|
A Comparison Between
Light Sources Used in Planted Aquaria
By
Ivo Busko
-
How to
compare bulbs
-
Lumens,
lux, PAR..., what are they ?
-
Technique
-
Data
-
Results
-
Appendix:
Criteria for comparing bulbs to be
used in planted freshwater aquaria always include
some measure of personal taste. We do not only want
plants to grow well, we also want the aquarium to
look good. Of course, we should try to provide in
the first place "strong" or "bright" lighting
(whatever those terms mean), in most cases guided by
rules of thumb of the type "Watts per gallon". This
is not the subject of this article however.
We concern ourselves here with efficiency
instead. That is, given a fixed amount of electrical
energy (Watts), how can we get the maximum "light"
possible, simultaneously keeping the good looks of
our tank ?
If one has a lot of room on top of
the tank, there are no concerns with electrical
energy economy, and one has a large pocket, the
primary selection criteria for light bulbs should be
based on their visually meaningful parameters
such as lumen output, color temperature and color
rendering index. If plants don't like it, just add
extra bulbs until they do. If however there are
space constraints (due for instance to exotic tank
geometry, which is my case !) and/or budget concerns
both for initial setup as well as for long term
maintenance (my case as well !), one should try to
design an efficient lighting setup. To this end
every efficiency and throughput characteristic of
each potential light bulb must be taken into account
in greater detail. In particular, more appropriate
parameters than just the lumen output should be
considered. But what are these parameters, and what
values should we seek for ?
My aim with this article is to
provide this additional information on light bulbs
used (or potentially usable) in planted aquaria,
with numerical results expressed in standard
physical units. It is not my objective to recommend
particular types or brands of bulbs; the information
is presented in here with the sole objective of
enabling the reader to take more informed decisions
when designing his/hers lighting system.
The following section introduces
some of the terminology used in the work; you can
skip it if you are familiar with the subject. The
next sections briefly discuss the
technique and
data
used, and present the
results.
There is an
appendix with pointers to the
primary
data sources, a detailed description of the
computational steps and
errors,
and an
example of a practical use of the data presented
here.
Artificial light sources are usually
evaluated based on their lumen output. Lumen
is a measure of flux, or how much light
energy a light source emits (per unit time). The
lumen measure does not include all the energy
the source emits, but just the energy with
wavelengths capable of affecting the human eye. Thus
the lumen measure is defined in such a way as to be
weighted by the (bright-adapted) human eye spectral
sensitivity. If we plot this sensitivity as a
function of the wavelength of the light (building
the so called photopic curve), we see that it
has an approximately bell shape, peaking up at a
wavelength of around 550 nanometers (nm), the
"green" region of the light spectrum, and decreasing
at both longer (red) and shorter (blue) wavelengths.
See the plot
here. The consequence is that two light sources
that emit the same total amount of energy can have
vastly different lumen ratings, depending on how
much of that energy is concentrated around the 550
nm region.
Another quantity often quoted when
talking about light output is lux. Lux is a
measure of illumination, not flux. Flux
refers to the light energy that leaves the source.
Illumination refers to the light energy that reaches
the receiving surface. Lux is equivalent to lumens/m2.
Lux cannot be computed only from the know data of a
light source. Additional information regarding the
illumination geometry, reflectors, distances,
intervening media (glass covers, water) must be
taken into account.
Other quantities used to describe
light quality associated with its visual
characteristics are color temperature and
color rendering index (CRI). Color temperature
is defined as the temperature that a perfect
electromagnetic radiator ("black body") would have
to have to emit light with the same "color" as the
light source in question. Higher color temperature
means bluer color, lower temperature, redder color.
Color temperature is expressed in degrees Kelvin
(from Lord Kelvin, the 19th century physicist, and
which means degrees Celsius above absolute zero).
CRI measures how close to their "true color" a light
source can render objects illuminated by it. A
"perfect" light source would have a CRI of 100,
lower values mean that the colors are shifted from
their "true" hue and saturation. Many people are
familiar with the color shifting that takes place
when one buys clothes in a store with artificial
illumination and then realizes that under natural
(sun) light the colors are not quite the same. Had
the store used high-CRI light bulbs that color shift
would be much smaller or not noticeable at all.
It is easy to guess from the wording
in the above paragraph that these two parameters are
also strongly related to the human eye response
characteristics. In fact, the technical definition
of the term "color" used above is directly based on
psychophysics experiments performed with human
subjects and standardized by the CIE (Commission
Internationale d'Eclairage) about 60 years ago. In
other words, color temperature and CRI are
parameters entirely based on the human visual system
characteristics and may carry absolutely no meaning
when applied in other contexts.
Laboratory experiments showed that
the photosynthesis process that takes place in
plants when submitted to intense light has a very
different spectral response than the human eye. In
fact, photosynthesis is the least efficient
in the region around 550 nm. Most of the light
capable of inducing the photosynthesis reaction is
either red or blue. In other words, plant leaves
mostly reflect green light, while they absorb red
and blue with higher efficiency. An experimental
fact that confirms this statement, independent of
any laboratory measurement, is the fact that many
plants look green ! Portable field instruments used
to quantify photosynthesis in growing plants often
exploit this fact by using as light source a pair of
red and blue LEDs (Light Emitting Diode) instead of
a white light source.
The curve that results from plotting
photosynthesis efficiency as a function of
wavelength is named "Photosynthesis Action
Spectrum". It is the equivalent of the photopic
curve for photosynthesis. The curve is typically
double-peaked, with maxima around 420 (blue) and 670
(red) nm and a "valley" around 550 nm. The curve
drops sharply below 400 nm and above 700 nm. The
peaks are broad and not as pronounced as the central
peak in the photopic curve. There is still
significant response in the green region around 550
nm. See a typical curve
here. Many plant species can show specific
action spectra that differ markedly from that
"average" curve. In some extreme cases there is no
response at all in one of either red or blue
regions. The important point is that photosynthesis
has a much broader wavelength response than
the human eye, with less dependency on specific,
narrow wavelength regions. Thus, light sources that
look very different to us may "look" similar to a
plant. Conversely, light sources that look similar
to us may "look" very different to plants, all
depending on their specific spectral distributions.
In some instances we see references
to "plant growth spectrum" as well. This is not
to be taken as equivalent to the action spectrum
though. The action spectrum has a precise meaning in
terms of quantity (in moles/sec/leaf surface area)
of CO2 consumed by the plant subject to measurement.
"Growth", on the other hand, can be defined in many
different ways (height ? weight ? weight of dry
plant mass ?) that can be even very
species-dependent, so it hardly makes a good
standard for comparison purposes.
Based on the Photosynthesis Action
Spectrum, light bulb manufacturers came up with
fluorescent "plant bulbs". They basically emit most
of their light in the wavelengths that are more
efficient for photosynthesis, namely the red and
blue ends of the visible spectrum. As expected,
these light sources look dim to the human eye and
consequently have poor lumen ratings. Also, their
color temperature and CRI ratings have little, if
any, meaning. After all, these bulbs were not
designed to be "seen" by humans...
The standard measure that quantifies
the energy available for photosynthesis is
"Photosynthetic Active Radiation" (aka
"Photosynthetic Available Radiation") or PAR.
Contrary to the lumen measure that takes into
account the human eye response, PAR is an unweighted
measure. It accounts with equal weight for all the
output a light source emits in the wavelength range
between 400 and 700 nm. PAR also differs from the
lumen in the fact that it is not a direct measure of
energy. It is expressed in "number of photons per
second", whose relationship with "energy per second"
(power) is intermediated by the spectral curve of
the light source. One cannot be directly converted
into the other without the spectral curve.
The reason for expressing PAR in
number of photons instead of energy units is that
the photosynthesis reaction takes place when a
photon is absorbed by the plant, no matter what
the photon's wavelength (or energy) is (provided
it lies in the range between 400 and 700 nm). That
is, if a given number of blue photons is absorbed by
a plant, the amount of photosynthesis that takes
place is exactly the same as when the same number of
red photons is absorbed. For convenience, number of
photons is usually reported in the literature in
micromole units, or microEinsteins. One
microEinstein is equivalent to 6.02 1017
photons. Another important difference is that
usually PAR is quoted as an illumination measure
akin to lux, thus related to the receiving surface.
PAR is typically reported in microEinstein/second/m2.
Thus we see from the above that, to
evaluate light sources for use in plant
applications, we cannot in principle rely entirely
on an human-based criterion, the lumen rating.
Unfortunately, manufacturers provide little
information in that regard. Power consumption in
Watts and lumen ratings are easy to get, and for
many bulbs spectral plots do exist. Many of these
are not depicted in physically meaningful units
though (such as Watt/nanometer), making it difficult
to compare different products. PAR figures are never
quoted because they depend on the detailed
illumination geometry, which varies from setup to
setup.
However, having access to the
spectral plot in relative units, and the lumen and
Watt rating for a bulb, it is possible to
derive several useful bulb parameters. For instance,
an overall efficiency factor can be computed
comparing the theoretical lumen output the bulb
should have, with its actual lumen output. This
efficiency factor is independent both from the
bulb's spectrum and from the human eye
photopic response, contrary to the often used
lumen/Watt efficiency factor. The efficiency factor
thus computed can be used then to normalize the
spectrum from relative to absolute physical units
such as Watt/nm. It then becomes a simple matter to
compute other quantities in standard physical units.
For instance, one can compute the
total amount of photons generated per second in the
interval 400 to 700 nm, which is related directly to
the bulb's PAR characteristics. If all other
parameters that affect the light input into the
aquarium (reflectors, glass cover, water depth and
transparency, physical dimensions) are kept
constant, this flux-like PAR measure can be used
directly to compare different bulbs, without the
hassle of converting the measure to illumination
units. Another possibility is to weight the PAR
measure with an average Photosynthesis Action
Spectrum, thus generating a figure of merit akin to
the lumen rating, but targeted towards plant use,
not human use. The figure of merit thus created is
usually named in the literature "Photosynthetic
Usable Radiation" or PUR. All these figures taken
together should make the selection of a particular
bulb a more objective process.
For carrying out the computations, I
used only spectral curves and bulb data I was able
to get from the web, as well as some web-published
photosynthesis action spectra. I also had to write a
short computer program. Details and pointers to
original data can be seen in the
appendix.
Initially I got data for mostly
normal-output fluorescents, since this is the type
of bulb which I was primarily interested in. But the
methodology is general and applicable to any
light source. The most recent results include data
for metal halides, power compacts, HO and VHO
fluorescents, an incandescent halogen, two mercury
vapor bulbs, a high pressure sodium, as well as a
solar spectrum.
The main problem when comparing
normalized light spectra is related to spectral
resolution. Roughly speaking, this is the amount
of detail a spectral plot has regarding light
intensities at neighboring wavelengths. The smaller
the resolution, the more detail and information the
spectral plot conveys. Published bulb spectra span a
relatively large range of spectral resolutions, and
accurate comparisons can only be made in between
spectra of the same, or about the same, resolution.
Fortunately the majority of these published spectra
have resolutions in a narrower range, in between 5
to 10 nm. This enables relatively fair comparisons
among most of the bulbs, generating errors in the
computed parameters of a few percent only. The few
spectra in the sample that have smaller (better)
resolutions were numerically degraded to a nominal 5
nm resolution in order to be directly compared with
the main body of data. A few spectra with very poor
resolutions are presented separately and cannot be
reliably compared with the others.
The main results are presented in
the tables that follow. The Hagen bulbs have
published spectra which clearly show systematic
distortion in the emission profiles not caused by
the spectrophotometer characteristics, but more
likely by doctoring at the marketing department.
Such data cannot be compared with other bulbs unless
very approximately, so their data is reported in a
separate table. Relative comparisons among the Hagen
bulbs should still be possible though (with a grain
of salt).
By the same reason pointed in the
previous section, it is very difficult to visually
compare spectral plots with very different
resolutions. In particular, the narrow, strong
emission features characteristic of modern
fluorescent phosphors may look very different in
plots with even a small difference in resolution,
turning objective visual comparisons difficult. This
fact must be kept in mind when examining the
library of normalized spectral plots. Integral
quantities such as the ones reported in the tables
are much less prone to the effects of varying
spectral resolution and make a much better objective
criterion. Spectral plots can be useful though,
always keeping in mind the resolution effect.
Columns in the first two tables list
the following quantities:
-
Power: the bulb's rated power.
This is the power the bulb itself draws, not
including additional power consumed by ballasts
and other driving devices.
-
Maximum lumen output: this
theoretical value depends only on the bulb's
spectrum and rated power. It is the lumen output
that the bulb would have if all
electrical energy input to the bulb were
transformed into electromagnetic energy.
-
Rated lumens: (initial) taken
from bulb's specs.
-
Efficiency: the ratio between
rated lumens and maximum lumens, or overall
efficiency.
-
PAR: the bulb's output in PAR.
The units are just uE/sec. Elsewhere in
the literature PAR is usually defined as a
measure of illumination (like lux). Thus
it should be computed at the receiving
surface in units of uE/sec/m2
or equivalent. The PAR figures in this article
are a measure of flux (like lumens). To
convert them to uE/s/m2 one
should enter with complicated geometric and
transparency factors that are specific to each
individual setup. The tabulated values are
appropriate to use in relative comparisons among
different bulbs, and also as a starting point if
one wants to compute the illumination created by
a specific setup.
-
PAReff: the PAR/Watt efficiency
ratio. With plant applications in mind, this
parameter should be the primary criterion for
quantifying bulb efficiency. Thus, in the
following two tables, bulbs are ranked in order
of decreasing PAR efficiency.
-
PUR: obtained by weighing the
photon spectrum with an "average" photosynthesis
action curve. The Total column lists the sum of
all photons in the range 400-700nm weighted by
the action spectrum. Since there is no clue in
these figures about the relative amount
of red and blue photons, I also computed PUR in
the 400-500 nm range only (blue) and 600-700 nm
range only (red).
-
R/B: The ratio between the red
and blue PURs. This measure is in some way
analogous to the color temperature of the bulb.
Color temperature, however, is defined in terms
of the eye photopic response. R/B is defined in
terms of the photosynthesis action spectrum. It
is a measure of the "color temperature" that the
plants, not the human eye, "see".
|
|
Bulb
|
Power
(Watt)
|
Max.
lumens
|
Rated
lumens
|
Effic.
|
PAR
uE/s
|
PAReff
uE/s/Watt
|
PUR
Total
uE/s
|
PUR
Blue
uE/s
|
PUR
Red
uE/s
|
R/B
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ADV850
|
32
|
9700
|
3100
|
0.32
|
46.2
|
1.44
|
22.8
|
11.5
|
7.2
|
0.63
|
|
HPS Dlx
|
100
|
22650
|
7300
|
0.32
|
140
|
1.40
|
72.8
|
10.1
|
53.8
|
5.33
|
|
MHN
|
150
|
34500
|
11250
|
0.33
|
207
|
1.38
|
116
|
45.0
|
47.7
|
1.06
|
|
Iwasaki65
|
150
|
37700
|
12000
|
0.32
|
199
|
1.33
|
107
|
46.6
|
35.2
|
0.75
|
|
Optimarc
|
250
|
59030
|
19000
|
0.32
|
330
|
1.32
|
181
|
75
|
70
|
0.93
|
|
Dulux54
|
55
|
16400
|
4800
|
0.29
|
72.2
|
1.31
|
36.3
|
19.6
|
10.3
|
0.52
|
|
Pentron41 HO
|
54
|
17800
|
5000
|
0.28
|
69.5
|
1.29
|
32.0
|
13.7
|
12.0
|
0.88
|
|
Aquarelle
|
38
|
8100
|
2380
|
0.29
|
48.2
|
1.27
|
29.1
|
18.8
|
6.9
|
0.37
|
|
T8/741
|
32
|
10400
|
2850
|
0.27
|
40.4
|
1.26
|
18.9
|
7.5
|
7.3
|
0.97
|
|
MH
|
250
|
82500
|
23000
|
0.28
|
310
|
1.25
|
152
|
67.6
|
32.2
|
0.48
|
|
PC6700
|
96
|
29100
|
8100
|
0.28
|
117
|
1.22
|
56.1
|
27.0
|
16.7
|
0.62
|
|
TLD950
|
36
|
9100
|
2350
|
0.26
|
42.8
|
1.19
|
23.4
|
8.5
|
10.0
|
1.18
|
|
GE SPX65
|
40
|
11600
|
3050
|
0.26
|
46.2
|
1.15
|
24.0
|
13.8
|
5.1
|
0.37
|
|
PLL950
|
55
|
14800
|
3800
|
0.26
|
62.8
|
1.14
|
32.8
|
15.5
|
10.7
|
0.69
|
|
PC6700
|
55
|
16700
|
4230
|
0.25
|
61.0
|
1.11
|
29.3
|
14.1
|
8.7
|
0.62
|
|
Triton
|
40
|
9000
|
2200
|
0.24
|
43.2
|
1.08
|
25.1
|
14.9
|
7.2
|
0.48
|
|
Daylight Dlx
|
40
|
10400
|
2550
|
0.25
|
42.3
|
1.06
|
23.2
|
11.9
|
6.2
|
0.52
|
|
GE Fresh & Salt
|
40
|
10000
|
2350
|
0.24
|
42.6
|
1.06
|
23.2
|
12.4
|
7.6
|
0.62
|
|
Cool White
|
40
|
12600
|
3050
|
0.24
|
42.4
|
1.06
|
20.5
|
9.3
|
5.7
|
0.61
|
|
VitaLite
|
40
|
9200
|
2340
|
0.25
|
41.5
|
1.04
|
23.1
|
10.0
|
8.3
|
0.82
|
|
Ott CF
|
23
|
5000
|
1200
|
0.24
|
24.0
|
1.04
|
14.4
|
7.5
|
4.6
|
0.61
|
|
Gro-Lux
|
40
|
5100
|
1200
|
0.23
|
41.2
|
1.03
|
27.4
|
9.7
|
15.5
|
1.6
|
|
Warm White
|
40
|
14000
|
3100
|
0.22
|
40.7
|
1.02
|
18.1
|
6.1
|
6.6
|
1.08
|
|
Cool White Dlx
|
40
|
9500
|
2250
|
0.24
|
40.5
|
1.01
|
22.4
|
8.6
|
9.4
|
1.09
|
|
Warm White Dlx
|
40
|
9400
|
2200
|
0.23
|
39.8
|
1.00
|
21.4
|
5.9
|
11.6
|
1.97
|
|
Perfecto
|
40
|
6800
|
1500
|
0.22
|
39.5
|
0.989
|
25.3
|
9.8
|
12.6
|
1.28
|
|
C50
|
40
|
10100
|
2250
|
0.22
|
39.2
|
0.980
|
21.2
|
8.1
|
8.8
|
1.09
|
|
Osram Biolux
|
40
|
10200
|
2400
|
0.24
|
38.1
|
0.953
|
20.4
|
10.2
|
4.5
|
0.44
|
|
P&A
|
40
|
8900
|
1900
|
0.21
|
37.7
|
0.943
|
20.9
|
5.4
|
12.0
|
2.22
|
|
VHO Cool White
|
115
|
36000
|
7500
|
0.21
|
105.
|
0.916
|
51.4
|
23.0
|
14.2
|
0.62
|
|
AgroLite
|
40
|
7800
|
1600
|
0.21
|
33.6
|
0.841
|
19.2
|
5.4
|
11.1
|
2.05
|
|
GE Freshwater
|
40
|
8500
|
1425
|
0.17
|
30.8
|
0.771
|
18.4
|
6.9
|
9.1
|
1.33
|
|
TL950
|
32
|
13000
|
2000
|
0.15
|
22.7
|
0.709
|
8.9
|
2.0
|
2.4
|
1.19
|
|
MV
|
100
|
42300
|
4300
|
0.1
|
46.2
|
0.46
|
17.8
|
7.1
|
4.3
|
0.60
|
|
Wonderlite
|
160
|
31500
|
3125
|
0.1
|
56.9
|
0.356
|
32.1
|
14.3
|
10.3
|
0.72
|
|
Halogen
|
60
|
1100
|
730
|
0.65
|
15.8
|
0.263
|
8.7
|
1.2
|
6.1
|
4.69
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sun light
|
40
|
8040
|
2050
|
0.25
|
40.0
|
1.0
|
22.8
|
8.9
|
10.0
|
1.08
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Bulb
|
Power
(Watt)
|
Max.
lumens
|
Rated
lumens
|
Effic.
|
PAR
uE/s
|
PAReff
uE/s/Watt
|
PUR
Total
uE/s
|
PUR
Blue
uE/s
|
PUR
Red
uE/s
|
R/B
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PowerGlo
|
40
|
8900
|
2200
|
0.25
|
43.2
|
1.08
|
25.7
|
14.9
|
5.8
|
0.39
|
|
SunGlo
|
40
|
13100
|
3100
|
0.24
|
42.4
|
1.06
|
20.6
|
9.7
|
4.8
|
0.49
|
|
AquaGlo
|
40
|
4600
|
960
|
0.21
|
38.5
|
0.964
|
27.9
|
11.5
|
14.6
|
1.27
|
|
FloraGlo
|
40
|
12100
|
2180
|
0.18
|
34.3
|
0.857
|
16.7
|
3.4
|
9.2
|
2.69 |
The bulb names mean:
|
ADV850
|
Philips Advantage fluorescent, 5000K
F32T8/ADV850
|
|
HPS Dlx
|
High Pressure Sodium deluxe Philips
Ceramalux Comfort C100S54/C/M
|
|
MHN
|
Philips dense-line emitter metal
halide 4100K CRI 80 (MHN150/TD/840)
|
|
Iwasaki65
|
Iwasaki 6500K metal halide
|
|
Optimarc
|
Duro-Test 250 Watt 5500 K metal
halide (CRI = 91)
|
|
Dulux54
|
Osram Dulux L 5400K 82 CRI compact
fluorescent
|
|
Pentron41 HO
|
Osram/Sylvania T5 HO fluorescent
4100 K (FP54/841/HO)
|
|
Aquarelle
|
Philips Aquarelle 10,000 K
fluorescent for freshwater aquaria
|
|
T8/741
|
T8 equivalent of cool white, 4100 K,
F32T8/741
|
|
MH
|
generic, non-coated metal halide
4000K CRI65 (from Philips catalog)
|
|
PC6700
|
6700K 96 Watt compact fluorescent
PC96W67K
|
|
TLD950
|
Philips full spectrum fluorescent
'TL'D/90 de Luxe 5300 K CRI > 95
|
|
GE SPX65
|
GE SPX65 6500 K fluorescent
|
|
PLL950
|
Philips PL-L/950 5300K high-CRI (91)
compact fluorescent
|
|
PC6700
|
6700K 55 Watt compact fluorescent
PC55W67K
|
|
Triton
|
Interpet Triton
|
|
Daylight Dlx
|
GE Daylight Deluxe fluorescent
|
|
GE Fresh & Salt
|
GE AquaRays Fresh & Saltwater
fluorescent (F40T12/AR/FS)
|
|
Cool White
|
generic 4100 K cool white
fluorescent F40T12CW (average of two spectra)
|
|
VitaLite
|
Duro-test VitaLite fluorescent (CRI
= 91)
|
|
Ott CF
|
Screw-in full-spectrum compact
fluorescent
|
|
Gro-Lux
|
"Original" Sylvania Gro-Lux (not the
wide spectrum variety)
|
|
Warm White
|
generic 3000 K warm white
fluorescent F40T12WW (average of two spectra)
|
|
Cool White Dlx.
|
generic 4200 K cool white
fluorescent deluxe F40T12CWX (average of two
spectra)
|
|
Warm White Dlx.
|
generic 3000 K warm white deluxe
fluorescent F40T12WWX (average of two spectra)
|
|
Perfecto
|
Perfecto-A-Lamp (a wide-spectrum
grolux)
|
|
C50
|
Full spectrum T12 5000K fluorescent:
GE Sunshine (or Chroma 50), Philips Colortone,
Sylvania Designer (average of three spectra).
|
|
Osram Biolux
|
Osram Biolux fluorescent
|
|
P&A
|
GE Plant & Aquarium fluorescent
|
|
VHO Cool White
|
Very High Output version of the 4100
K cool white fluorescent (Osram F48T12CW/VHO/LT)
|
|
AgroLite
|
Philips Agro-Lite fluorescent
F40T12AGRO
|
|
GE Freshwater
|
GE AquaRays Freshwater fluorescent
(F40T12/AR/FR) (a modified, lower efficiency grolux)
|
|
TL950
|
Philips TL950 5000K fluorescent very
high CRI (98) F32T8/TL950
|
|
MV
|
Deluxe Mercury Vapor Philips
H38MP-100/DX 3700 K, CRI 45
|
|
Wonderlite
|
Self-ballasted screw-in mercury
vapor R40 flood ligth with special "plant" spectrum
made by Westron
|
|
Halogen
|
Spot halogen Philips Masterline Par
16 (60PAR16/H/NSP) 2950K
|
|
Sun light
|
Theoretical bulb that perfectly
reproduces sun light (CIE-D 5500 K standard
spectrum) with the average efficiency of a full
spectrum NO fluorescent.
|
|
PowerGlo
|
Hagen PowerGlo fluorescent
|
|
SunGlo
|
Hagen SunGlo fluorescent
|
|
AquaGlo
|
Hagen AquaGlo fluorescent (a
wide-spectrum grolux)
|
|
FloraGlo
|
Hagen FloraGlo fluorescent |
We can draw several conclusions from these
data:
-
The most important conclusion in my
opinion is that the efficiency of converting electrical
energy into PAR light energy is not that different for
the several bulbs and technologies included in the
sample. The majority of bulbs in the sample deliver
approximately (within a 20% range) the same amount of
uE/s/Watt in the 400-700 nm range, about 1 uE/s/Watt.
High intensity discharge lamps and high-end fluorescents
tend to be more efficient, but not by a large factor.
On the other hand, the efficiency of
converting electrical energy into visible light
energy can be very different among the several types. In
other words, the lumen/Watt efficiency can encompass a
very wide range, about 200% in this sample. This effect
can be quantified by the correlation coefficient between
these two quantities, which is 0.56 in this sample. This
tells us that no correlation exists between the lumen
and PAR output, or, in other words, the lumen efficiency
is a very poor criterion for selecting bulbs. We should
strive instead for raw power (Watts), since PAR/Watt is
on a first approximation the same for most bulbs. The
reason for that lack of correlation is of course the
broad band response of plants to light, as opposed to
the narrow band response of the human eye. Some bulbs
are somewhat better than others in converting Watts into
photons though, so when efficiency is a major design
factor, one should stick with the highest PAReff bulbs.
Remember however that in real life, one should be
concerned with the overall system effciency, and not
just bulb efficiency. This includes the differences
between, for instance, magnetic and electronic ballasts.
This topic is outside the scope of this article though.
-
The ordering in decreasing PAR
efficiency is almost identical with the ordering in
decreasing overall efficiency. This effect is expected
since both parameters ultimately measure the efficiency
of conversion of electrical energy into electromagnetic
energy, over a wide spectral band and without regard to
the spectral shape. If we ignore the halogen bulb, both
parameters span a relatively narrow range of a factor 2.
This is also a consequence of the fact that both
parameters in fact depend only on the underlying
physical processes used to convert electricity into
light. Incidentaly, the halogen bulb is the only one in
this sample that relies on a fundamentaly different
physical process to create ligth: heating of a radiative
solid element. All other bulbs rely on some type of
electrical discharge in a gas. We may conclude that the
most popular existing lighting technologies are not
capable of conversion efficiencies larger than about
30%.
-
A few bulbs do not follow the trend
described above. These are the broad spectrum ones:
Vita-Lite, Biolux, Wonderlite, the halophosphor "Deluxe"
bulbs, and most markedly, the halogen. The reason is
that these bulbs deliver a significant fraction of their
total electromagnetic output outside the 400-700
nm range. For the broad spectrum fluorescents and MHs
this fraction is about 8-15%, for the halogen it is more
than 90% ! The result is that they have a significantly
poorer PAR emission given their overall efficiency. In
other words, they spend a fair amount of electricity to
create light which both the human eye and the
photosynthesis process cannot see. Of course, there
might be other processes that benefit from that
ultraviolet and infrared energy, but strictly from the
perspective of optimizing raw PAR emission and lumen
output these bulbs aren't the best choice. It also must
be noted that the halogen bulb is not strictly
comparable with fluorescent and discharge lamps in this
regard, since the underlying physical processes
responsible for light and heat emission are different in
each case. Thus its apparently high overall efficiency
factor is in fact an artifact caused by the very
definition of this efficiency factor in the first place.
-
Some of the bulbs with the worst
efficiency are:
-
the notoriously inefficient halogen
incandescent, about four times less efficient than
the average fluorescent in producing PAR photons.
The 60 Watt halogen produces about 0.01 Watt/s/nm in
the green-yellow spectral region, as compared to a,
say, 40 Watt Cool White fluorescent which produces
about 0.04-0.05 Watt/s/nm in the same region. Note
however that for this particular type of spot light
bulb, which has an enclosed parabolic reflector, the
very narrow bean partially compensates for this low
efficiency. The ultimate comparison would be in
between the illumination at the illuminated
spot, and the illumination created by the other
bulbs when under a very efficient reflector. The
spot created by the halogen spot is very small
though, and of limited use (perhaps as accent
light).
-
the mercury vapor bulbs, about
halfway between the halogen and the worst
fluorescents. The Deluxe MV probably should be
avoided, since besides its low efficiency, it
provides a way too unpleasant light (too low CRI,
too yellow). A regular (non-Deluxe) MV is even worse
since it lacks entirely any red emission. The
Wonderlite though seems to have overcome the color
problems. The light is reported to be white and with
good color rendering. Should be an option to
consider in non-standard applications, since its
enclosed reflector should partially balance out the
lower efficiency.
-
the very high CRI fluorescent TL950,
about 30% less efficient (in PAR units) than the
average fluorescent. Note that its lumen/Watt
efficiency is not that bad though, even
outperforming in this respect some of the older
high-CRI bulbs. This bulb is a tri-phosphor that
seems to use special phosphors that emit light at
different wavelengths than the "normal"
tri-phosphors found in other bulbs. The overall
emission is packed tightly around the 550 nm region,
with minimal emission at the blue and red ends of
the spectrum. Probably these phosphors were
specifically tailored to achieve the extremely high
CRI, at the expense of other performance factors.
High CRI ratings are usually associated with low
efficiency, but the newer TLD/950 and PL-L/950 bulbs
(both European...) seem to break this trend. They
provide both relatively high efficiency and
high CRI.
-
the Philips Agro-Lite and the GE
Aqua Rays Freshwater bulbs.
-
the VHO version of the Cool White
tube. Low efficiency seems to be a normal
characteristic of VHO tubes.
-
The most efficient bulbs in the sample
are the metal halides, the high pressure sodium, and the
tri-phosphors ADV850, Dulux, Pentron HO, and Aquarelle,
about 20-30% more efficient than the average
fluorescent. Of note is the comparison of bulbs with same spectrum but different power.
The PC6700 with 55 Watt power is significantly less
efficient than the 96 Watt version. This trend should be
true for other fluorescent types as well, and also for
the MH types. Interesting enough, a generic, traditional
metal halide does not perform so well when put side by
side with more evolved types such as the dense-line
emitter MHs (MHN, Iwasaki65 and Optimarc). The HPS
deluxe was included in the sample only for completeness,
since it has a too low color temperature (2200 K) to be
of use as the main light source in planted aquaria. It
might be useful as a replacement for
halogen/incandescent bulbs used as accent lights though.
Normal HPS bulbs were not analyzed due to their poor CRI
(around 20).
-
High performance fluorescent tubes are
capable of generating the same, or even slightly more,
light output per Watt than MH bulbs. In particular the
Philips ADV850 operated under standard conditions even
outperforms most MHs. Considering that these inexpensive
T8 bulbs can be overdriven by electronic ballasts with
high ballast factors (> 1), thus delivering even more
light, they are possibly the best option to light a
planted aquarium in terms of performance/cost factor.
-
As an interesting exercise we could rank
the bulbs according to their PUR efficiency ratio
instead. The following table lists the bulbs so ranked.
|
Bulb
|
PUReff
(uE/s/Watt)
|
|
MHN
|
0.77
|
|
Aquarelle
|
0.76
|
|
HPS Dlx
|
0.73
|
|
Optimarc
|
0.72
|
|
Iwasaki65
|
0.71
|
|
ADV850
|
0.70
|
|
Gro-Lux
|
0.69
|
|
Dulux54
|
0.66
|
|
TLD950
|
0.65
|
|
Perfecto
|
0.63
|
|
Triton
|
0.63
|
|
Ott CF
|
0.62
|
|
MH
|
0.61
|
|
GE SPX65
|
0.60
|
|
PLL950
|
0.60
|
|
Pentron41 HO
|
0.59
|
|
PC6700 (96 Watt)
|
0.58
|
|
GE Fresh & Salt
|
0.58
|
|
Daylight Dlx
|
0.57
|
|
Cool White Dlx
|
0.56
|
|
VitaLite
|
0.55
|
|
Warm White Dlx
|
0.54
|
|
PC6700 (55 Watt)
|
0.53
|
|
C50
|
0.53
|
|
P&A
|
0.52
|
|
Cool White
|
0.51
|
|
Osram Biolux
|
0.50
|
|
AgroLite
|
0.48
|
|
GE Freshwater
|
0.46
|
|
Warm White
|
0.45
|
|
VHO Cool White
|
0.44
|
|
TL950
|
0.28
|
|
Wonderlite
|
0.20
|
|
MV
|
0.18
|
|
Halogen
|
0.15 |
The PUR ranking roughly repeats the trend
observed with PAR efficiency ranking: the same high-efficiency
bulbs in terms of PAR/Watt rank high in the PUR/Watt list. In
other words, the two parameters correlate well. The outstanding
exception here is the generic MH, which has a spectrum well
matched to the photopic curve. The main effect of using PUR to
rank a bulb is the expected better performance of "plant" bulbs
that were specifically designed with the Photosynthesis Action
Spectrum in mind. Once again, the ADV850 bulb shows
extraordinary performance, with a PUR efficiency similar to the
"best" plant bulb, the original Gro-Lux.
Another interesting exercise is to rank the
bulbs by their lumen/PAR ratio:
|
Bulb
|
lumen/PAR
(lumen/uE/s)
|
|
MV
|
93.1
|
|
TL950
|
88.2
|
|
Warm White
|
76.5
|
|
MH
|
73.6
|
|
Pentron41 HO
|
71.9
|
|
Cool White
|
71.8
|
|
PC6700 (both)
|
69.2
|
|
ADV850
|
67.1
|
|
Dulux54
|
66.5
|
|
GE SPX65
|
66.1
|
|
Osram Biolux
|
62.9
|
|
PLL950
|
60.5
|
|
Daylight Dlx
|
60.3
|
|
Iwasaki65
|
60.3
|
|
Optimarc
|
57.6
|
|
C50
|
57.4
|
|
VitaLite
|
57.1
|
|
Cool White Dlx
|
55.6
|
|
Warm White Dlx
|
55.3
|
|
GE Fresh & Salt
|
55.2
|
|
Wonderlite
|
54.9
|
|
TLD950
|
54.9
|
|
MHN
|
54.4
|
|
HPS Dlx
|
52.1
|
|
Triton
|
50.9
|
|
P&A.
|
50.4
|
|
Sun light
|
50.0
|
|
Ott CF
|
50.0
|
|
Aquarelle
|
49.4
|
|
AgroLite
|
47.6
|
|
GE Freshwater
|
46.3
|
|
Halogen
|
46.2
|
|
Perfecto
|
37.9
|
|
Gro-Lux
|
29.1 |
This parameter does depend exclusively on the
shape of the bulb's spectral curve. It measures how well matched
is this curve to the photopic curve, and how far it is from a
perfectly flat (in photon units) spectrum. Again, the large
range in lumen/PAR values in the above table is a direct
consequence of the lack of correlation between the two
parameters.
The lumen/PAR measure would be useful, for
instance, in helping picking out bulbs that both look bright to
our eyes, and deliver a fair amount of light at the red and blue
ends of the spectrum. The highest ranking bulbs in the table
have spectra extremely well matched to the photopic curve, thus
lacking red and blue emission. The lowest ranking bulbs, on the
contrary, look dim to our eyes but deliver a larger fraction of
their output into the red and blue ends of the spectrum. Flat
spectrum bulbs, as expected, are the ones showing the best
balance, ranking close to the center of the list.
Another measure of spectral balance can be
conveied by how close the R/B ratio is to true sun light. As
expected, the high-CRI TL950 and TLD950 rate very close to sun
light. The inexpensive C50 and some of the halophosphors rate
next, together with the more expensive Vita-Lite. Plant bulbs
tend to put out an excess of red light, and higher efficiency
bulbs tend to be bluer. The extreme case among the fluorescents
is the Aquarelle bulb, which ranks as the most efficient
fluorescent in PUR/Watt and is the bluest as well. The
exception to this "rule" is the HPS Deluxe bulb, which creates
a lot of red light despite its high efficiency. If one
believes, as many people do, that the red and blue regions of
the spectrum govern plant growth in different ways, one should
take the R/B parameter into account when selecting a light bulb.
Note that there is no straightforward relationship with color
temperature, which is a human eye-based criterion and
meaningless in this context (since it is defined over a too
narrow wavelength span).
It is easy, from the tabulated data, to compute
figures for multi/mixed bulb configurations, by just adding the
individual bulb's measures, weighted by the number of bulbs of
each type in the mix and scaling the contributions by the actual
bulb power. So it should be easy to come up with optimum mixes
given the constraints of ones' configuration. Of course, these
constraints may play a significant role in the final result. For
instance, a T5 bulb such as the Pentron HO may benefit from its
better optical coupling to specular reflectors, minimized
restrike, and higher operating temperature than PC, T8 and T12
bulbs, thus resulting in higher overall efficiency of the ligth
fixture. See the
example. Remember that a small additional error may appear
when scaling by the bulbs rated power. Both fluorescent and
metal halide bulbs of different sizes/powers may have slightly
different efficiencies of conversion of electrical energy into
light.
And bear in mind: these results are only as good
as the manufacturer's published spectral curves, lumen and Watt
data allow them to be. Unreliable or wrong manufacturer specs
will translate directly into wrong or bloated performance
figures. I estimate that internal errors in the computed
parameters, caused mostly by digitization inaccuracy and poor
spectral resolution, should be a few percent at most for the
best data, up to 10-15 percent for the worst ones. See the
appendix.
Bulb spectra:
Bulb lumens:
Photosynthesis action spectra:
Photopic curve:
The first posted version was made with a curve
digitized from
http://www.reefnet.on.ca/gearbag/wwwlux.html. The current
table uses CIE's 1988 table (thanks to Roger Miller)
Lumen definition:
http://www.cs.indiana.edu/hyplan/kuzimmer/IES/section3.2.html
-
digitize the published spectrum at suitable
values of wavelength and rebin to a small wavelength step (1
nm).
-
(optional) numerically degrade the
resolution to 5 nm.
-
numerically integrate the digitized spectrum
over its entire wavelength range, getting the total power S
in relative units.
-
knowing the bulb's total power consumption P
in Watts, normalize the digitized spectrum ordinate scale by
multiplying the relative values by P/S. This gives the
bulb's spectrum in Watts/nm, assuming that the conversion
efficiency from electrical to electromagnetic energy is
100%.
-
multiply the Watts/nm spectrum by the eye
photopic curve (normalized to unity peak). Integrate the
result over the same wavelength range used above, and
multiply the resulting integral by 683 lumens/Watt. This
gives the theoretical maximum lumen output of the bulb.
-
divide the bulb's rated lumen output by the
theoretical one. This gives the overall efficiency factor.
-
multiply the spectrum in Watts/nm obtained
above by the efficiency factor. This gives the spectrum in
true Watts/nm.
-
convert the spectrum from Watts/nm to uE/sec/nm
using the appropriate physical relation and constants (uE/sec
= power in Watts X wavelength in nm X 8.36 10-3).
-
integrate the uE/sec/nm spectrum in
the 400-700 nm range, the result is the bulb's PAR measure
in units of uE/sec.
-
multiply the uE/sec/nm spectrum by a
suitably digitized version of the photosynthesis action
spectrum (normalized to unity peak).
-
integrate this spectrum in the 400-700 nm
range to get the PUR measure.
-
integrate this spectrum in wavelength ranges
400-500, and 600-700 nm to get the blue and red PUR
measures, respectively.
The above procedure computes PAR in uE/s
units and not in uE/s/m2. This is so
since the computation starts with a flux measure (lumen)
as opposed to an illumination measure (such as lux =
lumen/m2). So there is an unknown area factor
involved in the translation. In other words, the computation is
at the source of light, while PAR is usually defined at
the destination of light.
The main source of error is the published
spectrum itself. It appears that manufacturers either use very
low resolution spectrophotometers, or else smooth the curves on
purpose (to hide proprietary information ?). A few spectra have
very good spectral resolution though, but most show broader than
expected emission features. The tri-phosphor bulbs in particular
emit most of the energy in a few narrow wavelength regions, and
if these regions are not well sampled, the lumen and PAR output
can show significant errors. Spectra for the "Glo" bulbs (Hagen)
are very smoothed out and show suspect shifts in the wavelength
of the main emission features, so expect larger errors in these.
I did some experimentation changing the emission lines a bit,
both in width and intensity. I also numerically degraded the
spectral resolution of the best spectra in the sample by known
values to check how much this effect affects the measured
quantities. Based on these experiments I can estimate that the
theoretical maximum lumen output can be wrong by as much as 5-8%
in the worst cases, and likely 1-2% in the best cases.
A second source of error is the published lumen
output. For some bulbs the manufacturer provides both initial
and design lumen specs. Most bulbs are listed with just a single
lumen rating, which in most cases is assumed to be initial
lumens. But one can never be certain, and comparisons are only
accurate if a consistent lumen parameter is used. The results
are also dependent on the assumption that the bulbs' published
wattages are the actual wattages drawn by the bulbs, and not
nominal values.
A less important source of error affects only
the PUR measures, and is due to the fact there is no single
photosynthesis action spectrum that can be applied to all plant
species. Some species show a very intense response in the
blue and almost none in the red, others show a more balanced
response. The curve I chose has the red and blue peaks with
similar values.
Lets try to use the data presented here in a
real situation. I will get the lighting configuration currently
on my 46 gallon bow front aquarium and try to estimate what
should be the light level at the substrate. The lighting
arrangement consists of two strip fixtures. One carries two 55
Watt power compact fluorescents, the other a single 3' 30 Watt
T-12 fluorescent tube.
The total PAR emission of the two PC bulbs (one
Dulux54 and one PLL950), according to the table, is 72.2 + 62.8
= 135 uE/s. For the 30 Watt tube (an AquaGlo) we scale by
the power factor: 35.8 / 40 X 30 = 26.9 uE/s.
We must account for the fact that all figures in
the table were computed under the assumption of initial lumen
output. We might want to apply a correction factor to account
for the mid-life loss, say 10%. So the two mid-age PC bulbs will
deliver 122 uE/s and the mid-age 30 Watt tube delivers
24.2 uE/s.
Each fixture has a different type of reflector,
so their contributions to the actual amount of light that make
its way into the water should be accounted for separately.
The raw PAR values presented in the main table
quantify the total emission of each light bulb in all spatial
directions. A bare light bulb placed above the water surface
will have most of its emission lost outside the water, due to
the lack of a reflector, to the critical angle at the air/water
interface, and to partial reflection at that interface. For a
fluorescent tube placed parallel and near the water surface, we
can estimate the loss due to these factors to be of the order of
75%. That is, only about 25% of the light that leaves the bulb
makes its way into the water. Adding a reflector increases that
efficiency considerably. Lets assume that the PC fixture
reflector can divert about 50% of the escaping light back into
the water. Lets presume that the the single fluorescent strip
reflector can divert back 30%. Bear in mind that all these
factors are very crude approximations of the real
situation.
So the total amount of light emitted by the PC
fixture into the water would be 122 X 0.25 + (122 X 0.75)
X 0.50 = 76.3 uE/s. For the single fluorescent fixture,
24.2 X 0.25 + (24.2 X 0.75) X 0.30 = 11.5 uE/s.
Lets not forget the glass cover. Assume
(according to measurements archived at the Krib site) that 10%
is lost due to dirt glass. Now we can add the total amount of
PAR light that makes its way into the water: (76.3 + 11.5) X
0.90 = 79.0 uE/s.
As for the light that actually reaches the
substrate, we should only take into account the absorption and
scattering of light by the water. Due to total reflection at the
internal glass/water interface, an aquarium acts in a very
similar way as a wave guide (an optical fiber is another
example). So there is no attenuation by a geometrical
inverse-square law effect. According to data posted on the APD
list, a 16" deep freshwater layer should absorb about 50% of the
light. Thus the total amount of PAR light that reaches our
substrate is 79.0 X 0.50 = 39.5 uE/s.
Now lets recall that our PAR figures are for
total flux, not illumination (flux divided by area of
receiving surface). Lets assume as a first approximation that
the light flux inside the water illuminates the entire substrate
area evenly. This is not a too bad approximation in the case of
long fluorescent tubes that span the entire aquarium length.
Some areas will get somewhat less light, some areas more, but
the average figure will not be too far. For my 36" long X 14"
wide (average) aquarium, the surface is 0.32 square meters. So
our final figure for the PAR illumination is 39.5 / 0.32 = 123
uE/s/m2.
Now we can finally compare this level of
illumination with what plants actually require. Data posted on
the APD suggest that the compensation point for photosynthesis
in aquatic plants is in between 15 and 80 uE/s/m2,
and that anything below 100 uE/s/m2 should be
considered low light. If that is the case, we see that my setup
should be able to drive photosynthesis above the compensation
point for most plants, but not much. I shouldn't expect for
instance to see pearling at the low levels near the substrate.
And that is effectively what I observe.
One can also work backwards and, starting from a
pre-defined illumination requirement, work upwards on the water
column to find how much PAR flux should be provided by the light
fixtures, and thus what combination of bulbs/reflectors and the
like should be used.
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