Journal of Light & Visual Environment
Online ISSN : 1349-8398
Print ISSN : 0387-8805
ISSN-L : 0387-8805
Volume 30, Issue 2
Displaying 1-10 of 10 articles from this issue
Special Issue “Light Sources Workshop, 2005(1)”
Technical Review
  • Georges ZISSIS, Jean-Baptiste ROUFFET
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 51-54
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Light is vital for life: Light sources play an indispensable role to daily life of any Human being. Our World cannot be conceived without light. Quality of life, health and, somehow, urban security related with traffic and crime prevention measures depend on light and on its quality. The lighting industry is an important economic factor in Europe, USA and many Asiatic Countries. All in all, lighting is an important socio-economic factor and lighting system development should be an integral part of any Sustainable Development and of any program of improvement of Quality of Life. This presentation provides an overview of the present state of research in the science and technology of light sources. Existing technologies and future challenges for the lighting industry will be presented. To better understanding the light source technology an part of this presentation will be devoted to the physics of light sources.
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Letters
  • Double Helical External Electrodes Lamp (DHEL)
    Masafumi JINNO, Yusuke MUGURUMA, Tatsuya MATSUDA, Hideki MOTOMURA, Shu ...
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 55-57
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Recently as interests in environmental issues increase, demands for mercury-free fluorescent lamps are increasing because mercury is harmful to human beings and creatures. As one of the solutions of this issue the authors have developed a new-type of mercury-free fluorescent lamps using double helical external electrodes. In this paper the fundamental characteristics of Xenon-Neon discharge in the Double Helical External Electrodes Lamps (DHEL) such as the luminance, power consumption and lamp current are investigated. When the pressure ratio of Xe: Ne was fixed at 7 : 3, total pressure at 1.33 kPa and external electrode pitch as 10 mm, luminance over 10000 cd / m2 is achieved. In addition as a prototype 1 m length DHEL is prepared and demonstrated to show basically there is no limit in length of DHEL.
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  • Masafumi JINNO, Hidefumi TANIUCHI, Masashi WATANABE, Hideki MOTOMURA
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 58-60
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    When applying a pulsed voltage to a discharge tube using dielectric barrier discharge, discharge occurs two times in a pulse at a rising and a falling edge of a voltage pulse. The timing of the second discharge can be changed by controlling the pulse width. In this study the influence of the pulse width on the luminance of the barrier discharge lamp with an inner electrode is investigated. The lamp used in this study has two electrodes, one is set in the lamp and the other is set on the outside surface of the lamp. Internal electrode is connected to the high voltage side and the external electrode is connected to the ground side. Luminance is observed under the condition of pulse repetition frequency of 10 kHz, peak voltage from 1 kV to 3 kV and pulse width from 2 μs to 98 μs. Luminance took almost same value from 30 μs to 90 μs, whereas it decreased by both deceasing the pulse width less than 30 μs and increasing it more than 90 μs. It means that the higher luminance is obtained by avoiding the overlap of the two radiations at rising and falling edge of applied voltage.
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  • Kazunori KADOWAKI, Sakae NISHIMOTO, Isamu KITANI
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 61-63
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    This paper describes results on an experimental study of faint light emission produced by separation of an adhesive tape from a glass or from a polymer film. Spectroscopic measurements of the faint light were carried out using a monochromator and a photomultiplier. The results indicated that the light emission was caused by discharges near the tape-air-glass triple junction. We found that the frequency of the light emission was strongly changed by changing the peeling speed of the tape. Discharge lights were detected in many times in the case of high-speed peeling, whereas no light was detected in the case of low-speed peeling. We also measured surface potential distributions on the film after separation from the tape using a XY-movable probe and an electrostatic voltmeter. The surface potential on the film after the fast-speed peeling became slightly higher than that on the film after the low-speed peeling.
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Special Issue “Lux Pacifica 2005(1)”
Research Note
Technical Reviews
  • Hayden WILLEY
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 68-73
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Sustainable lighting, considered in the broader context of sustainable design, suggests a return to more natural interior environments with their greater sensory stimulation and experiential richness. Research over the last 50 years has been claimed to provide little evidence of the interaction between the visual, thermal, acoustic, tactile and olfactory senses which might be expected to be essential to sensory richness. A critical evaluation of such research, in the context of understanding gained from recent research in cognitive science and neuroscience, reveals serious flaws in this research into sensory interaction. The nature of these flaws is discussed with examples. Insight gained from studies of visual perception suggests significant changes need to be made to experimental procedures to avoid the problem of “inattentional blindness” and to overcome the lack of reality in the rooms and equipment used in laboratory-based studies. In particular, it is argued that the lack of a sense of “place” and of a realistic activity means that the experimental setting will fail to trigger any significant activity in the neural pathway in the visual cortex which has been found to enable interaction with non-visual sensory modalities.
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  • Tse-ming CHUNG, Hiu-dan CHEUNG
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 74-80
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Recently the Hong Kong Government has issued a performance-based code governing daylighting in buildings to supplement its prescriptive code. The performance-based method uses the vertical daylight factor (VDF) at the centre of the window pane in the specification of the performance standards. However, the calculation of VDF is not an easy task and is especially not suitable in the early design stage when designers may need to evaluate the daylighting performance quickly using simple sketches and limited data. In view of this, the current performance-based code allows the use of a simplified alternative method called the unobstructed vision area (UVA) method. In this paper, a review of the UVA method is first given. Then a method based on the orthographically projected area (OPA) of all obstructions above the reference point is presented. The OPA can be determined with similar efforts as determining the UVA. Case studies comparing the performance between the OPA and UVA methods are presented. Results show that the OPA method predicts the VDF reliably and therefore is truly a simplified performance-based method.
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Regular Section
Papers
  • Hideki MOTOMURA, Ka Hong LOO, Yoshihisa IKEDA, Masafumi JINNO, Masahar ...
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 81-86
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Although xenon pulsed dielectric barrier discharge is one of the most promising substitutes for mercury low-pressure discharge for fluorescent lamps, the efficacy of xenon fluorescent lamp is not enough for practical use for general lighting. To improve the efficacy it is indispensable to clarify mechanisms of vacuum ultraviolet (VUV) emissions, which excite phosphor, from xenon discharge related to plasma characteristics. In this paper emission waveforms and temporal change of metastable atom density are measured and temporal VUV emission characteristics related to generations and losses of metastable atoms in xenon pulsed barrier discharge is investigated. It is shown that the lamp efficacy is improved by about 10% with shorter pulse in which the two VUV emission peaks in a pulse are overlapped. It is also shown that at the lower pressure of 1.3 kPa metastable atoms generated during on-period of the voltage pulse are not efficiently consumed for VUV emissions in the off-period of the voltage pulse because of lower rate of three-body collision and quenching. This fact is thought to be one of the reasons why the lamp efficacy is low at lower pressure.
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  • Sangpil HAN, Taiichiro ISHIDA, Masayuki IGUCHI, Wataru IWAI
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 87-94
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The purpose of this study is to understand the change of impression by comparing the uniformity lighting with the compound lighting. The experiment is carried out with the two scaled-models that were supposed to be an office space. One is lit by the uniform lighting and the other by the compound lighting. Subjects were asked to evaluate the point of difference by semantic differential rating on their overall impression after comparing with two rooms. The results showed that the impressions of compound lighting were more positive score than that of uniformity lighting on the items of ‘dim-bright’, ‘dislike-like’, ‘artificial-natural’ and ‘closed-open’, and that there was no significant difference in impressions between two spaces on other items.
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  • Teppei KASAHARA, Daisuke AIZAWA, Takashi IRIKURA, Takayoshi MORIYAMA, ...
    2006 Volume 30 Issue 2 Pages 95-103
    Published: 2006
    Released on J-STAGE: October 23, 2006
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    It is expected that lighting employing white LED will become popular in the future. However, the influence of the arrangement as well as the number of LED lights and luminance distribution of the surface of light sources on discomfort glare has not yet been clarified. The aim of this study is to clarify such influences by conducting an experiment using simulated light sources. The results of the experiment show that the closer the ratio of luminance of the peripheral area against luminance of the LED lighting (luminance of the peripheral area / luminance of the LED lighting) is to 1, the smaller the discomfort glare. It is also clarified that when the total area of the light source is constant, although the BCD average luminance increases as the number of LED lights increases, the level of increase in the BCD average luminance is smaller than that in the number of LED lights. Further, when the interval of LED lights is constant, it is found that although the BCD average luminance decreases as the total area of the light source increases, the level of the decrease is smaller than the level of the increase.
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