LEDs could lower household bills

New technology could cut UK power use by equivalent of eight power stations

By Greenwire

29 Jan 2009

Comments: 1

Lights

A new way of making LEDs could see household lighting bills reduced by up to 75 per cent within five years time, thanks to research at Cambridge University.

The new LEDs use Gallium Nitride (GaN), a man-made semiconductor that emits a brilliant bright light but uses very little electricity. Until now high production costs have made GaN lighting too expensive for widespread use in homes and offices.

The Cambridge University Centre for Gallium Nitride, with funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), has developed a new way of making GaN which could produce LEDs for a tenth of current prices.

The new technique grows GaN on silicon wafers, which achieves a 50 per cent improvement in cost and efficiency on previous approaches to grow GaN in labs on expensive sapphire wafers, used since the 1990s.

Based on current results, GaN LED lights in every home and office could cut the proportion of UK electricity used for lights from 20 per cent to 5 per cent - a reduction equivalent to the output of eight power stations.

A GaN LED can burn for 100,000 hours and therefore, on average, only needs replacing after 60 years. And, unlike currently available energy-saving bulbs, GaN LEDs do not contain mercury eliminating the environmental problems posed by their disposal. GaN LEDs also have the advantage of turning on instantly and being dimmable.

Professor Colin Humphreys, lead scientist on the project said: "This could well be the holy grail in terms of providing our lighting needs for the future. We are very close to achieving highly efficient, low cost white LEDs that can take the place of both traditional and currently available low-energy light bulbs. That won't just be good news for the environment, it will also benefit consumers by cutting their electricity bills."

GaN LEDs, used to illuminate landmarks like Buckingham Palace and the Severn Bridge, are also appearing in camera flashes, mobile phones, torches, bicycle lights and interior bus, train and plane lighting.

Parallel research is also being carried out into how GaN lights could mimic sunlight to help 3m people in the UK with Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD).

Ultraviolet rays made from GaN lighting could also aid water purification and disease control in developing countries, identify the spread of cancer tumours and help fight hospital 'super bugs'.

The Cambridge Centre for Gallium Nitride was established in 2000 and its research work is underpinned by £1.6 million of EPSRC funding.

The Centre's industrial partners include Aixtron, Forge Europa, QinetiQ, Sharp Europe, Philips, Semelab and RFMD. UK academic collaborators include Manchester, Oxford and Sheffield Hallam Universities.

This article is from Greenwire.org.uk

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment

  

Greg Barker has said that despite cuts to solar incentives the industry will continue to grow this year - is he right?

8%

7%

9%

76%

INSIGHT

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel


Hardware Engineer / Electroni

10 Feb 2012

Hardware Engineer FPGA,VHDL,Embedded C,PCB Layout,Orcad My client a leading design and manufacturing company is looking for an experienced hardware engineer, electronic engineer. This forward thinking organisation will create ample opportunities for the right Hardware electronics engineer. The Hardware Engineer will design, implement, evaluate and verify complete data acquisition systems and the s

APC

Guidelines for specification of data centre power density

The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres

Quocirca

Powering the data centre

A look at alternative approaches to managing energy for cost and/or sustainability reasons in data centres