Hi All
- Researchers at the University of Illinois are developing panels of
microcavity plasma lamps that may soon brighten people's lives. The
thin, lightweight
panels could be used for residential and commercial lighting, and for
certain types of biomedical applications.

Photograph of an aluminum foil lamp having a radiating area of 225
square centimeters. The inset is a magnified view of several
diamond-shapes microcavities.

"Built of aluminum foil, sapphire and small amounts of gas, the panels
are less than 1 millimeter thick, and can hang on a wall like picture
frames," said
Gary Eden, a professor of electrical and computer engineering at the U.
of I., and corresponding author of a paper describing the microcavity
plasma lamps
in the June issue of the Journal of Physics D: Applied Physics.

Like conventional fluorescent lights, microcavity plasma lamps are
glow-discharges in which atoms of a gas are excited by electrons and
radiate light. Unlike
fluorescent lights, however, microcavity plasma lamps produce the plasma
in microscopic pockets and require no ballast, reflector or heavy metal
housing.
The panels are lighter, brighter and more efficient than incandescent
lights and are expected, with further engineering, to approach or
surpass the efficiency
of fluorescent lighting.

The plasma panels are also six times thinner than panels composed of
light-emitting diodes, said Eden, who also is a researcher at the
university's Coordinated
Science Laboratory and the Micro and Nanotechnology Laboratory.

A plasma panel consists of a sandwich of two sheets of aluminum foil
separated by a thin dielectric layer of clear aluminum oxide (sapphire).
At the heart
of each lamp is a small cavity, which penetrates the upper sheet of
aluminum foil and the sapphire.

"Each lamp is approximately the diameter of a human hair," said visiting
research scientist Sung-Jin Park, lead author of the paper. "We can pack
an array
of more than 250,000 lamps into a single panel."

Completing the panel assembly is a glass window 500 microns (0.5
millimeters) thick. The window's inner surface is coated with a phosphor
film 10 microns
thick, bringing the overall thickness of the lamp structure to 800
microns.

Flat panels with radiating areas of more than 200 square centimeters
have been fabricated, Park said. Depending upon the type of gas and
phosphor used,
uniform emissions of any color can be produced.

In the researchers' preliminary plasma lamp experiments, values of the
efficiency -- known as luminous efficacy -- of 15 lumens per watt were
recorded.
Values exceeding 30 lumens per watt are expected when the array design
and microcavity phosphor geometry are optimized, Eden said. A typical
incandescent
light has an efficacy of 10 to 17 lumens per watt.

The researchers also demonstrated flexible plasma arrays sealed in
polymeric packaging. These devices offer new opportunities in lighting,
in which lightweight
arrays can be mounted onto curved surfaces -- on the insides of
windshields, for example.

The flexible arrays also could be used as photo-therapeutic bandages to
treat certain diseases -- such as psoriasis -- that can be driven into
remission
by narrow-spectrum ultraviolet light, Eden said.

With Eden and Park, co-authors of the paper are graduate students Andrew
Price and Jason Readle, and undergraduate student Jekwon Yoon. Funding
was provided
by the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research and the Office of
Naval Research.

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