Everlasting Lightbulb

Energy: Researchers have developed an environmentally friendly light bulb that uses very little energy and should never need changing
ALTHOUGH
it symbolises a bright idea, the traditional
incandescent light bulb is a dud. It wastes huge
amounts of electricity, radiating 95% of the
energy it consumes as heat rather than light. Its
life is also relatively short, culminating in a
dull pop as its filament fractures. Now a team of
researchers has devised a light bulb that is not
only much more energy-efficient—it is also
expected to last longer than the devices into
which it is inserted. Moreover, the lamp could be
used for rear-projection televisions as well as
general illumination.
The
trick to a longer life, for light bulbs at least,
is to ensure that the lamp has no electrodes.
Although electrodes are undeniably convenient for
plugging bulbs directly into the lighting system,
they are also the main reason why lamps fail. The
electrodes wear out. They can react chemically
with the gas inside the light bulb, making it
grow dimmer. They are also difficult to seal into
the structure of the bulb, making the rupture of
these seals another potential source of failure.
Scientists working for Ceravision, a company
based in Milton Keynes, in Britain, have designed
a new form of lamp that eliminates the need for
electrodes. Their device uses microwaves to
transform electricity into light. It consists of
a relatively small lump of aluminium oxide into
which a hole has been bored. When the aluminium
oxide is bombarded with microwaves generated from
the same sort of device that powers a microwave
oven, a concentrated electric field is created
inside the void.
If
a cylindrical capsule containing a suitable gas
is inserted into the hole, the atoms of the gas
become ionised. As electrons accelerate in the
electric field, they gain energy that they pass
on to the atoms and molecules of the gas as they
collide with them, creating a glowing plasma. The
resulting light is bright, and the process is
energy-efficient. Indeed, whereas traditional
light bulbs emit just 5% of their energy as
light, and fluorescent tubes about 15%, the
Ceravision lamp has an efficiency greater than
50%.
Because the lamp has no filament, the scientists
who developed it think it will last for thousands
of hours of use—in other words, for decades.
Moreover, the light it generates comes from what
is almost a single point, which means that the
bulbs can be used in projectors and televisions.
Because of this, the light is much more
directional and the lamp could thus prove more
efficient than bulbs that scatter light in all
directions. Its long life would make the new
light ideal for buildings in which the
architecture makes changing light bulbs
complicated and expensive. The lamps' small size
makes them comparable to light-emitting diodes
but the new lamp generates much brighter light
than those semiconductor devices do. A single
microwave generator can be used to power several
lamps.
Another environmental advantage of the new design
is that it does not need mercury, a highly toxic
metal found in most of the bulbs used today,
including energy-saving fluorescent bulbs,
fluorescent tubes and the high-pressure bulbs
used in projectors. And Ceravision also reckons
it should be cheap to make. With lighting
accounting for some 20% of electricity use
worldwide, switching to a more efficient system
could both save energy and reduce emissions of
climate-changing greenhouse gases.