1.1. The Importance of Light and the Issue of Lighting Efficiency
Lighting provides an indispensable energy service (illumination), enabling activities at times when natural light levels are insufficient. Illumination is so valuable that around 20% of global grid-connected electricity is consumed for the purpose of making artificial light [
1]. With the breakthrough technology of light emitting diode (LED) lamps, which now comprise over 40% of lamp sales [
2], applications of artificial lighting have spread beyond illumination to many other fields including human physiology and photosynthesis for horticulture [
3]. Given the expanding role that artificial lighting plays globally, understanding precisely its potential contribution—via increasing efficiency—to reducing energy use to meet carbon dioxide emission targets is crucially important. Thus, the analysis of the energy and exergetic efficiency of lighting is important in many fields, including energy history [
4], energy economics [
5], ecological economics [
6], forecasting energy efficiency improvements [
2], and societal exergy analysis [
7], the focus of this article.
1.2. Lighting Fundamentals: Light Energy and the Energy Conversion Chain
Ahead of a detailed treatment of the thermodynamics of light in
Section 2.1, we set out here two fundamental aspects of lighting. The first aspect is clear definitions of electromagnetic (EM) energy and light. EM energy (
E, in J) is broad-spectrum EM radiation quantified by the energy of photons via Einstein’s equation:
where
h is Planck’s constant (
),
is frequency (in 1/s),
c is the speed of light (in m/s), and
is wavelength (in m). The human retina responds to a narrow wavelength range of EM radiation (380 nm <
< 780 nm). Thus, light is EM radiation within that narrow wavelength band [
8], weighted by the eye’s spectral (i.e., wavelength-specific) sensitivity (See
Figure 1). We note that wavelengths of light are not inherently colored, but we have adopted the color representation of the Commission Internationale de l’Eclairage (CIE) 10 degree color matching function (CMF) [
9], supplied by the
R package
ggspectra [
10], for demonstration purposes in
Figure 1 and others. The figures show 555 nm, the wavelength of the peak of the combined sensitivities of two of the human eyes’ five light receptors, the long-wavelength (L) and medium-wavelength (M) cones.
The second aspect is to note that modern lighting is provided via an energy conversion chain: primary energy carriers (e.g., coal) are converted to final energy (electricity, measured in watts, W) and lastly to useful energy (visible light, measured in lumens, lm). The field of exergy analysis has long analyzed individual machines and power plants in the energy conversion chain for their exergetic efficiency and performance, e.g., co-generation power plants [
12], nuclear power plants [
13], refrigerators [
14], heat pumps [
15], and energy storage systems [
16]. In contrast, the field of societal exergy analysis evaluates entire energy conversion chains at regional, national, or world levels in exergy terms and considers light (and many other useful energy products) to be enablers of economic growth. (Energy quantifies the potential to change temperature, whereas exergy quantifies the potential to do work). See Nakićenović et al. [
17] for an early example and Guevara et al. [
18], Heun and Brockway [
19], and Ver Beek et al. [
20] for later examples of societal exergy analysis. Thus, societal exergy analysis relies upon results from the energy and exergy analysis of lamps and lighting to assess the ways in which useful energy products enable economic growth.
Lighting contributes a non-negligible proportion of total useful exergy supplied to modern economies, so an essential metric in societal exergy analysis is the efficiency with which electricity (final stage) is converted to light (useful stage) by lamps. Therefore, the efficiency of energy and exergy conversion of electricity into light by electric lamps (
and
, respectively) is the focus of this article. Note that both energy services (e.g., illumination, the stage of the energy conversion chain termed “application efficacy” in photometry [
21]) and satisfaction of human needs (e.g., comfort, safety, etc.) are downstream of the useful stage and thus beyond the scope of this paper.
1.3. The Conventional Method and the Thorny Issue of Luminous Efficacy
The valuable energy or exergy conversion efficiency (
) is defined in simple terms as
When the numerator and denominator are quantified in energy terms, an energy efficiency is obtained (). When the numerator and denominator are quantified in exergy terms, an exergetic efficiency is obtained ().
But light (the valuable output) is rarely quantified in energy terms and almost never in exergy terms. Instead, light is quantified in lumens (lm). Indeed, a common interpretation of Equation (
2) uses light (in lm) as the valuable output in the numerator and electricity (in W) as the input in the denominator to obtain luminous efficacy (
K, in lm/W). In fact, most lamps are rated and advertised by their lumen output and their luminous efficacy (
K).
Figure 2 shows the evolution over time of luminous efficacy for four lamp technologies. (Data for
Figure 2 were obtained from three sources: the Museum of Electric Lamp Technology (LampTech) [
22], the ENERGYSTAR database of certified lamps [
23], and the Lighting Market Characterization Reports commissioned by the US Department of Energy (DOE) [
24,
25,
26]. See
Supplementary Materials for additional information [
27].)
Practitioners who use luminous efficacy as a lamp efficiency metric include Nordhaus [
5] and Tsao and Waide, who state “[l]uminous efficacy represents the efficiency with which energy is used to produce visible light” [
28] (p. 265).
Sousa et al. note that societal exergy analysis is hampered when “the useful output cannot or is not typically measured in energy units” [
29] (p. 17), as is the case with lighting. Indeed, societal exergy practitioners need the valuable energy and exergetic efficiencies of lamps (
and
), but lighting efficiencies are given in terms of luminous efficacy (
K). Thus, the widespread use of luminous efficacy (
K) as a measure of lamp efficiency provides a burden to societal exergy analysis.
Conventionally, societal exergy practitioners solve this problem by estimating the valuable (
v) exergetic (
X) efficiency (
) of lighting (
L) by the ratio of the minimum energy required to produce a given output and the actual energy required to produce the same given output, as recommended by Sousa et al. [
29] for sound, information, and lighting. (See
Section 4.1.1 for additional detail). The conventional method is typically implemented for lighting via luminous efficacy with
where
K is the actual lamp luminous efficacy and
is the theoretical maximum luminous efficacy.
However, Equation (
3) exposes a source of confusion, namely what value should be used for
? Within the societal exergy analysis literature and beyond, three common values are adopted: 220 lm/W [
30,
31,
32], 400 lm/W [
7,
18,
30,
33], and 683 lm/W [
34,
35]. To our knowledge, the earliest reference for 220 lm/W and 400 lm/W is Summers [
30] (p. 151), who stated “[t]he efficiencies … assume that the maximum attainable efficiency for an acceptable white light is about 400 lumens per watt rather than the theoretical value of 220 lumens per watt for a perfectly ‘flat’ white light”. The value of 683 lm/W is derived from the definition of the lumen. It represents the luminous efficacy of a lamp emitting light at 555 nm, the peak of the photopic luminous weighting function, with electricity converted EM radiation at 100% efficiency.
Paoli and Cullen estimated the practical upper limit for the luminous efficacy of an LED lamp to be 284–350 lm/W, when considering all sources of energy loss (driver efficiency, wall plug efficiency, optical efficiency, and spectral efficiency) [
36]. The development of LED technology is following Haitz’s law, which predicts that “[e]very decade, for a given wavelength of light, the cost per lumen falls by a factor of 10 and the amount of light generated per LED package increases by a factor of 20” [
37,
38].
Figure 2 shows that LED technology is nearing the lower efficacies from Summers (220 lm/W) and Paoli and Cullen (284 lm/W).
Clearly, there are many options for
, and its value has a large effect on the valuable exergetic efficiency of lighting in the conventional method (Equation (
3)). So getting it right is important.
1.4. Need, Aim, Contributions, and Structure
Although the confusion around maximum luminous efficacy (
) is sufficient motivation to dig deeper to fully understand and define the exergy of light and the exergetic efficiency of lamps, further issues and confusions await. (See
Section 4). Thus, there is ample
need for clarity and rigor about the thermodynamics of artificial lighting.
The need leads to the aim of this article: to bring clarity to (a) the energy and exergy of light and (b) the valuable energy and exergetic efficiency of lamps for societal exergy analysis.
The novel
contributions of this article include: (a) clear and rigorous definitions of the energy and exergy of light, applicable to the field of societal exergy analysis (
Section 2.1.4), (b) presentation of a framework for understanding the exergetic efficiency of lamps (the exact method,
Section 2.1.5), (c) application of the exact method to re-interpret the conventional method, exposing its shortcomings (
Section 4.1.1), (d) recommendations for societal exergy analysis going forward (
Section 4.2), and (e) development of an approximate method for cases when an approximation to the exact method is needed (
Section 4.2.3).
The
structure of this article is as follows: In
Section 2, we (a) set out the energy and exergy fundamentals of light and lighting efficiency and (b) define luminous weighting functions and spectral power distributions for example lamps. In
Section 3, we show results for luminous weighting functions and example lamps before presenting a discussion in
Section 4.
Section 5 summarizes and suggest future work.