Sunday, April 26, 2009

LED Efficiency & Usage


  • Natural History Museum had its rotunda building renovated
  • Replaced incandescent bulbs with LED bulbs
  • Saved energy in more than one way

LEDs?


Maintenance workers for the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County used to have to go up a tall ladder to replace incandescent bulbs hung 30 feet high in the rotunda building several times a week, said Don Webb, president of Cordell Corporation, a boutique firm that manages the development of large assembly facilities such as the museum. Then in April 2008, the museum had Webb’s company replace the incandescent bulbs with 144 different bulbs. Now, maintenance workers won’t have to replace the new bulbs for up to ten years.



The replacement bulbs contain light emitting diodes, or LEDs. They are primarily a light source, but have also ventured into the medical and traffic safety fields. When used in bulbs, a cluster of LEDs serve as the source of light as the filament does for a regular bulb. LEDs are the tiny lights often seen in electronics such as multiline telephones, in which the little red light means someone is on a particular line, or the small light on a stereo or television that tells you its on. Individually, they are no bigger than a jellybean. But when many LEDs are put together in a larger product array, they can serve as the television screen itself.


The Change

This isn’t why the Natural History Museum chose LEDs over compact incandescents though. Changing bulbs was becoming too labor-intensive, said Webb. So instead of having someone continue to change the lights multiple times every week, the museum replaced the incandescent bulbs with a set of “theatrical bulbs with custom LED fixtures that look identical to those original bulbs,” he said. The application of theatrical bulbs is architectural, to give a desired lighting effect as on movie sets. Webb said the challenge was replicating the look that the previous bulbs gave. The architect of the building originally set up the lights in a certain fashion that gave the exhibits the intended historical appearance. Even a slightly different look was not good enough. The LED bulbs were perfect, said Webb.

“They really do look identical,” Webb said—the same shape, color and warmth of incandescent. But at only 1.5 watts each, LEDs have a much greater lifespan.

The museum, located on Exposition Boulevard in Los Angeles near the University of Southern California, houses more than 35 million specimens and artifacts. It’s the largest natural and historical museum in the Western United States, containing exhibits ranging from insects to dinosaurs and Native American displays to Hollywood memorabilia.

Human Energy

Webb said that while they were doing major renovations on the rotunda building, they looked at the light fixtures and decided that they wanted more energy conservation from them. But the LEDs saved the museum energy in more ways than one, he said.

Before the LEDs were installed, the building’s substantial number of 150-watt incandescent bulbs, which generate light by heating up, produced a lot of heat, Webb said, so the museum had to specially air-condition the building. LEDs are lit when the semi-conductor, a little electrical chip, in them receives a small amount of current, generating almost no heat. After replacing the incandescent bulbs with LED bulbs, Webb said that the museum also ended up saving electricity for air conditioning, as well as “human energy” from demanding maintenance.

Webb said that the Natural History Museum plans to have Cordell Corp. install LED bulbs in several other locations as renovations continue.

LED light as a therapy


  • Known as LED, or Deep Penetrating Light Therapy
  • Used to heal external (scars, cuts) and internal (pain, fractures)
  • Use of therapy on rise, but not in mainstream yet
Light therapy

Light emitting diodes (LEDs), are primarily a source of efficient light. However, they also benefit society in the medical field. Harry Latterman, a scientist from Arizona who used to be the operations manager for a small laser company, has been working with LEDs as a tool for physical therapy for 20 years. It’s a specialized therapy called LED light therapy, which involves red LEDs being shined in contact with physical conditions ranging from scars and cuts to internal damage and impairment. Latterman said that the light from the LEDs enter the tissue and revitalize inactive molecules over time. The process speeds up skin-level healing, and in more serious cases it makes healing and recovery possible when it originally wasn’t.


There is a lot of skepticism about the effectiveness of this treatment in the medical industry, but Latterman says he has many times witnessed LED therapy work miracles.

A lady Latterman knew had been told she would need to have surgery in 45 days on her eyes to remove the cataracts, a disease that makes the natural lenses in the eyes blurry. She got a hold of a red LED cluster, and pressed the light against her closed eyes for about a minute every day. Latterman said that after 15 days of doing so, she started seeing better. When the time for surgery had arrived, she no longer had cataracts.

Skepticism

Latterman says that the main argument skeptics of the therapy pose is the possibility of “the placebo effect”—the perceived improvement seen in one’s health because one expects it while under treatment, when in actuality the treatment has no effect. Latterman says animals help provide evidence to defend against the claim of the placebo effect. There is no placebo effect in animals, so if a treatment is given to one and its condition improves also, the argument is invalid.

This was just the case for the lady whose cataracts were gone after LED therapy. Latterman said that the lady’s neighbor had a dog that was nearly blind. She gave him the LED cluster to use on his dog, and eventually its vision was greatly improved as well.



Pain relief

Latterman said he once gave LEDs to an elder woman in Marina del Rey, Calif. who suffered from arthritis. She was forced to stay downstairs in her home because she couldn’t walk up and down the stairs with her bad knees, and she needed both hands to lift a coffee mug and open the front door because she had bad hands. After a time of treating her hands and knees with the LEDs he had given her, she invited Latterman over. When he arrived, Latterman said she opened the door for him, walked up and down the stairs and said, “Look what I’m doing!”

Latterman continues to spread the word about LED light therapy despite the skepticism it receives. He says he hopes it will eventually be recognized globally in the medical field for its effectiveness.