Monday, November 19, 2012

Making solid-state lighting fun


Solid-state lighting is a clean, green new market for optical technology, but it's hard to get very excited about white LEDs that merely replace older incandescent and fluorescent bulbs. Now, Philips is trying to make solid-state lighting fun with wirelessly controlled color-tunable bulbs called "Hue".

A Hue bulb screws into a standard light socket and contains red, green, and blue LEDs. A smartphone or iPad app controls the bulb's output through a wireless controller and a wireless receiver in the bulb. The app matches the LED outputs colors selected from a rainbow palette in the app, or from the user's favorite photos. Users can pick bright disco colors, shades of white from candlelight to sunlight, or anything in between.

A $200 starter set including the controller and three bulbs sounds like an impulse buy at the Apple Store -- and that's exactly where Philips is selling it, as a fun gadget. A single 600-lumen Hue bulb will set you back $60, more than triple the price of a Philips Ambient bulb that emits a pleasant white light. But playing with colored lights is much more fun, as Philips shows in a video.

The Hue isn't just a party light. You can set it to emit shades of white from a bright "energize" tone to start the morning to a warm "relax" shade to unwind in the evening. You can set each bulb to turn on and off when you want it. So it's an all-purpose adjustable light ready to put into any socket in the house, without costly rewiring.

Philips is first to market, but company is coming. LiFx (San Francisco, CA) in September sought support on Kickstarter to develop their own smart bulb, and was surprised to receive $1.3 million in pledges when they had sought only $100,000. They have demonstrated a bench version and now are designing a production prototype, which will include a white LED as well as the RGB emitters.

So far press attention has focused on controls and tunable colors, but I wonder what the green sources are. Philips is using a "lime green" LED from its LumiLEDs division because it gives better color rendering than standard green LEDs, but won't disclose the wavelength or composition. Is it a hard-to-make green LED, a phosphor-LED hybrid, or something else?  If anybody out there has a spectrophotometer and a Hue at hand, it would be interesting to see a spectrum.


iPhone sets a Philips Hue bulb to "relax" for a calming evening. (Courtesy of Philips Lighting)

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