Evolution of A Light Bulb
Evolution of A Light Bulb
Evolution of A Light Bulb
Early beginnings
Man-made electrical lighting itself began in circa 1810 when a chemist in England
called Humphrey Davy invented the arc light. This worked by connecting a battery
to two wires, and attaching the other ends of the wires to a strip of charcoal. The
charcoal became electrically charged and began to glow, with arcs of electricity in
the air surrounding it.
Then in 1820 Warren De La Rue placed a coil made of platinum into an empty tube
and allowed an electric current to pass through to form the first known proto-light
bulb. This lit up well enough but the problem was that the chosen material for the
coil, platinum was and still is extremely expensive to obtain, making the design a
non-starter for commercialization.
But only being an experimental version there were limits to its illumination (it was
quite dim) and it also could only be used very close to the source of power. The
vacuum maintenance was also causing some trouble, so Swan, successful but
frustrated, turned to other science projects and only returned to improving his
invention in 1875 when he switched the filament to one of compressed and
carbonized fibrous cotton thread.
In 1878 he demonstrated his new version. This was a year earlier than Thomas
Edison, who had independently chosen the same textile for the filament in his light
bulb, after he and his assistants had exhaustively tested 6000 alternative plant
fibers from every corner of the Earth, before settling on cotton as the best.
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NAME : KULA SEGARA PANDIYAN J
REG NO: 17MCD0025
Edison takes charge, (with some help)
Swan’s improved lamp lit well for thirteen and-a-half hours. Edison did beat this,
his lasting for a little under fifteen hours. Thomas Edison however was no ordinary
inventor and due to his numerous past successes and fame, had a number of
wealthy industrialists providing him with money to back his projects. So he bought
Swan’s patent from the company that then owned it (not from Joseph Wilson Swan
himself) and the latter passed into the history books (or the better ones, anyway).
Edison now began to rapidly improve the working life span of the light bulb. His
further experiments leading to better and better versions until by 1880, his
bamboo fiber filament lamp was a 16 watt bulb that lasted for anywhere between
1200-1500 hours. Though this again was not entirely down to him. A large reason
for the long burning filaments was the complete lack of oxygen inside the glass
bulb.
And the design for the bulb itself employed by Edison was not his alone, his had
evolved out of a glass concept invented by two Canadians: Henry Woodward and
Matthew Evans; but they had been unsuccessful in finding willing backers for their
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NAME : KULA SEGARA PANDIYAN J
REG NO: 17MCD0025
bulb, and having no financial muscle themselves, ended up like Swan, having their
rights to patent bought by Thomas Edison, and also like Swan, are hardly known
today whilst Edison is regularly hailed as the father of the light bulb.
One should not belittle Edison, mind. He behaved perfectly legally at all times and
improved the originals immensely, allowing them to become widespread in use.
And although he did not get there first, his original had also been slightly better
than the competition.
Moving on
In the next century 1903 saw Willis Whitnew invent a metal-coating for the carbon
filament which avoided the inside of the bulb turning dark with sooty residue. In
addition to this, 1906 saw tungsten (still in common use today) making its
appearance as the General Electric Company patented a way of producing
filaments from this excellent candidate metal. Indeed Edison himself had known
tungsten would eventually prove to be the best choice for filaments in
incandescent light bulbs, but in his day, the machinery needed to produce the wire
in such a fine form was not available. Engineering had come on in leaps and bounds
in the intervening years but tungsten filament production was still a costly pastime
for business until 1910 when William David Coolidge of General Electric improved
the process of manufacture to make the longest lasting tungsten filaments
available to all.
So the wonder of light bulbs were soon seen in all parts of the world where
electricity itself stood proud, and even in some places where it didn’t yet (which
must have been unbelievably maddening). Little electric friends that make life so
much easier for everyone, and they continued to evolve and adapt to a number of
choices of types for different purposes, looks and occasions.
Pros
Less energy than traditional incandescence
(~15%)
Can use less expensive gases in them
Cons
Very hot (known to start fires)
Cannot touch bulbs
Some need transformers
Shorter life time (60 W replacement .9 year
At 3 hours a day)
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NAME : KULA SEGARA PANDIYAN J
REG NO: 17MCD0025
WHAT NOW? FLORESCENT / COMPACT FLORESCENT
How They Work
Bulb is filled with mercury gas, sealed and coated with an
Ultra-Violet
(UV) light-sensitive material (called a phosphor)
Electric current is run through a filament producing electrons
The electrons transfer their energy to the gas, causing the gas
to emit UV radiation.
Phosphor absorbs UV radiation and re-emits visible, while
light.
Pros:
More efficient than an incandescent light bulb.
Last Longer
Cons
Contains toxic mercury.
Resistance decreases as current flows through bulb. Needs
either external ballast (florescent) or
Internal ballast (compact florescent) to control current.
Warm up time
8 Evolution of a light bulb
NAME : KULA SEGARA PANDIYAN J
REG NO: 17MCD0025
WHAT NOW? LEDS
Pros
Very small (5 mm is a typical size)
Do not catastrophically fail (gets dimmer over
time)
Lifetime 25,000-60,000 hours (life defined as
reaching 70% of original brightness)
98% of power goes to light
Cons
Directional lighting (shines in straight line not
spread out)
High cost
Heat sensitive
What is a Light Emitting Diode (LED)?
An LED is a diode that produces light.
The lighting industry has changed significantly over recent years thanks to LED
technology. Its long life, low carbon emissions, efficiency and quality of light have
helped it gain an ever-growing market share
With LED lighting becoming mainstream, the next generation of solid state lighting
technology is already creating interest. Organic LED lighting works by passing
electricity through one or more thin layers of organic semiconductor material.
Mass-market adoption of OLED lighting is not expected to occur for at least two
years, but it is already being used in TVs and phones.