Compact fluorescent lamp
A compact fluorescent lamp (CFL), also known as a compact fluorescent light bulb or an energy saving lightbulb, is a type of fluorescent lamp that fits into a standard light bulb socket or plugs into a small lighting fixture.
In comparison to incandescent light bulbs, CFLs have a longer rated life and use less electricity. CFLs may save enough money in electricity costs to make up for their higher initial price within about 500 hours of use.
Market
Globally introduced in the early 1980s, CFLs have steadily increased in sales volume, largely due to improvements in product performance and reduction in unit prices. The most important advance in fluorescent lamp technology (including in CFLs) has been the gradual replacement of magnetic ballasts with electronic ballasts: This has removed most of the flickering and slow starting traditionally associated with fluorescent lighting.
The market for CFLs has been aided by the production of both integrated and non-integrated lamps. Integrated lamps combine a bulb, an electronic ballast and either a screw or bayonet fitting; these lamps allow consumers to easily replace incandescent bulbs with CFLs. Non-integrated lamps allow for the replacement of consumable bulbs and the extended use of ballasts; since the ballasts last longer, they can be more expensive and sophisticated, providing options such as dimming. (Non-integrated CFLs are more popular for professional users, such as hotels.)
CFLs are produced for both AC input and DC input. DC CFLs are popular for use in recreational vehicles and off-the-grid housing. Poor families in developing countries are using DC CFLs (with car batteries and small solar panels) to replace kerosene lanterns.
CFL energy consumption compared to incandescent bulbs
luminous flux (light output) |
consumption of electricity | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Incandescent | Compact fluorescent |
CCFL lamp | LED lamp | |
200 lm | 25 W | 5-6 W | ?W | 4.5-9W |
450 lm | 40 W | 8 W | ?W | 6-12W |
600-700 lm | 60 W | 11–13 W | ?W | ?W |
950 lm | 75 W | 18–20 W | ?W | ?W |
1200 lm | 100 W | 20-25 W | ?W | ?W |
1600 lm | 125 W | 26-30 W | ?W | ?W |
1900 lm | 150 W | 35-42 W | ?W | ?W |
CFLs are typically guaranteed for 8,000 hours. (Incandescent bulbs typically last 500 to 2000 hours, depending on exposure to voltage spikes and mechanical shock.)
CFLs use about a quarter of the power of incandescent bulbs. For example, a 15-watt CFL produces the same amount of light as a 60-watt incandescent bulb (approximately 900 lumens or 60 lumens per watt). A comparison of the purchase and operating costs of these two light sources follows.
The kilowatt-hour (kWh) is the unit used to sell electrical energy in most countries. The cost of electricity in the United States ranges from $0.06 to $0.38 per kWh, with an average cost in May 2006 of $0.106 per kWh [1] (also see Electricity rates.) For convenience, a rate of $0.08 per kWh is often used for estimating the running costs of appliances.
File:CompactFluorescentLightBulb.png |
The CFL, therefore, will save $36.00 in electricity (compared to the incandescent bulb) during its rated life. Some American discount stores sell packages of CFLs for about $2.75 per CFL and incandescent bulbs for about $0.50 each, a $2.25 difference. The estimated payback period for buying the CFL instead of the incandescent bulb is, therefore, 500 hours, which is 100 days at 5 hours per evening. Two additional advantages of the CFL are that the majority of these bulbs never get beyond touch-warm, making them significantly safer for children and the elderly, and providing a reduced risk of fire in homes and offices.
- As of early 2007, blister packs of CFLs in U.S. discount stores made pricing per bulb rapidly approach $1, partly influenced by a push by retailer Wal-Mart to give CFLs more in-store prominence, and expanding the range of available wattages down to 5 watts (25 watts tungsten equivalent), agreed to with some reluctance by manufacturers of both tungsten and CFL bulbs, who enjoy a significantly larger margin in the tungsten product. A California initiative even seeks to ban the sale of tungsten bulbs altogether.
The above calculations do not account for the ancillary effect of (light bulb) heat on energy costs. The energy that is not used to create light is instead converted into heat energy. Incandescent bulbs therefore produce substantially more heat than CFLs for a given light output. During cold months, incandescent bulbs can help to heat buildings; but during hot months, incandescent bulbs place additional strain on air conditioning systems.
Colors
CFLs are produced in varying shades of white:
- "Warm white" or "Soft white" (2700 K–3000 K) provides a light very similar to that of an incandescent bulb, somewhat yellow in appearance;
- "White", "Bright White", or "Medium White" (3500 K) bulbs produce a yellowish-white light, whiter than an incandescent bulb but still on the warm side;
- "Cool white" (4100 K) bulbs emit more of a pure white tone; and
- "Daylight" (5000 K–6500 K) is slightly bluish-white.
The "K" denotes the correlated color temperature in kelvins. Color temperature is a quantitative measure. The higher the number, the “cooler”, i.e., bluer, the shade. Color names associated with a particular color temperature are not standardized for modern CFLs and other triphosphor lamps like they were for the older style halophosphate fluorescent lamps. Variations and inconsistencies exist among manufacturers. For example, Sylvania's Daylight CFLs have a color temperature of 3500 K, while most other bulbs with a "daylight" label have color temperatures of at least 5000 K. Some vendors do not include the kelvin value on the package, but this is beginning to change now that the Energy Star Criteria for CFLs is expected to require such labeling in its 4.0 revision.
CFLs are also produced, less commonly, in other colors:
- Red, green, orange, blue, and pink, primarily for novelty purposes
- Yellow, for outdoor lighting, because it does not attract insects
- Blacklight, for special effects
CFLs with UVA generating phosphor, are an efficient source of long wave ultraviolet "blacklight", much more efficient than incandescent "blacklight" bulbs, since the amount of UV light that the filament of the incandescent lamp produces is according to blackbody radiation, and the UV radiation is only a fraction of the generated spectrum.
Being a gas discharge lamp, a CFL will not generate all frequencies of visible light; the actual color rendering index is a design compromise (see below). With less than perfect color rendering, CFLs can be unsatisfactory for inside lighting, but modern, high quality designs are proving acceptable for home use.
Other terms that apply to CFLs:
- Full Spectrum
- High Definition
Environmental issues
Since CFLs use about a quarter of the energy of incandescent bulbs they are a key part of efforts to fight pollution.
However, CFLs contain trace amounts of mercury. The amount is not large enough to pose a hazard to users (it is about 1/5 the amount in a typical digital watch battery), but it does become a concern at landfills and trash incinerators where the mercury from many bulbs can escape and contribute to air and water pollution.
Some manufacturers such as Philips and GE make very low mercury content CFLs[2]. Safe disposal requires storing the bulbs unbroken until they can be processed. Consumers should seek advice from local authorities. Usually, one can either:
- Bring back used CFLs to where they were purchased, so the store can recycle them correctly; or
- Bring used CFLs to a local recycling facility.
The first step of processing involves crushing the bulbs in a machine that uses negative pressure ventilation and a mercury-absorbing filter or cold trap to contain and treat the contaminated gases. Many municipalities are purchasing such machines. The crushed glass and metal is stored in drums, ready for shipping to recycling factories.
Note that coal power plants are the single largest source of mercury emissions into the environment. According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), (when coal power is used) the mercury released from powering an incandescent bulb for five years exceeds the sum of the mercury released by powering a comparably luminous CFL for the same period and the mercury contained in the lamp. [3]
How they work
Parts
There are two main parts in a CFL: the gas-filled tube (also called bulb or burner) and the magnetic or electronic ballast. Electrical energy in the form of an electrical current from the ballast flows through the gas, causing it to emit ultraviolet light. The ultraviolet light then excites a white phosphor coating on the inside of the tube. This coating emits visible light. CFLs that flicker when they start have magnetic ballasts; CFLs with electronic ballasts are now much more common. See Fluorescent lamp.
End of life
Both the ballast and the burner are subject to failure from normal use. In low-quality CFLs, high temperatures often cause the ballast electronics to fail before the burners. In high-quality CFLs, the burners almost always fail first. The burners occasionally fail due to cracks and imperfect seals but much more typically due to an increased work function at the electrodes caused by vaporization and sputtering-off of the cathode material. It is also this material that then deposits onto the burner's glass tubing, causing blackening of the tubing.
High-quality driver electronics can prolong the life of the burners by preheating the electrodes to prevent damage from rapid expansion. High-quality drivers require high-quality components. The best CFL manufacturers (including Osram, Philips, General Electric, Luxlite) produce CFLs that can last 15,000 hours. Such lifetimes require highly automated and controlled manufacturing.
At end of life, CFLs should be recycled by specialist firms. In the European Union, CFL lamps are one of many products subject to the WEEE recycling scheme. The retail price includes an amount to pay for recycling, and manufacturers and importers have an obligation to collect and recycle CFL lamps.
Design compromises and challenges
Apart from durability, the primary purpose of good CFL design is high electrical efficiency.
These are some other areas of interest:
- Quality of light: A phosphor emits light in a narrow frequency range, unlike an incandescent filament, which emits the full spectrum, though not all colors equally, of visible light. Mono-phosphor lamps emit poor quality light; colors look bad and inaccurate. The solution is to mix different phosphors, each emitting a different range of light. Properly mixed, a good approximation of daylight or incandescent light can be reached. However, every extra phosphor added to the coating mix causes a loss of efficiency and increased cost. Good-quality consumer CFLs use three or four phosphors—typically emitting light in the red, green and blue spectra—to achieve a "white" light with color rendering indexes (CRI) of around 80. (A CRI of 100 represents the most accurate reproduction of all colors; reference sources having a CRI of 100, such as the sun and tungsten bulbs, emit black body radiation.)
- Size: CFL light output is roughly proportional to phosphor surface area, and high output CFL bulbs are often larger than their incandescent equivalents. This means that the CFL might work fine in the socket, but that the light cover might not fit over it or that the user might not have the room to squeeze the CFL in place.
- Covered performance: To approximate the look of an incandescent bulb, the CFL burner can be enclosed behind a cosmetic glass cover. However, this causes the temperature of the burner to increase greatly, increasing the gas pressure inside the burner and decreasing the brightness (and therefore efficiency) of the lamp. These problems have largely been solved using special mercury compounds and other techniques, and now globe and flood versions are widely available (at hardware stores and elsewhere).
- Electronics: Dimming control can be added to the lamp with support from the driver electronics. Also, large deployments of CFLs (in a hotel lobby, for example) require specialised electronics with low levels of electronic distortion to avoid disturbing the electricity supply. This is usually not a problem with home use because of the few lamps deployed. One problem with dimmable compact fluorescents is that when they dim the color temperature stays the same. This means that a dimmed light appears grey instead of warm orange like a incandescent light when dimmed.[citation needed]
- Time to achieve full brightness: Compact fluorescent bulbs can take 30 seconds or more to reach full brightness. This compares to 0.1 seconds for incandescent bulbs and 0.01 seconds for LED lamps.
- CFLs often do not fail suddenly like incandescent lightbulbs do. Symptoms of impending CFL failure may come months ahead, with more and more prolonged turn-on times until full luminosity is reached, buzzing of the ballast, random periods of reduced brightness and the appearance of growing black spots on the glass tubing's inside.
- In places infested with insects,or in an outdoor environment bugs have a habit of climbing into the "cage" formed by the CFL tubing and perishing inside. Some CFLs have an extra oval shell hiding the tubeworks to prevent this.
- Buzz: The newer spiral lights have very low hum or buzz, but in a very quiet room can still be heard. This can be annoying to some people.
- Outdoor Use: In very cold weather the time to full brightness can be extended to several minutes or not turn on at all.
- Differences between manufacturers: There are large differences between quality of light, cost, and turn-on time between different manufacturers, even for bulbs that appear identical and have the same color temperature.
Other CFL technologies
Another type of fluorescent lamp is the electrodeless fluorescent, known as a radiofluorescent lamp or fluorescent induction lamp. Unlike virtually all other conventional lamps that have hardwired electrical connections to transfer energy to the lamp core, the electrodeless fluorescent accomplishes this solely by electromagnetic induction. The induction is effected by means of a wire-wound ferrite core that projects upward into the bulb encased in an inverted U-shaped glass cover. The wire is energized with high frequency electricity often 2.65 or 13.6 MHz; this ionizes the mercury vapor, exciting the phosphor & producing light.
Another variation on existing CFL technologies are bulbs with an external nano-particle coating of titanium dioxide. Titanium dioxide is a photocatalyst becoming ionized when exposed to UV light produced by the CFL, thereby capable of converting oxygen to ozone, water to hydroxyl radicals, which neutralizes odors and kills bacteria, viruses, and mold spores.
The Cold Cathode Fluorescent Light (CCFL) is one of the newest forms of CFL. CCFLs use electrodes without a filament. The voltage of CCFL lamps is about 5 times higher than CFL lamps and the current is about 10 times lower. CCFL lamps have a diameter of about 3 millimeters. The lifetime of CCFL lamps is about 50,000 hours. The lumens per watt is about half of CFL lamps.
Initially CCFL was used for thin monitors and backlighting, but now it is also manufactured for use as a lightbulb. Since the efficacy (watt/lumen) is actually lower than a compact fluorescent light, it is actually not as efficient as a CFL. Its advantages are that it is (1) instant-on, like an incandescent, (2) compatible with timers, photocells, and dimmers, and (3) has an amazingly long life of approximately 50,000 hours. CCFL are a convenient transition-technology for those who are not comfortable with the short lag-time associated with the initial lighting of Compact Fluorescents. They are also an effective and efficient replacement for lighting that is turned on and off frequently with little extended use (e.g. a half-bath or closet).
Efforts to encourage adoption
Improving the efficiency of household lighting is part of the effort to increase energy efficacy.[4] However, people have been hesitant to transition from incandescent bulbs to CFLs, despite their three- to twelve-month payback period. The initial capital investment is higher, which may deter some people. The warm-up period associated with CFLs discourages others (although the new CCFL mitigate that objection). Professionals who install lighting fixtures sometimes do not consider installing CFLs, because the electrical bill is not their concern, and the CFLs have a higher cost.
Some governments have attempted to encourage CFL usage by distributing them for free and by appealing to people's moral beliefs.[citation needed] Some activists in Britain have lobbied Parliament to tax or ban incandescent bulbs, a measure that has generated controversy, and websites like Banthebulb.org have been created in support of the ban.
In June 2006, the U.S. Environmental Defense initiated a campaign called Make the Switch to encourage the public to switch from incandescent bulbs to compact fluorescent bulbs. It asked every household in the U.S. to replace three 60-watt incandescent bulbs with CFLs. Environmental Defense claims that if every household was to do this, the change could reduce pollution as much as taking 3.5 million cars off the road would.
In addition, Wal-Mart announced in September 2006 that it was starting a campaign to endorse CFLs. The store aims to sell one CFL to every one of their 100 million customers within the next year, thus changing the energy consumption of the United States and improving Wal-Mart's reputation.[1]. In Ottawa, Canada, there is an effort to get every household to change at least one light bulb. Project Porchlight has volunteers going door-to-door providing one CF bulb to every household for free.
Another website, Onebillionbulbs.com, is behind a campaign to replace one billion incandescent bulbs with CFLs across the U.S. The site has a fifty-state map; each state is a certain color from white to green. The closer to green, the closer to the state's goal.
A California Assemblyman, Lloyd Levine, wants to introduce a bill to ban all conventional light bulbs from the State of California (NewScientist)
In an attempt to slash emissions, the Australian federal government plans to phase out the use of incandescent light bulbs by 2010, the first government to do so in the world. [2] [3]
Gallery of CFLs
-
Biax or Linear CFL -
Globe CFL -
Reflector CFL -
Spiral CFL -
A CFL bulb designed to resemble an incandescent bulb.
An incandescent bulb is shown on the right for comparison
References
- ^ "How Many Lightbulbs Does it Take to Change the World? One. And You're Looking At It". Fast Company. Retrieved 2006-08-30.
- ^ Light bulbs ban to slash emissions - The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ [http://www.malcolmturnbull.com.au/news/Article.aspx?ID=661 World first! Australia slashes greenhouse gases from inefficient lighting
- R. J. Van der Plas, A. B. de Graaff, "A comparison of lamps for domestic lighting in developing countries" (Energy Ser. Pap. 6, Industry and Energy Department, World Bank, Washington, DC, 1988).
- G. S. Dutt, "Illumination and Sustainable Development", Energy Sustain Dev. 1 (1), 23 (1994).
External links
- Compact Fluorescent Lamps: What You Should Know
- Energy Star's page on fluorescent bulbs
- Energy saving calculator
- Energy Savings
- Make the Switch Campaign, Environmental Defense
- Reduce Global Warming
- How much coal is required to run a 100-watt light bulb 24 hours a day for a year? - from HowStuffWorks.com
- LampRecycle.Org - For information on recycling spent mercury-containing lamps
- Mercury in Compact Fluorescent Lamps - from the National Electrical Manufacturers Association
- Compact Fluorescent Pitfalls, Reality, and Recommendations
- Lighting Research Center - Excellent information and analysis of "full spectrum" lighting
- Project Porchlight Non-profit organization from Ottawa, Ontario distributing CFL bulbs to every home in Canada as a conservation and education program.
- Energy Saving Trust in the UK, the Energy Saving Trust provides advice and information about CFL lighting, including council and power company subsidies to domestic homes
- Savingenergy.org.uk a UK source of CFL lightbulbs
- OneBillionBulbs.com - Emphasizes cost-saving and environmental benefits of CFLs
- FastCompany.com article - details Wal-Mart and GE's joint effort to create a CFL revolution
- [5] - In Holland, Greenpeace mobilizes people to change 1 million light bulbs to CFLs