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The incandescent light bulb or incandescent lamp is a source of artificial light that works by incandescence (a general term for heat-driven light emissions which includes the simple case of black body radiation). An electrical current passes through a thin filament, heating it until it produces light. The enclosing glass bulb prevents the oxygen in air from reaching the hot filament, which otherwise would be destroyed rapidly by oxidation.
Incandescent bulbs are sometimes called electric lamps, a term originally applied to the original arc lamps. They are also known as globes and light globe with the theater, television and film industries, a term which is commonly used in Australia.
Incandescent bulbs are made in a wide range of sizes and voltages, from 1.5 volts to about 300 volts. They require no external regulating equipment and have a low manufacturing cost, and work well on either alternating current or direct current. As a result the incandescent lamp is widely used in household and commercial lighting, for portable lighting, such as table lamps, some car headlamps and electric flashlights, and for decorative and advertising lighting.
Some applications of the incandescent bulb make use of the heat generated, such as incubators (for hatching eggs), brooding boxes for young poultry, heat lights for reptile tanks, and the Easy-Bake Oven toy. In cold weather the heat shed by incandescent lamps contributes to building heating, but in hot climates lamp losses increase the energy used by air conditioning systems. Since in northern countries like those in Scandinavia there is little need for artificial lighting outside of the heating season, up to 50% of energy used annually in incandescent bulbs is used efficiently.
Incandescent light bulbs are gradually being replaced in many applications by (compact) fluorescent lights, high-intensity discharge lamps, LEDs, and other devices, which produce the same amount of visible light but use less electrical energy. Some jurisdictions have or are considering banning the sale of incandescent lightbulbs in favour of more energy-efficient lighting.
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Original carbon-filament bulb from Thomas Edison
In addressing the question "Who invented the incandescent lamp?" historians Robert Friedel and Paul Israel Friedel, Robert, and Paul Israel. 1987. Edison\'s electric light: biography of an invention. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press. pages 115-117 list 22 inventors of incandescent lamps prior to Swan and Edison. They conclude that Edison\'s version was able to outstrip the others because of a combination of factors: an effective incandescent material, a higher vacuum than others were able to achieve and a high resistance lamp that made power distribution from a centralized source economically viable. Another historian, Thomas Hughes, has attributed Edison\'s success to the fact that he invented an entire, integrated system of electric lighting. "The lamp was a small component in his system of electric lighting, and no more critical to its effective functioning than the Edison Jumbo generator, the Edison main and feeder, and the parallel-distribution system. Other inventors with generators and incandescent lamps, and with comparable ingenuity and excellence, have long been forgotten because their creators did not preside over their introduction in a system of lighting." Hughes, Thomas P. 1977. Edison\'s method. In Technology at the Turning Point, edited by W. B. Pickett. San Francisco: San Francisco Press Inc., 5-22. Hughes, Thomas P. 2004. American Genesis: A Century of Invention and Technological Enthusiasm. 2nd ed. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press
| Early evolution of the light bulb | |
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PlotData= mark:(line,black) shift:(15,-5) at:1910 text:"William David Coolidge - Tungsten filament" at:1882 text:"Lewis Latimer - Better filament production" at:1880 text:"Thomas Edison - Long lasting filament" at:1875 text:"Warren & Evans - Gas filled ""globe"" at:1873 text:"Joseph Wilson Swan - Carbon fiber filament" at:1854 text:"Heinrich Göbel - Carbonised bamboo filament" at:1841 text:"Frederick de Moleyns - Powdered charcoal filament" at:1840 text:"Warren De la Rue - Vacuum tube enclosure" at:1809 text:"Sir Humphry Davy - Carbon arc lamp" at:1801 text:"Sir Humphry Davy - Platinum filament" Josephson, Matthew (1959). Edison: a biography. McGraw Hill. |
In 1802 Humphry Davy had what was then the most powerful battery in the world at the Royal Institution of Great Britain. In that year, he created the first incandescent light by passing the current through a thin strip of platinum, chosen because the metal had an extremely high melting point. It was not bright enough nor did it last long enough to be practical, but it was the precedent behind the efforts of scores of experimenters over the next 75 years until Thomas Edison\'s creation of the first practical incandescent lamp in 1879.Davis, L.J. "Fleet Fire." Arcade Publishing, New York, 2003. ISBN 1-55970-655-4 In 1809, Davy created the first arc lamp by making a small but blinding electrical connection between two charcoal rods connected to a 2000 cell battery. Demonstrated to the Royal Institution in 1810, the invention came to be known as the Arc lamp.
In 1835, James Lindsay demonstrated a constant electric light at a public meeting in Dundee, Scotland. He stated that he could "read a book at a distance of one and a half feet". However, having perfected the device to his own satisfaction, he turned to the problem of wireless telegraphy and did not develop the electric light any further. His claims are not well documented.
In 1840, British scientist Warren de la Rue enclosed a platinum coil in a vacuum tube and passed an electric current through it. The design was based on the concept that the high melting point of platinum would allow it to operate at high temperatures and that the evacuated chamber would contain fewer gas molecules to react with the platinum, improving its longevity. Although an efficient design, the cost of the platinum made it impractical for commercial use.The History Of The Light Bulb. Net Guides Publishing, Inc. (2004). Retrieved on 2007-05-02. The History of the light bulb. IN-VSEE. Retrieved on 2007-05-02.
In 1841, Frederick de Moleyns of England was granted the first patent for an incandescent lamp, with a design using powdered charcoal heated between two platinum wires contained within a vacuum bulb.
In 1845, American John W. Starr acquired a patent for his incandescent light bulb involving the use of carbon filaments. T.K. Derry &, Trevor Williams (1960). A Short History of Technology. Oxford University Press. He died shortly after obtaining the patent. Aside from the information contained in the patent itself, little else is known about him.
In 1851, Jean Eugène Robert-Houdin publicly demonstrated incandescent light bulbs on his estate in Blois, France. His light bulbs are on permanent display in the museum of the Chateau of Blois.
In 1872 A. N. Lodygin invented an incandescent light bulb. In 1874 he obtained a patent for his invention.
The same year, Canadians Henry Woodward and Mathew Evans in Toronto patented an electric light bulb.
In a suit filed by rivals seeking to get around Edison\'s lightbulb patent, German-American inventor Heinrich Göbel claimed he developed the first light bulb in 1854: a carbonized bamboo filament, in a vacuum bottle to prevent oxidation, and that in the following five years he developed what many call the first practical light bulb. Lewis Latimer demonstrated the bulbs Göbel had purportedly built in the 1850s had actually been built much later, and found the glassblower who had constructed the fraudulent exhibits.Fouché, Rayvon, Black Inventors in the Age of Segregation: Granville T. Woods, Lewis H. Latimer, and Shelby J. Davidson.) (Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore & London, 2003, pp.115-116. ISBN 0-8018-7319-3 In a patent interference suit in 1893, the judge ruled Göbel\'s claim "extremely improbable."
Carbon filament lamp (E27 socket, 220 volts, approx. 30 watts, left side: running with 100 volts
Joseph Wilson Swan (1828–1914) was an English physicist and chemist. In 1850 he began working with carbonized paper filaments in an evacuated glass bulb. By 1860 he was able to demonstrate a working device but the lack of a good vacuum and an adequate supply of electricity resulted in a short lifetime for the bulb and an inefficient source of light. By the mid-1870s better pumps became available, and Swan returned to his experiments. With the help of Charles Stearn, an expert on vacuum pumps, Swan developed a method of processing that avoided the early bulb blackening in 1878. This received a British Patent No 8 in 1880.Swan K R Sir Joseph Swan and the Invention of the Incandescent Electric Lamp. 1946 Longmans, Green and Co. Pp 21-25. On 18th December 1878 a lamp using a slender carbon rod was shown at a meeting of the Newcastle Chemical Society, and Swan gave a working demonstration at their meeting on 17th January 1879. It was also shown to 700 who attended a meeting of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle on 3rd February 1879. These lamps used a carbon rod from an arc lamp rather than a slender filament. Thus they had low resistance and required very large conductors to supply the necessary current, so they were not commercially practical, although they did furnish a demonstration of the possibilities of incandescent lighting with relatively high vacuum, a carbon conductor, and platinum lead-in wires. Besides requiring too much current for a central station electric system to be practical, they had a very short lifetime.[1] "Lamp Inventors 1880-1940: Carbon Filament Incandescent" Smithsonian National Museum of American History. retrieved February 6, 2008 Swan turned his attention to producing a better carbon filament and the means of attaching its ends. He devised a method of treating cotton to produce \'parchmentised thread\' and obtained British Patent 4933 in 1880. Swan K R Sir Joseph Swan and the Invention of the Incandescent Electric Lamp. 1946 Longmans, Green and Co. Pp 21-25. From this year he began installing light bulbs in homes and landmarks in England, and in the early 1880s he had started his company.R.C. Chirnside. Sir Joseph Wilson Swan FRS - The Literary and Philosophical Society of Newcastle upon Tyne 1979.
In North America, parallel developments were also taking place. On July 24 1874 a Canadian patent was filed for the Woodward and Evans Light by a Toronto medical electrician named Henry Woodward and a colleague Mathew Evans. They built their lamps with different sizes and shapes of carbon rods held between electrodes in glass cylinders filled with nitrogen. Woodward and Evans attempted to commercialize their lamp, but were unsuccessful. They ended up selling their patent (U.S. Patent 0,181,613) to Thomas Edison in 1879[2].
Thomas Edison began serious research into developing a practical incandescent lamp in 1878. Edison filed his first patent application for "Improvement In Electric Lights" on October 14, 1878 (U.S. Patent 0,214,636). After many experiments with platinum and other metal filaments, Edison returned to a carbon filament. The first successful test was on October 22 1879;Paul Israel, Edison: a Life of Invention, Wiley (1998), page 186. and lasted 13.5 hours. Edison continued to improve this design and by Nov 4, 1879, filed for a U.S. patent (granted as U.S. Patent 0,223,898 on Jan 27, 1880) for an electric lamp using "a carbon filament or strip coiled and connected ... to platina contact wires." U.S. Patent 0,223,898 Although the patent described several ways of creating the carbon filament including using "cotton and linen thread, wood splints, papers coiled in various ways," it was not until several months after the patent was granted that Edison and his team discovered that a carbonized bamboo filament could last over 1200 hours.
Hiram S. Maxim started a lightbulb company in 1878 to exploit his patents and those of William Sawyer. His United States Electric Lighting Company was the second company to sell practical incandescent electric lamps, after Edison. They made their first commercial installation of incandescent lamps at the Mercantile Safe Deposit Company in New York City in the fall of 1880, about six months after the Edison incandescent lamps had been installed on the steamer Columbia. Maxim in October 1880 patented a method of coating carbon filaments with hydrocarbons to extend their life. Lewis Latimer, his employee at the time, developed an improved method of heat treating them which reduced breakage and allowed them to be molded into novel shapes, such as the characteristic "M" shape of Maxim filaments. On January 17, 1882, Latimer received a patent for the "Process of Manufacturing Carbons", an improved method for the production of light bulb filaments which was purchased by the United States Electric Light Company. Latimer patented other improvements such as a better way of attaching filaments to their wire supports.
In Britain, the Edison and Swan companies merged into the Edison and Swan United Electric Company (later known as Ediswan, which was ultimately incorporated into Thorn Lighting Ltd). Edison was initially against this combination, but after Swan sued him and won, Edison was eventually forced to cooperate, and the merger was made. Eventually, Edison acquired all of Swan\'s interest in the company. Swan sold his United States patent rights to the Brush Electric Company in June 1882. Swan later wrote that Edison had a greater claim to the light than he did, in order to protect Edison\'s patents from claims against them in the US.
U.S. Patent 0,223,898 by Thomas Edison for an improved electric lamp, January 27 1880
The United States Patent Office gave a ruling October 8, 1883 that Edison\'s patents were based on the prior art of William E. Sawyer and were invalid. Litigation continued for a number of years. Eventually on October 6, 1889, a judge ruled that Edison\'s electric light improvement claim for "a filament of carbon of high resistance" was valid.
In the 1890s, the Austrian inventor Carl Auer von Welsbach worked on metal-filament mantles, first with platinum wiring, and then osmium, and produced an operative version in 1898.
In 1897, German physicist and chemist Walther Nernst developed the Nernst lamp, a form of incandescent lamp that used a ceramic globar and did not require enclosure in a vacuum or inert gas. Twice as efficient as carbon filament lamps, Nernst lamps were briefly popular until overtaken by lamps using metal filaments.
In 1903, Willis Whitnew invented a filament that would not blacken the inside of a light bulb. (Some of Edison\'s experiments to stop this blackening led to the invention of the electronic vacuum tube.) It was a metal-coated carbon filament. On December 13th 1904, Sándor Just and Ferenc Hanaman were granted a Hungarian patent (No. 34541) for a tungsten filament lamp, which lasted longer and gave a brighter light than the carbon filament. Tungsten filament lamps were first marketed by the Hungarian company Tungsram in 1905, so this type is often called Tungsram-bulbs in many European countries.The History of Tungsram. In 1906, the General Electric Company patented a method of making tungsten filaments for use in incandescent light bulbs. Sintered tungsten filaments were costly, but by 1910 William David Coolidge (1873–1975) had invented an improved method of making tungsten filaments. The tungsten filament outlasted all other types of filaments and Coolidge made the costs practical. In 1913 Irving Langmuir found that filling a lamp with inert gas instead of a vacuum resulted in twice the luminous efficacy and reduction of bulb blackening. Marvin Pipkin, an American chemist, in 1924 patented a process for frosting the inside of lamp bulbs without weakening them, and in 1947 patented a process for coating the inside of lamps with silica. In 1936 the coiled-coil filament was introduced which further improved the efficiency of lamps. Incandescent Lamps publication TP-110, General Electric, Nela Park, 1964 , page 3
By 1964 improvements in efficiency and production of incandescent lamps had reduced the cost of providing a given quantity of light by a factor of thirty, compared with the cost at introduction of Edison\'s lighting system General Electric TP-110 pg. 3
Between 1924 and 1939 the international market for incandescent light bulbs was controlled by the Phoebus cartel, which dictated wholesale prices and whose members controlled most of the world market for lamps.
Incandescent light bulbs consist of a glass enclosure (the envelope, or bulb) which is filled with an inert gas to reduce evaporation of the filament and reduce the required strength of the glass. Inside of the bulb is a filament of tungsten wire, through which an electrical current is passed. The current heats the filament to an extremely high temperature (typically 2000 K to 3300 K depending on the filament type, shape, size, and amount of current passed through). The heated filament emits light with a continuous spectrum. The useful part of the emitted energy is visible light, but also significant energy is given off in the in the near-infrared wavelengths.
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Incandescent light bulbs usually contain a glass mount on the inside, which supports the filament and allows the electrical contacts to run through the envelope without gas/air leaks. Many arrangements of electrical contacts are used. Large lamps may have a screw base (one or more contacts at the tip, one at the shell) or a bayonet base (one or more contacts on the base, shell used as a contact or used only as a mechanical support). Some tubular lamps have an electrical contact at either end. Miniature lamps may have a wedge base and wire contacts, and some automotive and special purpose lamps have screw terminals for connection to wires. Contacts in the lamp socket allow the electrical current to pass through the base to the filament. Power ratings range from about 0.1 watt to about 10,000 watts.
To improve the efficacy of the lamp, the filament usually consists of coils of fine wire, also known as a \'coiled coil\'. For a 60 watt 120-volt lamp, the uncoiled length of the filament is usually 22.8 inches or 580 mm General Electric TP-110, page 22 and the filament diameter is 0.0018 inches (0.045 mm).
A scanning electron microscope image (75x) of a 60 W line voltage light bulb filament. In order to increase the filament length while keeping its physical size small, the filament takes the form of a coiled coil. By comparison, low voltage lamp filaments usually take the form of a single coil.
One of the problems of the standard electric light bulb is evaporation of the filament. Small variations in resistivity along the filament cause "hot spots" to form at points of higher resistivity; a variation of diameter of only 1% will cause a 25% reduction in service life General Electric TP-110 page 7. The hot spots evaporate faster than the rest of the filament, increasing resistance at that point—a positive feedback which ends in the familiar tiny gap in an otherwise healthy-looking filament. Irving Langmuir found that an inert gas, instead of vacuum, would retard evaporation, and so ordinary incandescent light bulbs over about 25 watts in rating are now filled with a mixture of nitrogen,and argon, or krypton Burgin. Lighting Research and Technology 1984 16.2 61-72. However, a filament breaking in a gas-filled bulb can form an electric arc, which may spread between the terminals and cause very heavy current flow; intentionally thin lead-in wires or more elaborate protection devices are therefore often used as fuses built into the light bulb.Robert, Hunt (2001-2006). Glass Blowing for Vacuum Devices - Lamp Autopsy. Teralab. Retrieved on 2007-05-02. Moyes and Allwood. British Patent 814314 3 June 1969
During ordinary operation, the tungsten of the filament evaporates; hotter, more-efficient filaments evaporate faster. Because of this, the lifetime of a filament lamp is a trade-off between efficiency and longevity. The trade-off is typically set to provide a lifetime of several hundred to 2000 hours for lamps used for general illumination. Theatrical, photographic, and projection lamps may have a useful life of only a few hours, trading life expectancy for high output in a compact form. Long life general service lamps have lower efficiency but are used where the cost of changing the lamp is high compared to the value of energy used.
In a conventional lamp, the evaporated tungsten eventually condenses on the inner surface of the glass envelope, darkening it. For bulbs that contain a vacuum, the darkening is uniform across the entire surface of the envelope. When a filling of inert gas is used, the evaporated tungsten is carried in the thermal convection currents of the gas, depositing preferentially on the uppermost part of the envelope and blackening just that portion of the envelope.
In a halogen lamp the rate of evaporation of the filament is reduced, and darkening of the envelope prevented, by filling the lamp with an inert gas, usually at high pressure, with a small amount of a halogencompound added. Smaller bulbs are necessary to maintain the halogen regenerative cycle. These lamps can operate at a higher filament temperature giving them a higher luminous efficiency for the same, or generally longer life than their nearest non halogen equivalents and can be used more efficiently in optical systems. Burgin and Edwards. Lighting Research and Technology 1970, 2.2.95-108
Some old, high-powered lamps used in theater, projection, searchlight, and lighthouse service with heavy, sturdy filaments contained loose tungsten powder within the envelope. From time to time, the operator would remove the bulb and shake it, allowing the tungsten powder to scrub off most of the tungsten that had condensed on the interior of the envelope, removing the blackening and brightening the lamp again.
When a light bulb envelope breaks while the lamp is on or if air leaks into the envelope, the hot tungsten filament reacts with the air, yielding an aerosol of brown tungsten nitride, brown tungsten dioxide, violet-blue tungsten pentoxide, and yellow tungsten trioxide which then deposits on the nearby surfaces or the bulb interior.Hochgraf, Fredrick G. (1985). Review of Lamp Examination for ON or OFF in Traffic Accidents. Northwestern University Traffic Institute. Retrieved on 2007-05-02.
The glass bulb of a general service lamp can reach temperatures between 400 and 550 degrees Fahrenheit (200 to 260 degrees Celsius). Lamps intended for high power operation or used for heating purposes will have envelopes made of hard glass or fused quartz. General Electric TP-110 page 26
Incandescent lamps are nearly pure resistive loads which means they have a power factor of 1. This means the actual power consumed (in watts) and the apparent power (in volt-amperes) are equal. The actual resistance of the filament is temperature dependent. The cold resistance is about 1/15 the resistance when the lamp is lit. For example, a 100 watt, 120 volt lamp has a resistance of 144 Ω when lit, but the cold resistance is much lower (about 9.5 ohms) General Electric TP-110 page 24 . Since incandescent lamps are resistive loads, simple triac dimmers can be used to control brightness. Electrical contacts may carry a "T" rating symbol indicating that they are designed to control circuits with the high inrush current characteristic of tungsten lamps. For a 100-watt 120 volt general service lamp, the current stabilizes in about 0.10 seconds, and the lamp reaches 90% of its full brightness after about 0.13 seconds. General Electric TP-110 page 23, 24
| Power (W) | Output (lm) | Efficiency (lm/W) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 25 | 5 |
| 15 | 110 | 7.3 |
| 25 | 200 | 8.0 |
| 35 | 350 | 10.3 |
| 40 | 500 | 12.5 |
| 50 | 700 | 13.5 |
| 55 | 800 | 14.2 |
| 60 | 850 | 14.5 |
| 65 | 1000 | 15.0 |
| 70 | 1100 | 15.7 |
| 75 | 1200 | 16.0 |
| 90 | 1450 | 16.1 |
| 95 | 1600 | 16.8 |
| 100 | 1700 | 17.0 |
| 135 | 2350 | 17.4 |
| 150 | 2850 | 19.0 |
| 200 | 3900 | 19.5 |
| 300 | 6200 | 20.7 |
Incandescent light bulbs are usually marketed according to the electrical power consumed. This is measured in watts and depends mainly on the resistance of the filament, which in turn depends mainly on the filament\'s length, thickness and material. For two bulbs of the same voltage, type, colour, and clarity, the higher-powered bulb gives more light.
The table shows the approximate typical output, in lumens, of standard incandescent light bulbs at various powers. Note that the lumen values for "soft white" bulbs will generally be slightly lower than for standard bulbs at the same power, while clear bulbs will usually emit a slightly brighter light than correspondingly-powered standard bulbs.
The kilowatt-hour, equal to 3.6 megajoules, is the unit of energy in which electricity is commonly purchased. The cost of electricity in the United States normally ranges from $0.06 to $0.18 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), but can be as high as $0.23 per kWh in certain areas such as Hawaii. As for any other electrical appliance, the hourly cost of operation can be calculated by multiplying the input in watts by the cost per kilowatt-hour and divding by 1000; for example, a 100-watt lamp operated on electricity that costs 10 cents per kilowatt-hour will cost 100 * 10/1000 = 1 cent per hour to operate.
The desired product of any electric lighting system is illumination (lumens), not power. To compare incandescent lamp operating cost with other light sources, the calculation must also consider the lumens produced by each lamp. For commercial and industrial lighting systems the comparison must also include teh required illumination level, effectiveness of the lighting fixtures, the capital cost of the lamp, the labor cost to replace lamps, the various depreciation factors for light output as the lamp ages, effect of lamp operation on heating and air conditioning systems, and also the energy consumption.
Light emitted in all directions. Available in either clear or frosted. Bulb shapes: General ("arbitrary") (A), Globe (G), Decorative (D) (flame, teardrop and other shapes)
Lamps greater than 200 watts.
Reflective coating inside the bulb directs light forward. Flood types (FL) spread light. Spot types (SP) concentrate the light. Reflector (R) bulbs put approximately double the amount of light (foot-candles) on the front central area as General Service (A) of same wattage.
Parabolic Aluminized Reflector (PAR) bulbs control light more precisely. They produce about four times the concentrated light intensity of General Service (A), and are used in recessed and track lighting. Weatherproof casings are available for outdoor spot and flood fixtures. 120V (PAR) 16, 20, 30 and 38 bulbs: Available in numerous spot and flood beam spreads. Like all light bulbs, the number represents the diameter of the bulb in 1/8s of an inch. Therefore, a PAR 16 is 2" in diameter, a PAR 20 is 2.5" in diameter, PAR 30 is 3.75" and a PAR 38 is 4.75" in diameter.
"HIR" means that the bulb has a special coating that reflects infrared back onto the filament. Therefore, less heat escapes, so the filament burns hotter and more efficiently. Lighting Glossary
A light bulb with a standard E26 Edison screw base
The double-contact Bayonet Cap. (The bulb shown is actually a compact fluorescent.)Most domestic and industrial light bulbs have a metal fitting (or lamp base) compatible with standard sockets. General Electric introduced standard fitting sizes for tungsten incandescent lamps under the Mazda trademark in 1909. This standard was soon adopted across the United States, and the Mazda name was used by many manufacturers under license through 1945.
In each designation, the E stands for Edison, who created the screw-base lamp, and the number is the diameter of the screw base in millimeters. (This is true even in North America, where designations for the diameter of the glass bulb are based on eighths of an inch.) There are four standard sizes of screw-in sockets used for line-voltage lamps:
The largest size E39 is now used only in large street lights, although a few high-wattage household lamps (such as a 100/200/300-watt three-way) use it as do higher-wattage bulbs and most common high-intensity discharge bulbs. MES bulbs for 12 volts are also produced for recreational vehicles. Large outdoor Christmas lights use an intermediate base, as do some desk lamps and many microwave ovens. Formerly Emergency exit signs also tended to use the intermediate base (in the US modern exit signs must use LEDs now). A medium screw base should not carry more than 25 amperes current; this may limit the practical rating of low-voltage lamps. General Electric TP 110 page 12
Bulbs with a bayonet (push-twist) base for use with sockets having spring-loaded base plates, are produced in similar sizes and are given a B or BA designation. These are also extremely common in 12-volt automobile lighting worldwide, in addition to wedge-base lamps which have a partial plastic or even completely glass base. In this case, the wires wrap around to the outside of the bulb, where they press against the contacts in the socket. Miniature Christmas bulbs use a plastic wedge base as well. BC or B22 or B22d or double-contact bayonet cap are used in Australia, India, Ireland, New Zealand and the UK for most 220–240 V mains lamps. A miniature bayonet is used in North America for appliances such as sewing machines and vacuum cleaners.
Halogen bulbs are available with a standard fitting, but also come with a pin base, with two contacts on the underside of the bulb. These are given a G or GY designation, with the number being the center-to-center distance in millimeters. For example, a 4 mm pin base would be indicated as G4 (or GY4). Some common sizes include G4 (4 mm), G6.35 (6.35 mm), G8 (8 mm), GY8.6 (8.6 mm), G9 (9 mm), and GY9.5 (9.5 mm). The second letter (or lack thereof) indicates pin diameter. Some spotlights or floodlights have pins that are broader at the tips, in order to lock into a socket with a twist. Other halogen bulbs come in a tube, with blades or dimples at either end.
There are also specialized bases for lamps used in projectors and stage lighting instruments. Projector lampsThe Basics About Projector Lamps. Published by PartStore, accessed on June 29, 2007., in particular, may run on unusual voltages (such as 82), perhaps intended as a vendor lock-in or to optimize light output for a particular optical system.
Lamps intended for use in optical systems (such as film projectors, microscope illuminators, or theatrical lighting instruments) have bases with alignment features so that the filament is positioned accurately within the optical system. A screw-base lamp may have a random orientation of the filament when the lamp is installed in the socket.
Tubular lamps such as R7S-75 for halogen lamp tubes, in this case a 7 mm diameter socket with 75 mm tube length.butiken.su.se Stockholms universitet."MT0414 Lampa, halogen, 300W, R7s-15 Haloline" / see picture
Incandescent lamps are very sensitive to changes in the supply voltage. These characteristics are of great practical and economic importance.
For a supply voltage V,
This means that a 5% reduction in operating voltage will more than double the life of the bulb, at the expense of reducing its light output by about 20%. This may be a very acceptable trade off for a light bulb that is in a difficult-to-access location (for example, traffic lights or fixtures hung from high ceilings). So-called "long-life" bulbs are simply bulbs that take advantage of this trade off. Since the value of the electric power they consume is much more than the value of the lamp, general service lamps for illumination usually emphasize efficiency over long operating life; the objective is to minimize the cost of light, not the cost of lamps. General Electric TP-110, page 20
The relationships above are valid for only a few percent change of voltage around rated conditions, but they do indicate that a lamp operated at much lower than rated voltage could last for hundreds of times longer than at rated conditions, albeit with greatly reduced light output. The Centennial Light is a light bulb which is accepted by the Guinness Book of World Records as having been burning almost continuously at a fire station in Livermore, California since 1901. However, the bulb is powered by only 4 watts. A similar story can be told of a 40-watt bulb in Texas which has been illuminated since September 21, 1908. It once resided in an opera house where notable celebrities stopped to take in its glow, but is now in an area museum.[3]
In flood lamps used for photographic lighting, the trade-off is made in the other direction. Compared to general service bulbs, for the same power, these bulbs produce far more light, and (more importantly) light at a higher colour temperature, at the expense of greatly reduced life (which may be as short as 2 hours for a type P1 lamp). The upper limit to the temperature at which metal incandescent bulbs can operate is the melting point of the metal. Tungsten is the metal with the highest melting point. A 50-hour-life projection bulb, for instance, is designed to operate only 50 °C (90 °F) below that melting point. Such a lamp may achieve up to 22 lumens/watt , compared with 17.5 for a 750-hour general service lamp. General Electric TP-110, page 19
Lamps designed for different voltages have different luminous efficacy. For example a 100 watt 120 volt lamp will produce about 17.1 lumens per watt. A lamp with the same rated lifetime but designed for 230 V would produce only around 12.8 lumens/watt, and a similar lamp designed for 30 volts (train lighting) would produce as much as 19.8 lumens/watt. General Elecric TP 110 pg. 19
Lamps also vary in the number of support wires used for the tungsten filament. Each additional support wire makes the filament mechanically stronger, but removes heat from the filament, creating another trade-off between efficiency and long life. Many modern general service 120 volt lamps use no additional support wires, but lamps designed for "rough service" often have several support wires and lamps designed for "vibration service" may have as many as five. Lamps designed for low voltages (for example, 12 volts) generally have filaments made of much heavier wire and do not require any additional support wires. Very low voltages are inefficient since the lead wires would conduct too much heat away from the filament, so the practical lower limit is 1.5 volts. Very long filaments for high voltages are fragile, and lamp bases become more difficult to insulate so lamps with rated voltages over 300 V are not made. General Electric TP 110
Close-up of a tungsten filament inside a halogen lamp. The two ring-shaped structures left and right are filament supports.
Approximately 90-95% of the power consumed by an incandescent light bulb is emitted as heat, rather than as visible light. General Electric TP-110, page 23, table.
For a given quantity of light, an incandescent light bulb, produces more heat (and consumes more power) than a fluorescent lamp (with up to 15% efficiency). Incandescent lamps\' heat output increases load on air conditioning in the summer, but the heat from lighting can contribute to building heating in cold weather; while this saves on the energy purchased by the consumer, it may require extra fuel consumption at power plants. Prof. Peter Lund, Helsinki University of Technology,[4] on p. C5 in Helsingin Sanomat Oct. 23, 2007.
Quality halogen incandescent lamps are closer to 9% efficiency, which will allow a 60 W bulb to provide nearly as much light as a non-halogen 100 W. Also, the lower wattage halogen lamp can be designed to produce the same amount of light as a 60 W non-halogen lamp, but with much longer life. Halogen lamps get hotter than regular incandescent lamps because the heat is concentrated on a smaller envelope surface, and because the surface is closer to the filament. This high temperature is essential to their long life. Some safety codes now require halogen bulbs to be protected by a grid or grille, or by the glass and metal housing of the fixture to prevent ignition of draperies or flammable objects in contact with the lamp. Similarly, in some areas halogen bulbs over a certain power are banned from residential use.
Luminous efficacy is a ratio of the visible light energy emitted to the total power input to the lamp. It is measured in lumens per watt (lm/W). The maximum efficacy possible is 683 lm/W for monochromatic green light at 555 nanometres wavelength, the peak sensitivity of the human eye. For white light, the maximum luminous efficacy is around 230 lumens/watt. Luminous efficiency is the ratio of the luminous efficacy to this maximum possible value. It is expressed as a number between 0 and 1, or as a percentage.[5] However, the term luminous efficiency is often used for both quantities. Two related measures are the overall luminous efficacy and overall luminous efficiency, which divide by the total power input rather than the total radiant flux. This takes into account more ways that energy might be wasted and so they are never greater than the standard luminous efficacy and efficiency. The term "luminous efficiency" is often misused, and in practice can refer to any of these four measures.
The chart below lists values of overall luminous efficacy and efficiency for several types of incandescent bulb, and several idealized light sources. A similar chart in the article on luminous efficacy compares a broader array of light sources to one another.
| Type | Overall luminous efficiency | Overall luminous efficacy (lm/W) |
|---|---|---|
| 40 W tungsten incandescent | 1.9% | 12.6Keefe, T.J. (2007). The Nature of Light. Retrieved on 2007-11-05. |
| 60 W tungsten incandescent | 2.1% | 14.5 |
| 100 W tungsten incandescent | 2.6% | 17.5 |
| glass halogen | 2.3% | 16 |
| quartz halogen | 3.5% | 24 |
| high-temperature incandescent | 5.1% | 35Klipstein, Donald L. (1996). The Great Internet Light Bulb Book, Part I. Retrieved on 2006-04-16. |
| ideal black-body radiator at 4000 K | 7.0% | 47.5Black body visible spectrum |
| ideal black-body radiator at 7000 K | 14% | 95 |
| ideal white light source | 35.5% | 242.5 |
| ideal monochromatic 555 nm (green) source | 100% | 683See luminosity function. |
A 100 W bulb for 120 V systems, produces 17.5 lm/W, compared to a theoretical "ideal" of 242.5 lm/W for white light. Unfortunately, tungsten filaments radiate mostly infrared radiation at temperatures where they remain solid (below 3683 kelvins). Donald L. Klipstein explains it this way: "An ideal thermal radiator produces visible light most efficiently at temperatures around 6300 °C (6600 K or 11 500 °F). Even at this high temperature, a lot of the radiation is either infrared or ultraviolet, and the theoretical luminous efficiency is 95 lumens per watt." No known material can be used as a filament at this ideal temperature, which is hotter than the sun\'s surface. An upper limit for incandescent lamp luminous efficacy is around 52 lumens per watt, the theoretical value emitted by tungsten at its melting point. General Electric TP-110 page 19
Other alternatives to standard incandescent lamps for general lighting purposes, besides halogen lamps, include:
None of these devices rely on incandescence to produce light. Instead, all these devices produce light by the transition of electrons from one energy level to another. These mechanisms produce discrete spectral lines and so are not associated with the broad "tail" of invisible infrared emissions produced by incandescent emitters, which is energy not usable for illumination. By careful selection of which electron energy level transitions are used, the spectrum emitted can be tuned to the spectrum most suitable for visible light. However, the light never quite reaches the top quality of incandescent light so there is a trade-off of quantity instead of quality. They also lose output with age.
All of the non-incandescent alternatives are more complicated/emergy-intensive to produce & recycle and contain mercury which may end up in landfills and eventually enter the food chain.
Due to the higher energy usage of incandescent light bulbs in comparison to more energy efficient alternatives, like compact fluorescent lamps and LED lamps, some governments have passed laws and regulations that have started to phase out their usage. Brazil and Venezuela started to phase them out in 2005, and other nations are planning scheduled phase-outs: Ireland in 2009, Australia in 2010, Canada in 2012, and the U.S. between 2012 and 2014. Most of these laws and regulations do not ban the usage of incandescents, but rather ban their sale.
In response to this regulatory movement, various efforts to improve the efficiency of incandescent lamps have been made. The consumer lighting division of General Electric has announced that they are working on what they have dubbed "high efficiency incandescent" (HEI) lamps, which are ultimately expected to be four times as efficient as current incandescent lamps, although their initial production goal is to be 30 lumens per watt or twice as efficient.Daley, Dan (February 2008), "Incandescent\'s Not-So-Dim Future", Projection Lights and Staging News (PLSN) (Timeless Communications Corp.) 09 (1): 46http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/ge/index.jsp?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20070223005120
In 2006, David Cunningham, who has produced many innovations in entertainment lighting, filed for a U.S. Patent for a lamp he says would ultimately be 80% efficient. Cunningham\'s lamp would use infrared reflector technology, as well as other means, to keep the heat produced as a bi-product near the filament, reducing the amount of power required to produce the same amount of visible light.{Citation | last = Cunningham | first = David | title = Incandescent lamp incorporating extended high-reflectivity IR coating and lighting fixture incorporating such an incandescent lamp (United States Patent 20060226777) | year = 2006}}Daley, Dan (February 2008), "Incandescent\'s Not-So-Dim Future", Projection Lights and Staging News (PLSN) (Timeless Communications Corp.) 09 (1): 46
The US Department of Energy at Sandia National Laboratories is also currently developing a filament, photonic lattice, which would improve the efficiency of a lamp from 5% to 60%."Proposed Bulb Ban Causes Chain Reaction", Projection Lights and Staging News (PLSN) Online, January 2008, <http://www.plsn.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1606&Itemid=41>Daley, Dan (February 2008), "Incandescent\'s Not-So-Dim Future", Projection Lights and Staging News (PLSN) (Timeless Communications Corp.) 09 (1): 46
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