Luminous Efficiency (Efficacy)
Luminous efficacy is a property of light sources, which indicates what portion of the emitted electromagnetic radiation is usable for human vision. It is the ratio of emitted luminous flux to radiant flux. Luminous efficacy is related to the overall efficiency of a light source for illumination, but the overall lighting efficiency also depends on how much of the input energy is converted into electromagnetic waves (whether visible or not).
Explanation
Wavelengths of light outside of the visible spectrum are not useful for illumination because they cannot be seen by the human eye.
Furthermore, the eye responds more to some wavelengths of light than
others, even within the visible spectrum. This response of the eye is
represented by the luminosity function. This is a standardized function which represents the response of a "typical" eye under bright conditions (Photopic vision). One can also define a similar curve for dim conditions (Scotopic vision). When not specified, photopic conditions are generally assumed.
Luminous efficacy measures the fraction of electromagnetic power which is useful for lighting. It is obtained by dividing the luminous flux by the radiant flux. Light with wavelengths outside the visible spectrum
does not contribute to the efficacy at all, because the luminous flux
of such light is zero. Wavelengths near the peak of the eye's response
contribute more strongly than those near the edges.
In SI, luminous efficacy has units of lumens per watt
(lm/W). Photopic luminous efficacy has a maximum possible value of
683 lm/W, for the case of monochromatic light at a wavelength of
555 nm (green). Scotopic luminous efficacy reaches a maximum of
1700 lm/W for narrowband light of wavelength 507 nm.
Efficacy and efficiency
In some other systems of units, luminous flux has the same units as radiant flux. The luminous efficacy is then dimensionless. In this case, it is often instead called the luminous efficiency or luminous coefficient
and may be expressed as a percentage. For example, it is common to
express the luminous efficiency in units where the maximum possible
efficacy, 683 lm/W, corresponds to an efficiency of 100%. The
distinction between efficacy and efficiency is not
always carefully maintained in published sources, so it is not uncommon
to see "efficiencies" expressed in lumens per watt, or "efficacies"
expressed as a percentage.
Mathematical definition
The dimensionless luminous efficiency measures the integrated fraction of the radiant power that contributes to its luminous properties as evaluated by means of the standard luminosity function.[1] The luminous coefficient is

where
- yλ is the standard luminosity function,
- Jλ is the spectral power distribution of the radiant intensity.
The luminous coefficient is unity for a narrow band of wavelengths at 555 nanometres.
Examples
Type
|
Luminous efficacy
(lm/W) |
Luminous efficiency[2]
|
| Class M star (Antares, Betelgeuse), 3000 K |
30 |
4% |
| ideal black-body radiator at 4000 K |
47.5 [3] |
7.0% |
| Class G star (Sun, Capella), 5800 K |
80 |
12% |
| natural sunlight |
93 |
14% |
| ideal black-body radiator at 7000 K |
95 [3] |
14% |
| ideal white light source |
242.5 [4] |
35.5% |
| ideal monochromatic 555 nm source |
683 [5] |
100% |
Lighting efficiency
Artificial light sources are usually evaluated in terms of a related quantity, the overall luminous efficacy.
This is the ratio between the total luminous flux emitted by a device
and the total amount of input power (electrical, etc.) it consumes.
This is often simply called “luminous efficacy”, which can be confusing
as it also has units of lm/W. It is also sometimes referred to as the wall-plug luminous efficacy or simply wall-plug efficacy.
The overall luminous efficacy is a measure of the efficiency of the
device with the output adjusted to account for the spectral response
curve (the “luminosity function”). When expressed in dimensionless form
(for example, as a fraction of the maximum possible luminous efficacy),
this value may be called overall luminous efficiency, wall-plug luminous efficiency, or simply the lighting efficiency.
The main difference between the regular and “overall” efficacies is that the latter account for input energy that is lost as heat
or otherwise exits the source as something other than electromagnetic
radiation. True luminous efficacy is a property of the radiation
emitted by a source. Overall luminous efficacy is a property of the source as a whole.
Examples
The following table lists overall luminous efficacy and efficiency for various light sources:
Sources that depend on thermal emission from a solid filament, such as incandescent light bulbs,
tend to have low overall efficacy compared to an ideal blackbody source
because, as explained by Donald L. Klipstein, “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 [sic] is 95 lumens per watt. Of course, nothing
known to any humans is solid and usable as a light bulb filament at
temperatures anywhere close to this. The surface of the sun is not
quite that hot.”[4] At temperatures where the tungsten filament of an ordinary light bulb remains solid (below 3683 kelvins), most of its emission is in the infrared.
SI photometry units
See also
References
- ^ (January 1958) Van Nostrand's Scientific Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition. Princeton, New Jersey, Toronto, London, New York: D. Van Nostrand Company, Inc..
- ^ a b Defined such that the maximum value possible is 100%.
- ^ a b Black body visible spectrum
- ^ a b c Klipstein, Donald L. (1996). The Great Internet Light Bulb Book, Part I. Retrieved on 2006-04-16.
- ^ See luminosity function.
- ^ 1 candela*4π steradians/40 W
- ^ a b Keefe, T.J. (2007). The Nature of Light. Retrieved on 2007-11-05.
- ^ China energy saving lamp. Retrieved on 2006-04-16.
- ^ Klipstein, Donald L.. The Brightest and Most Efficient LEDs and where to get them. Don Klipstein's Web Site. Retrieved on 2006-04-16.
- ^ Cree launches the new XLamp 7090 XR-E Series Power LED, the first 160-lumen LED!.
- ^ Improving White LED Efficiency Through Scattered Photon Extraction. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Retrieved on 2006-04-19.
- ^ Cree Demonstrates 131 Lumens per Watt White LED. Cree, Inc. Press Release (2006-06-20). Retrieved on 2006-12-03.
- ^ Nichia Corp. claims white LED delivering 150 lumens/Watt efficiency. Nichia Corp. Press Release (2006-12-22). Retrieved on 2006-12-03.
- ^ a b Technical Information on Lamps (pdf). Optical Building Blocks. Retrieved on 2007-10-14. Note that the figure of 150 lm/W given for xenon lamps appears to be a typo. The page contains other useful information.
- ^ (2007) OSRAM Sylvania Lamp and Ballast Catalog.
- ^ a b LED or Neon? A scientific comparison.
- ^ Why is lightning coloured? (gas excitations).
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Luminous Efficacy"
|