|
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Moving Smarter Lighting Systems from the Laboratory to the Marketplace
Researchers and Students Connect with Industry
Leaders at the Smart Lighting Engineering Research Center’s
Fourth Annual “Industry-Academia Days”
Lighting industry leaders will deliver a pair of keynote
addresses today at the Smart Lighting
Engineering Research Center (ERC) fourth annual
Industry-Academia Days. Led by Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute, the ERC is dedicated to developing new lighting
systems based on light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and light-sensing
technologies.
This year’s event will highlight the ERC’s leading-edge
research efforts toward the creation of a new generation of
lighting devices and systems. School of Engineering Dean David Rosowsky will
kick off the event, which will include technical sessions,
poster sessions, and a student elevator pitch competition. Eric
Meulenkamp, senior director and a research department head at
Philips Research North America, will deliver the afternoon
keynote address, titled “
Making Smart Lighting a Reality.” Stephen D. Bernstein, a
founder and principal of Cline Bettridge Bernstein Lighting
Design, will give the evening keynote, titled “Solid State
Lighting: A lighting designer's perspective.”
Today’s event takes place at the Hilton Garden Inn in Troy,
N.Y. See the full schedule at:
http://smartlighting.rpi.edu/events/2013AgendaAbstracts.pdf
Rensselaer leads the ERC, which launched in 2008 and is
funded primarily by the
National Science Foundation. Since then, the ERC has
enlisted more than 20 key industrial partners to help guide the
center’s research programs and hasten the transition from
product idea to testing and commercialization. The center has a
strong focus on LED materials and smart lighting systems. Along
with being highly energy efficient and producing higher quality
light, these smarter, feature-rich systems are poised to enable
entirely new applications in areas as diverse as
communications, health care, and biohazard sensing.
“At the Smart Lighting ERC, we envision a future where
solid-state lighting systems allow us to efficiently illuminate
our homes and businesses, but at the same time put lighting to
work in a wide range of other applications from transmitting
wireless data to scanning for harmful toxins in the air,” said
Rensselaer Professor and ERC Director
Robert Karlicek. “Our annual Industry-Academia Days allow
for industrial partners and other important stakeholders to
hear directly from the leaders, faculty, and students who are
in the lab every day working to solve these technical
challenges and advance the exciting field of smart
lighting.”
As part of the ERC Industry-Academia Days, students
affiliated with the ERC will be challenged by an elevator pitch
contest. As part of the contest, the students will have to
describe in only 90 seconds the importance, technical details,
and potential impacts of their research.
While the promise of LEDs as a long-lived, energy-efficient
heir to light bulbs, compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs), and
fluorescent tubes is undeniable, the true promise of LED and
solid-state lighting technology transcends illumination. LEDs
offer the potential to control, manipulate, and use light in
entirely new ways for a surprisingly diverse range of new
applications and capabilities never before possible with
ordinary lighting.
To realize the potential of solid-state lighting technology,
the ERC team is working to create better LEDs, as well as new
sensors and control systems required to effectively monitor and
manipulate these LEDs. Additionally, they are developing new
manufacturing technology to ensure this smart lighting
technology is scalable and cost effective. More than 30 ERC
faculty researchers at Rensselaer and partner universities are
actively working toward this goal, along with dozens of student
researchers, postdoctoral researchers, and visiting industry
engineers.
Along with Rensselaer, core ERC university partners are Boston University
and the
University of New Mexico. ERC educational outreach partners
are Howard University in Washington; Morgan State University in
Baltimore; and Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology in Terre
Haute, Ind.
For additional information on the Smart Lighting ERC,
visit:
Smart Lighting ERC
http://smartlighting.rpi.edu/
Students Drive Effort To Introduce “Smart Lighting”
on Rensselaer Campus
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=3117
Innovating Smarter Lighting Systems and a Brighter
Future at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2992
Energy@Rensselaer: Moving Smarter LEDs From the
Laboratory to the Marketplace
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2884
Energy@Rensselaer: Rensselaer Illuminates the Future
of Lighting
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2874
Energy@Rensselaer: Zeroing in on the Elusive Green
LED
http://news.rpi.edu/update.do?artcenterkey=2860
NSF Launches an ERC To Develop Smart Lighting
http://1.usa.gov/htftQh
Smart Lighting ERC Deploys New Technology on
Campus
http://www.rpi.edu/about/inside/issue/v4n17/lighting.html
|
Published
February 26,
2013 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
|