|
National Lighting Product Information Program Releases New Report on Street Lighting Technologies
Specifier Reports: Streetlights for Collector
Roads Is Available Online
The National Lighting Product Information Program (NLPIP)
released its latest Specifier Report, designed to
provide objective performance information on existing street
lighting technologies including light-emitting diode (LED),
induction, and high pressure sodium (HPS) streetlights. This
report comes at a critical time when many municipalities, some
with funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of
2009, are in the process of replacing HPS streetlights with LED
and induction models.
NLPIP performed photometric evaluations of 14 streetlights
that used either HPS, pulse-start metal halide (PSMH), or
induction lamps, or LED modules. NLPIP analyzed the
streetlights for light output and distribution, energy use,
spectral effects on visual performance, discomfort glare, and
economic factors. The streetlights were evaluated as part of
installations that meet the lighting criteria as defined in the
American National Standard Practice for Roadway
Lighting, ANSI/ IESNA RP-8-00 (R2005), for a simulated
one-mile stretch of collector roadway (a road servicing traffic
between local and major roadways).
According to NLPIP, when replacing the pole-mounted HPS
streetlights on a one-mile section of collector road with the
LED or induction streetlights used in the study, it would take
twice as many of the pole-mounted LED or induction streetlights
to meet the lighting criteria as defined in
RP-8-00.
Complete performance results are published in Specifier
Reports: Streetlights for Collector Roads, which is
available online at
www.lrc.rpi.edu/nlpip/publicationDetails.asp?id=927&type=1.
“The LED and induction streetlights we tested required
narrower pole spacing. As a result, the life cycle cost per
mile was dominated by the installation cost of the poles, as
opposed to the initial cost of the streetlights or any
potential energy or maintenance cost savings, as one may
assume,” said Leora Radetsky, LRC lead research specialist,
principal investigator and author of the report.
LED and induction technologies are often marketed as money
saving alternatives to HPS, with some manufacturers claiming
reductions in energy and maintenance costs. However, NLPIP
found that the HPS and PSMH streetlights evaluated in this test
provided a better cost value than the LED and induction
streetlights evaluated, which would need to produce about the
same street-side lumens as the HPS models to be economically
competitive.
The average power demand of the LED streetlight layouts
evaluated was slightly lower than the average power demand of
the HPS streetlight layouts, but there was wide variation among
LED models, according to NLPIP.
Mesopic Vision
The human visual system uses two types of photoreceptors,
cones and rods, found in the retina. Cones are used to process
visual information under daytime or “photopic” light levels,
while rods work under completely dark “scotopic” conditions.
There is, however, a range of light levels called “mesopic,”
where both cones and rods together provide input to the visual
system. Mesopic light levels are typically found outdoors at
night. However, commercial photometry is based entirely upon
the photopic luminous efficiency function, which considers how
the eye “sees” during daylight hours. As a result, conventional
photometry may misestimate the effectiveness of some light
sources used in nighttime applications in terms of energy
efficiency and visual performance.
NLPIP notes that, at the illuminance levels typical of
collector roadways, “white light” sources such as LED
streetlights could be slightly dimmed and provide equal levels
of visual performance, based on mesopic photometry. However, in
the collector roadway scenario used in this study, the reduced
power requirement would have little impact on the life cycle
cost per mile described above.
The Specifier Reports series is designed to provide
brand name performance information for efficient lighting
products and systems. All Specifier Reports can be
found at www.lrc.rpi.edu/programs/NLPIP/publications.asp.
National Lighting Product Information Program
(NLPIP)
NLPIP, established by the Lighting Research Center
(LRC) in 1990, helps lighting professionals, contractors,
designers, building managers, homeowners, and other consumers
find and effectively use efficient, quality products that meet
their lighting needs. With the support of government agencies,
public benefit organizations, and electric utilities, NLPIP
disseminates objective, accurate, timely, manufacturer-specific
information about energy-efficient lighting products in its
series of Lighting Answers, Lighting Diagnostics, Specifier
Reports, and Technical Guides. NLPIP sponsors include
Centre for Energy Advancement through Technological Innovation
(CEATI International Inc.), the New York State Energy Research
and Development Authority (NYSERDA), and the United States
Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). Learn more at www.lrc.rpi.edu/programs/NLPIP/index.asp.
|
Published
September 30,
2010 |
Contact: Mary Cimo
Phone: (518) 687-7174
E-mail: cimom@rpi.edu |
|