from more mfg. cost,LED requires more installation space,other factors remaining identical.Hence in terms of initial cost cfl is in positoin of advantage.Moreover,everyone highlights the longevity factor of LED,which is often manufacturer guaranteed,but no one talks about life of costly LED Drivers,which is never guranteed.
2013/02/28 at 10:15 am #13108AnonymousGuestHas anyone thought about the reactive power in LED and CFL’s? Energy suppliers won’t be happy with this. As a customer I’m not complaining, but supplying energy at factor 1 and only receiving money for a factor 0,8 or worse?
2013/02/28 at 12:13 pm #13110AnonymousGuestOne must consider the cost of ordinary bulb vis a vis CFL or LED. CFL and LED contains mercury which cannot be removed from the substance and is non destructible and also harmful for human life.
2013/03/01 at 6:52 am #13111AnonymousGuestInduction Lights are another good source. They do use mercury unlike the LED ones but with a life of 5-7 that of Metal halide and 50% less energy use they are worth considering.
2013/03/03 at 7:24 pm #13119AnonymousGuestHave we no direct answer.The main problem I have is colour.LED seem to have too much blue,the eco have too much red.Both use less watts of power than tungsten and longer life.
2013/03/24 at 8:46 am #13132AnonymousGuestDo you know of any study made to compare the reactive power and hence effect on PF of CFL vs LED lightings?
2013/04/02 at 10:15 pm #13022AnonymousGuestHi,
I believe the kVAR produced by the CFL’s and LED’s are very small. CFL’s can be considered as a resistive load, thus producing very small amount of kVAR. On the other hand, LED is a nonlinear load, so this may affect the whole system’s pF because of the Harmonics Distortion that it may cause.
2013/04/05 at 11:48 am #13025samueljordanParticipantYou have shared very informative thread here, we have to consider on energy savings in this expensive energy bills and lack of resources, we can use solar energy and use some energy efficient products like you have made a comparison between two electric products. In my opinion LED are more efficient than CFL. ;)
2013/05/03 at 10:26 pm #13059AnonymousGuestThe only disadvantage stems from higher cost of LED (at least to the present). The savings in energy use more than compensate over CFL.
2013/06/28 at 8:59 am #13303AnonymousGuestLED light is the modern way of lighting and have numerous benefits over other lighting sources like CFL or halogen lighting. The only thing about LED is its high cost but that don’t bother much as it is a power saving option thus ultimately will reduce your electricity bills
2013/06/29 at 8:46 am #13305AnonymousGuestrequired LED lights comparison form other lights
2013/06/29 at 8:48 am #13306AnonymousGuestrequired calculation software for make comparison lights between led lights and others lights
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