The sulfur lamp (also sulphur lamp) is a highly efficient full-spectrum electrodeless lighting system whose light is generated by sulfur plasma that has been excited by microwave radiation. The technology was developed in the 1990s.
It would be impossible to excite the sulfur with traditional electrodes. All metallic electrodes would quickly react with the sulfur rendering them useless. The absence of electrodes allows for a much greater variety of light-generating substances to be used than those used in traditional lamps.
The design life of the bulb is currently approximately 60,000 hours. However, the design life of magnetrons is currently only about 15,000 to 20,000 hours. The bulb emits no electric or magnetic fields.
With the exception of fluorescent lamps, the warm-up time of the sulfur lamp is notably shorter than for other gas discharge lamps, even at low ambient temperatures. It reaches 80% of its final luminous flux within twenty seconds (video), and the lamp can be restarted approximately five minutes after a power cut.
The first prototype lamps were 5.9 kW units, with a system efficacy of 80 lumens per watt. The first production models were 1.4 kW with an output of 135,000 lumens. Later models were able to eliminate the cooling fanhttp://195.178.164.205/IAEEL/iaeel/newsl/1996/ett1996/LiTech_b_1_96.html and improve efficiency to more than 100 lumens/watt.
The spectral output peaks at 510 nanometres, imparting a distinctly greenish hue to the illuminated environment. The correlated color temperature was about 6000 kelvins with a CRI of 79. The lamp can be dimmed to 20% without affecting the light quality, and light output remains constant over the life of the bulb.
The use of a magenta filter can be used to give the light a warmer feel. Such a filter was used on the lamps at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.http://palimpsest.stanford.edu/waac/wn/wn17/wn17-3/wn17-308.html
The addition of other chemicals in the bulb might improve color rendition. Sulfur lamp bulbs with calcium bromide (CaBr2) added produce a similar spectrum with the addition of a spike in red wavelengths at 625nm.http://www.nasatech.com/Briefs/July00/KSC11970.html Other additives such as lithium iodide (LiI) and sodium iodide (NaI) can be used to modify the output spectra.http://ncr101.montana.edu/Light1994Conf/5_10_MacLennan/MacLennan%20text.htm http://science.empas.com/search/kisti_detail.html?q=%C3%B5%B0%F8+%B9%E6%BB%E7%C8%D6%B5%B5&i=40028&au=&rs=&jn=&m=T http://society.kisti.re.kr/~society/image/kiee/1999/E01001033267.tif
Only two production models were developed, both with similar specifications: the Solar 1000 in 1994 and the Light Drive 1000 in 1997, which was a refinement of the previous model. Although the technology initially appeared to be very promising, sulfur lighting has not yet been a commercial success.
Production of these lamps ended in 1998.http://www.iaeel.org/IAEEL/Newsl/1998/tva1998/LiMa_a_2_98.html Fusion Lighting closed its doors in early 2002, after having used up about $90 million in venture capital. The Internet Archive has a copy of Fusion Lighting's defunct webite. Their lamps were installed in more than one hundred facilities worldwide, but many of them have already been removed.
In 2001, Ningbo Youhe New Lighting Source Co., Ltd, in Ningbo, China, produced its own sulfur lamp version. The company's website is no longer online and may be out of business, but information on these lamps is available from its archived copy at the Internet Archive.
Since 2005, sulfur lamps have been marketed by Island Systems Lighting in Essex, England. While these lamps are an original design, their specifications and output are similar to the production models previously manufactured by Fusion Lighting.
The magnetrons in these lamps may very well cause interruption in 2.4 GHz wireless spectrum, which is used by Wi-Fi and satellite radio in North America. Fearing interference with their broadcasts, Sirius and XM satellite radio petitioned the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to force Fusion Lighting to reduce by 99.9% the electromagnetic emissions of sulfur lamps. In 2001, Fusion Lighting agreed to install metal shielding around their lamps reducing electromagnetic emissions by 95%.
In May 2003, the FCC adopted an order terminating a proceeding started in 1998 that would have defined out-of-band emission limits for radio-frequency lights operating at 2.45 GHz, saying the record of the proceeding had become outdated and Fusion Lighting, the only party that had expressed an interest in 2.45 GHz RF lighting, had stopped pursuing development of RF lighting in that band.http://www.rwonline.com/dailynews/one.php?id=6211 The order concluded:
Unlike fluorescent and high-intensity discharge lamps, sulfur lamps contain no mercury. Therefore, sulfur lamps do not pose a threat to the environment or require special disposal. In addition, use of sulfur lamps has the potential to reduce the total amount of energy required for lighting.
The light pipes allow the lamp to be placed in an easily accessible area for maintenance and away from places where the heat of the lamp may be a problem.
At Sundsvall-Härnösand Airport near Sundsvall, Sweden, airfield lighting is provided by sulfur lamps mounted on towers 30 metres tall. The lamps are directed upward and shine their light onto wing-shaped secondary reflectors that spread the light out and direct it downward. In this way, one lamp can illuminate an area 30 by 80 metres.
At the headquarters of Nesa, an electric utility in Denmark, a single sulfur lamp directs its light onto numerous specular reflectors and diffusers to illuminate the entrance hall as well as several sculptures on the outside of the building.
At the entrance to University Hospital in Lund, Sweden, secondary reflectors on the ceiling are clad with highly reflective films, but shaped so as to avoid any glare. Moreover, since these films have a microprismatic surface structure that splits up the beams, the risk of glare problems is further reduced. The fact that the reflectors move the light source far away from the eye of anyone who would happen to look into them helps to further eliminate glare problems.http://195.178.164.205/IAEEL/iaeel/newsl/1994/fyra1994/DesAppl_c_4_94.html
At the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) headquarters building, two sulfur lamps were installed in the tops of free-standing kiosks. The 4.2m high ceiling was retrofit with high reflectance (90%), white acoustic ceiling tile. The lamps direct their light upward, and it is reflected off the ceiling providing indirect light. Narrow, medium, or wide beam patterns can be created by choosing various reflector elements.http://eetd.lbl.gov/newsletter/CBS_NL//NL14/Sulfur.html
Optical fibers have been studied as a distribution system for sulfur lamps, but no practical system has ever been marketed.http://www.remotelight.com/plp1000.html
The development of an affordable, efficient, and long-lived microwave source is a technological hurdle to cost reduction and commercial success. The lamp prototypes were only available in high wattages (1000+ W), which impeded adoption in applications where light output demands were not great. The sulfur lamp has problems with the life of the magnetron and the motor that rotates the bulb and noise from the cooling fan. Because the lamp has moving parts, reliability remains a critical issue, and system maintenance may impede market adoption.
Researchers have had some success at eliminating the need to rotate the bulb by using circularly polarized microwaves to spin the plasma instead.http://lfw.pennnet.com/Articles/Article_Display.cfm?Section=ARTCL&ARTICLE_ID=206867&VERSION_NUM=1 http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=APPLAB000084000015002769000001&idtype=cvips&gifs=yes Other experiments have used indium bromide (InBr3) as the light-generating medium.http://www.designnews.com/article/CA138103.html http://www.icpig.uni-greifswald.de/proceedings/data/Shido-Kando_1
Many of the installations of the lamps were for testing purposes only, but there remain a few sites where the lamps are in use as the primary lighting source. Perhaps the most visible of these would be the glass atriums in the National Air and Space Museum.
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