Incandescent
Bulbs:
A
traditional incandescent bulb uses a thin delicate filament that, electricity
is fed through to create light. As electricity is fed through this filament, it
heats up in emits light. We've been doing it this way since 1897. But it's not
very efficient as 90% of the energy put into the bulb is wasted as heat. That's
why light bulbs get so hot. The successive heat and delicate design cause them
to have a very short lifespan of around 1,000 hours.
LED
(Light Emitting Diode):
LED
stands for the light-emitting diode. LEDs have been used for a long time in small electronic
devices as indicator lights. But in the last couple of years, the technology has
gotten better at making them a lot brighter while keeping them super energy
efficient. This innovation has now made its way into light bulbs of all shapes
and sizes. The LED is made of a positive lead, a negative lead, and a
semiconductor dye. These components are housed in an epoxy shell. Electricity enters
the LED through the positive lead and energizes the tiny semiconductor dye and
light is created. Let's examine exactly what happens in that semiconductor die
to create light. One side of the die has a positive charge and the other side
is negatively charged. When electricity is applied to the die, the negatively
charged particles are attracted to the positively charged particles and the
byproduct is the creation of photons and photons are what light is made of. Keep
in mind this was a very simplified description. Of course, all of this happens
with very little energy needed, and almost no heat is created as compared to
traditional incandescent light bulbs or even newer compact fluorescent bulbs. In
fact, the traditional bulb as you will recall wastes 90% of the electricity fed
to it as the LED only losses 10% to heat. So, 90% is actually converted to
light. That is why LED bulbs can create as much light as a higher wattage.
incandescent
LEDs
have a much longer lifespan, up to 40 times longer than a traditional bulb.
LEDs are simple in design and incredibly efficient. And best of all, they last
up to 40 times longer than incandescent bulbs.
Stay tuned.
Bye.
No comments:
Post a Comment