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Published 02 May, 2005 12:00am

An idea to combat global warming

CAMBRDIGE: Professor Colin Humphreys is a man who works on a very small scale but has some big, bright ideas. While environmentalists warn about the dangers of global warming and governments hail the start of the Kyoto Protocol to tackle climate change, Humphreys is working on a novel way to help ease the problem with a new form of lighting.

The Cambridge University scientist is making a material that he and others believe could help to cut emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by 15 per cent — by making low-voltage, longer-lasting and more efficient light bulbs.

“We can save about 15 per cent on CO2 emissions, not by installing wind power which a lot of people don’t like, nor by using our cars less, but simply by developing gallium nitride-based lighting,” said Humphreys, the Goldsmiths’ Professor of Materials Science at the university’s Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy .

Gallium nitride is a compound that emits intense light. Humphreys believes the material that scientists are creating in the laboratory atom by atom could be the most important new electronic material since silicon.

He is convinced that using it in a light-emitting diode (LED), a device that emits visible light when an electric current passes through it, could help to curb global warming.

LEDs are already used in digital clocks, bicycle lights, mobile phones and traffic lights. Unlike normal light bulbs, which burn out quickly after about 1,000 hours, an LED lasts 100 times longer and fails gradually.

GREEN LIGHT: Under the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, developed nations will have to cut emissions of greenhouse gases to 5.2 per cent below 1990 levels by 2008-12. Humphreys said that by 1997 most nations were already 5 per cent above 1990 levels.

“So effectively this is saying that nations commit to reduce their CO2 levels by about 10 per cent.”

Lighting in Britain and other developed nations accounts for about 20 per cent of all the electricity used. In poorer countries the figure rises to 40 per cent, according to Humphreys.

The Japanese firm Nichia used gallium nitride to make the first LED to emit blue light in the early 1990s.

Humphreys and other scientists around the globe are using the material to develop tiny LEDs that emit a soft white light, instead of the current harsh one, which could eventually be five times more efficient than normal light bulbs.

“At the moment in the laboratory, gallium nitride is three times as efficient as light bulbs but in the next few years it will be five times as efficient, I’m sure,” he said.

Singapore, Denver, Colorado and other cities have replaced old traffic lights with LEDs and have seen considerable financial and energy saving, according to Humphreys.

“Although the capital cost of LEDs is greater than conventional light bulbs, over 10 years which is the lifetime of these LED traffic lights, Denver calculates it will save $5 million,” said Humphreys.

But the real savings could come when homes and offices can be converted to LEDs.

BRIGHT FUTURE: “At the moment the white LED is a harsh white. Coaches and cars will soon have white LEDs inside but for homes it will not be very acceptable,” said Humphreys.

He estimates it could take about 5-10 years before the technology to produce gallium nitride LEDs with a more subtle white will be available. But when this happens it could lead to real savings.

—Reuters

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