<p>Researchers have created a new technology which provides flicker-free, shatterproof lighting which is easy on the eyes and may soon replace the buzzing overhead fluorescent light bulbs in your office.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The lighting, based on field-induced polymer electroluminescent (FIPEL) technology, also gives off soft, white light – not the yellowish glint from fluorescents or bluish tinge from LEDs, claim scientists at Wake Forest University.<br /><br />“People often complain that fluorescent lights bother their eyes, and the hum from the fluorescent tubes irritates anyone sitting at a desk underneath them,” said David Carroll, the scientist leading the development of this technology at Wake Forest.<br /><br />“The new lights we have created can cure both of those problems and more,” Carroll said in a statement. The team uses a nano-engineered polymer matrix to convert the charge into light. This allows the researchers to create an entirely new light bulb – overcoming one of the major barriers in using plastic lights in commercial buildings and homes.<br /><br />The device is made of three layers of moldable white-emitting polymer blended with a small amount of nanomaterials that glow when stimulated to create bright and perfectly white light similar to the sunlight human eyes prefer.<br /><br />However, it can be made in any colour and any shape – from 2x4-foot sheets to replace office lighting to a bulb with Edison sockets to fit household lamps and light fixtures.<br /><br />This new lighting solution is at least twice as efficient as compact fluorescent (CFL) bulbs and on a par with LEDs, but these bulbs won’t shatter and contaminate a home like CFLs or emit a bluish light like LED counterparts.<br /><br />“If you wanted blue lights, discos would still be popular. You want lights that have a spectral content that is appealing to us inside of a building,” Carroll said.<br />“You want a light that won’t shatter and create a hazmat situation while your children are around,” Carroll said.<br /><br />Carroll’s group is the first to make a large-scale FIPEL that can replace current office lighting and is based on natural white light.<br /><br />Beyond office and home lighting, Carroll sees potential uses for large display lighting, from store marquees to signs on buses and subway cars.<br /><br />FIPELs also are long-lasting; Carroll has one that has worked for about a decade.<br />Wake Forest is working with a company to manufacture the technology and plans to have it ready for consumers as early as next year.<br /><br />The research supporting the technology is described in the journal Organic Electronics.</p>
<p>Researchers have created a new technology which provides flicker-free, shatterproof lighting which is easy on the eyes and may soon replace the buzzing overhead fluorescent light bulbs in your office.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The lighting, based on field-induced polymer electroluminescent (FIPEL) technology, also gives off soft, white light – not the yellowish glint from fluorescents or bluish tinge from LEDs, claim scientists at Wake Forest University.<br /><br />“People often complain that fluorescent lights bother their eyes, and the hum from the fluorescent tubes irritates anyone sitting at a desk underneath them,” said David Carroll, the scientist leading the development of this technology at Wake Forest.<br /><br />“The new lights we have created can cure both of those problems and more,” Carroll said in a statement. The team uses a nano-engineered polymer matrix to convert the charge into light. This allows the researchers to create an entirely new light bulb – overcoming one of the major barriers in using plastic lights in commercial buildings and homes.<br /><br />The device is made of three layers of moldable white-emitting polymer blended with a small amount of nanomaterials that glow when stimulated to create bright and perfectly white light similar to the sunlight human eyes prefer.<br /><br />However, it can be made in any colour and any shape – from 2x4-foot sheets to replace office lighting to a bulb with Edison sockets to fit household lamps and light fixtures.<br /><br />This new lighting solution is at least twice as efficient as compact fluorescent (CFL) bulbs and on a par with LEDs, but these bulbs won’t shatter and contaminate a home like CFLs or emit a bluish light like LED counterparts.<br /><br />“If you wanted blue lights, discos would still be popular. You want lights that have a spectral content that is appealing to us inside of a building,” Carroll said.<br />“You want a light that won’t shatter and create a hazmat situation while your children are around,” Carroll said.<br /><br />Carroll’s group is the first to make a large-scale FIPEL that can replace current office lighting and is based on natural white light.<br /><br />Beyond office and home lighting, Carroll sees potential uses for large display lighting, from store marquees to signs on buses and subway cars.<br /><br />FIPELs also are long-lasting; Carroll has one that has worked for about a decade.<br />Wake Forest is working with a company to manufacture the technology and plans to have it ready for consumers as early as next year.<br /><br />The research supporting the technology is described in the journal Organic Electronics.</p>