Friday, January 15, 2016

Why is Apple starting to patent light fittings?

Why is Apple starting to patent light fittings?

Apple has been granted a patent for the ceiling lighting system it has developed for its new-look stores in a move that has again raised the issue of the company’s intentions in the lighting market.
The US Patent and Trademark Office has granted Apple US Patent No. 9,217,247 for its new illuminated ceilings, which will be the showpiece feature of its next-generation stores. One of the first in the world to sport the new look is the company’s outlet in Brussels. The fully-illuminated LED ceiling is interspersed with narrow linear lighting troughs which include spotlights and other services, a design that is not wholly unfamiliar to lighting professionals working in the retail sector.
Apple’s retail team believes uniform lighting offers the best way to showcase its technology products. The troughs can accommodate cameras, speakers, alarms, fire suppression systems and, it’s speculated, the company’s iBeacon Bluetooth transmitters, which would allow customer tracking, in-store location, payments and marketing push notifications.
While it’s not unusual for Apple to patent innovations outside its core computer technologies – after all, the stores’ famous glass staircases are protected by copyright law – the patenting of a luminaire design raises fears in the lighting industry that Apple has long-term ambitions for the sector.
It’s known that the company has a lighting research team for instance, and lighting control firms are fearful of being disintermediated in a world dominated by the so-called ‘Internet of Things’, where connected IP-enabled devices such as luminaires and lamps can be controlled by smart phones, smart watches and tablets.

Nanotechnology Raises Incandescent Bulb Efficiency to Same Level as LEDs

Researchers combine the warm look of traditional light bulbs with 21st-century energy efficiency.

Traditional light bulbs, thought to be well on their way to oblivion, may receive a reprieve thanks to a technological breakthrough.
Incandescent lighting and its warm, familiar glow is well over a century old yet survives virtually unchanged in homes around the world. That is changing fast, however, as regulations aimed at improving energy efficiency are phasing out the old bulbs in favor of more efficient compact fluorescent bulbs (CFLs) and newer light-emitting diode bulbs (LEDs).
A proof-of-concept device built by MIT researchers demonstrates the principle of a two-stage process to make incandescent bulbs more efficient. This device already achieves efficiency comparable to some compact fluorescent and LED bulbs. (MIT/LEDinside)
Incandescent bulbs, commercially developed by Thomas Edison (and still used by cartoonists as the symbol of inventive insight), work by heating a thin tungsten wire to temperatures of around 2,700 degrees Celsius. That hot wire emits what is known as black body radiation, a very broad spectrum of light that provides a warm look and a faithful rendering of all colors in a scene.
But these bulbs have always suffered from one major problem: More than 95% of the energy that goes into them is wasted, most of it as heat. That’s why country after country has banned or is phasing out the inefficient technology. Now, researchers at MIT and Purdue University may have found a way to change all that.
The new findings are reported in the journal Nature Nanotechnology by three MIT professors — Marin Soljačić, professor of physics; John Joannopoulos, the Francis Wright Davis Professor of physics; and Gang Chen, the Carl Richard Soderberg Professor in Power Engineering — as well as MIT principal research scientist Ivan Celanovic, postdoc Ognjen Ilic, and Purdue physics professor (and MIT alumnus) Peter Bermel PhD ’07.
Light recycling
The key is to create a two-stage process, the researchers report. The first stage involves a conventional heated metal filament, with all its attendant losses. But instead of allowing the waste heat to dissipate in the form of infrared radiation, secondary structures surrounding the filament capture this radiation and reflect it back to the filament to be re-absorbed and re-emitted as visible light. These structures, a form of photonic crystal, are made of Earth-abundant elements and can be made using conventional material-deposition technology.
That second step makes a dramatic difference in how efficiently the system converts electricity into light. One quantity that characterizes a lighting source is the so-called luminous efficiency, which takes into account the response of the human eye. Whereas the luminous efficiency of conventional incandescent lights is between 2 and 3%, that of fluorescents (including CFLs) is between 7 and 15%, and that of most compact LEDs between 5 and 15%, the new two-stage incandescents could reach efficiencies as high as 40%, the team says.
However, the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) research report in 2014 noted LEDs luminous efficacy has already reached 30%, the LED luminous efficacy is probably closer to 50% at the moment, leaving LEDinside believing the stats cited in the research report might be outdated.
The first proof-of-concept units made by the team do not yet reach that level, achieving about 6.6% efficiency. But even that preliminary result matches the efficiency of some of today’s CFLs and LEDs, they point out. And it is already a threefold improvement over the efficiency of today’s incandescents.
The team refers to their approach as “light recycling,” says Ilic, since their material takes in the unwanted, useless wavelengths of energy and converts them into the visible light wavelengths that are desired. “It recycles the energy that would otherwise be wasted,” says Soljačić.
Bulbs and beyond
One key to their success was designing a photonic crystal that works for a very wide range of wavelengths and angles. The photonic crystal itself is made as a stack of thin layers, deposited on a substrate. “When you put together layers, with the right thicknesses and sequence,” Ilic explains, you can get very efficient tuning of how the material interacts with light. In their system, the desired visible wavelengths pass right through the material and on out of the bulb, but the infrared wavelengths get reflected as if from a mirror. They then travel back to the filament, adding more heat that then gets converted to more light. Since only the visible ever gets out, the heat just keeps bouncing back in toward the filament until it finally ends up as visible light.
“The results are quite impressive, demonstrating luminosity and power efficiencies that rival those of conventional sources including fluorescent and LED bulbs,” says Alejandro Rodriguez, assistant professor of electrical engineering at Princeton University, who was not involved in this work. The findings, he says, “provide further evidence that application of novel photonic designs to old problems can lead to potentially new devices. I believe that this work will reinvigorate and set the stage for further studies of incandescence emitters, paving the way for the future design of commercially scalable structures.”
The technology involved has potential for many other applications besides light bulbs, Soljačić says. The same approach could “have dramatic implications” for the performance of energy-conversion schemes such as thermo-photovoltaics. In a thermo-photovoltaic device, heat from an external source (chemical, solar, etc.) makes a material glow, causing it to emit light that is converted into electricity by a photovoltaic absorber.
“LEDs are great things, and people should be buying them,” Soljačić says. “But understanding these basic properties” about the way light, heat, and matter interact and how the light’s energy can be more efficiently harnessed “is very important to a wide variety of things.”
He adds that “the ability to control thermal emissions is very important. That’s the real contribution of this work.” As for exactly which other practical applications are most likely to make use of this basic new technology, he says, “it’s too early to say.”
The work was supported by the Army Research Office through the MIT Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies, and the S3TEC Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the U.S. Department of Energy.
[Editorial note: The luminous efficacy cited for LEDs in the press release are believed to be outdated. We have edited the article to include DOE's more recent findings in 2014 that pointed LEDs efficacy have reached at least 39%. The changes have been made as of Jan. 14, 2016.]

Melrose Eyes £4bn Bid For Philips Lighting

NETHERLANDS-TECHNOLOGY-PHILIPS-COMPANY-RESULTS


A London-listed vehicle which has turned around a string of underperforming industrial businesses is examining an offer for the lighting division of Philips, the Dutch conglomerate.
Sky News has learnt that Melrose is contemplating whether to join an auction of the business, which is drawing interest from some of the world's largest buyout funds.
If Melrose secures a deal to buy the Philips division, it would mark the British company's largest takeover to date, but would also represent a departure from the series of acquisitions it has made since it launched 13 years ago.
Set up by a trio of former executives at Wassall, a mini-conglomerate, Melrose specialises in identifying struggling industrial assets and improving their performance through several years of intensive operational management.
The recipe has worked at businesses such as Elster, a utility meter manufacturer, which it sold to the US industrial group Honeywell for £3.3bn last year.
Melrose's track record has earned its founders and senior executives substantial rewards but has been lauded by long-standing institutional investors, which have seen handsome returns over the last decade.
The company has tended to avoid formal auctions of assets, usually acquiring targets after pursuing bilateral discussions.
One source close to the Philips sale process said that while Melrose was examining a bid, its aversion to using levels of debt employed by private equity firms to finance transactions meant its prospects of succeeding with a bid would be lower than usual.
Other bidders for the Philips Lighting division include Apollo Management, Bain Capital and KKR, the buyout firms.
Christopher Miller, Melrose's chairman, said last month that the company had begun the search for a new acquisition.
"We are optimistic that a suitable acquisition will be identified to bring additional shareholder value and we look forward to inviting investors to participate in this next project in due course," he said.
Melrose continues to own Brush, a manufacturer of electricity generating equipment.
Melrose declined to comment.

Osram announces management, name for lamps business


Jan 15 German lighting group Osram said the lamps business it is carving out will be led by Jes Munk Hansen - who has been at the helm of the business for a year after running Osram's Americas business - and will be named "Ledvance".
The lamps business, with 2 billion euros ($2.2 billion) in annual sales, is to be operationally separated from the rest of Osram by April 1 and legally separated by July 1.

Osram has asked for tentative bids for the business, which is valued at roughly 500 million euros and has attracted interest from Chinese buyers who are interested in the brand and European and U.S. distribution channels. ($1 = 0.9176 euros) (Reporting by Georgina Prodhan; Editing by Christoph Steitz)