Services & Maintenance: Light Bright

By Mary Claire Frazier, IALD, LC, LEED AP
Published in the August 2006 issue of Today’s Facility Manager

Disposal of fluorescent and HID lamps that contain mercury and lead can be a trial for facility managers. Almost every state’s regulations differ from the others. But they all require time consuming storage, packaging, paperwork, and organization.

Some customers wonder if it wouldn’t just be easier, more economical, and more environmentally friendly use incandescent lamps exclusively to simplify the process. Unfortunately, this isn’t an option.

Regulations have been evolving for several years to encourage recycling. Both California and New York now require recycling of all fluorescent and HID lamps, and other states won’t be far behind.

From top to bottom: T6 metal halide, PAR38 metail halide, T5 fluorescent, T8 fluorescent. Which lamps would you rather store and dispose of? Photo provided by Candela Architectural Lighting Consultants.

Many require recycling if a facility disposes more than a certain minimum number of lamps. As a result, quite an industry has sprung up to accommodate these requirements. Facilities can pre-order boxes in which to ship spent lamps to recycling plants and lamp crushers to reduce the volume of waste.

Incandescent lamps can be thrown in the trash and disposed of in any landfill. Sure, fluorescent and HID lamps are more efficient at producing light, but are they really worth all that mercury in landfills potentially leaching into groundwater? The answer is yes.

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that only 1% of the mercury released into the environment comes from mercury containing lamps, that in comparison to 87% due to incineration and coal fired power plants. Still, every kilowatt hour saved by the use of more efficient sources to generate light prevents 0.04 milligrams of mercury emissions from power plants. However, the EPA recommends that all fluorescent lamps be recycled as a way of reducing mercury in landfills, even though low dose lamps are now prevalent and many have so little mercury that they are legally exempt from recycling requirements.

Waste Reduction Options

There are several options for reducing the volume of lamp waste that also provide other savings for a facility. The quest for smaller sizes in fluorescent light fixtures has been progressing for several years and is a familiar scene in the marketplace. Lamps are getting smaller, and smaller lamps require less storage space.

T5 fluorescent lamps have several advantages over larger T8 lamps. They require less mercury to operate because of the lower volume of the cavity and contain less material that needs to be recycled. Because smaller lamps allow more precise reflectors to control the optics of a light fixture, fewer light fixtures are required to provide the same light levels.

An even more interesting development has been taking place in metal halide fixtures. With the development of ceramic metal halide lamps, this efficient technology has migrated inside over the last few years.

The early generations of ceramic metal halide lamps included mostly ellipsoidal and PAR style bulbs. Ellipsoidal lamps look like traditional metal halide lamps and require bulky fixtures because of the size of the lamp and the need to add a reflector around the omni-directional lamp.

PAR lamps, with thick glass lenses on integral reflectors that house the ceramic capsule, produce a single specific beam spread. These lamps can be used in fairly basic fixtures, since they carry their optics with them. The fixture must only provide a socket and ballast.

Newer generations of ceramic metal halide lamps include T style lamps that are either double-ended or single-ended tubes. These lamps require fixtures that incorporate optical systems to determine the distribution of the light produced by the fixture. This means a more sophisticated and expensive fixture is part of the first cost of a project, but substantially less cost is incurred over time due to the smaller storage capacity requirements and the elimination of the need to buy a reflector every time it is necessary to purchase a lamp.

In fact, many manufacturers are offering fixtures that have interchangeable optics for these lamps. This means a single housing type can be used to produce a variety of beam spreads to accommodate various lighting functions. The reflector systems can be changed in the field whenever the fixtures need maintenance, and facilities departments are only required to store one lamp type in order to maintain that fixture.

With sophisticated optics and good quality construction that addresses heat dissipation issues, these lamp/fixture systems can produce an amazing amount of light from very little energy. The crisp, incandescent like light quality is a big plus, and the amount of lamp waste is minimal.

Additionally, the latest ballasts are now being produced to accommodate multiple wattages and voltages of metal halide lamps. This also reduces storage requirements, since fewer ballast types need to be kept on hand for timely replacement.

These system improvements are transforming metal halide lamps into the kind of easily interchangeable light source that incandescent A-lamps have been for years. The technology is not quite there yet, but that’s the direction the market is heading.

Lamp Life, Mercury, And Performance

From the facility maintenance point of view, lamp life is an issue that puts fluorescent lamps miles ahead of any other type of light source. Long life T8 lamps have proliferated in recent years, and many product lines from manufacturers are being marketed directly to facility managers.

It’s pretty obvious that the longer a lamp lasts, the less waste is created. However, it’s not an entirely clear cut issue from an environmental waste point of view. T5 lamps, with lower mercury content and less waste potential than T8 lamps, are not yet available in the extended life technology.

Low dose mercury lamps have become the norm in recent years, and this translates into very good news in terms of reducing the amount of environmental mercury entering the waste stream. However, some extremely serious issues have resulted from the use of lamps with too little mercury content to support performance requirements.

T5HO lamps that drop below a certain mercury level fail when they are dimmed on a regular basis. Since daylight dimming is one of the bright spots in energy savings for commercial facilities, this indicates that mercury levels in lamps have a critical line below which they cannot fall. As this problem was coming to light over the past couple of years, the number of lamps disposed of due to shortened life was substantial.

What About LEDs?

LEDs are being touted far and wide as the answer to every lighting question. [For more on this topic, see the Letters section of the magazine on page 8.] While they may someday actually be the main light source for commercial facilities, they aren’t there yet.

Their level of efficiency, while improving steadily, is approximately equal to halogen incandescent at this point. The current effectiveness of LEDs as a light source is based on the precision of their light distribution which is facilitated by their small size.

From a maintenance point of view, their quality and durability vary widely. There is substantial disagreement between experts and producers regarding life expectations and color quality. Some products allow for individual LEDs or modules to be replaced without replacing the entire fixture, but close inspection of product literature is often required to determine this. Since the technology is advancing at such an incredible rate, there is no guarantee the same products will be available at all when the time comes to change lamps.

From a disposal point of view, LEDs are circuit boards and should follow the same disposal path as other technologies of this kind. The low volume of LEDs reaching end of life so far has not triggered much discussion of this issue. However, once the current crop of products begins to fail, the issue will surface as a serious concern.

Optimizing Lighting Systems

As commercial buildings are being built and remodeled, facilities managers need to be involved in the design process in a positive way. Involvement of the people responsible for operating these increasingly complex systems is critical to ensure that lighting issues are addressed with approaches that will increase energy effectiveness, limit the number of lamps and lamp types required, and reduce disposal volume.

Effective involvement requires education in the complexities of the systems and equipment. There is also the need to understand the reasons for using different types of light sources and fixtures.

The facility manager who insists on the use of only 4′ T8 lamps is not contributing to the process in a useful way. The creation of visual environments that people enjoy populating is a culturally positive value that requires a range of tools. The best results come from cooperation and innovation.

Facility managers should encourage manufacturers to produce fixtures with energy efficient small lamps, interchangeable optics, and durable construction to reduce waste and storage volume. They should also take a realistic look at the pros and cons of the numerous fluorescent lamp options that promise nirvana.

Insisting that new technologies prove their reliability and effectiveness is smart. But equally important is the effort to encourage the market to produce new products that transform wasteful practices.

Frazier is principal at Candela Architectural Lighting Consultants based in Seattle, WA. She has more than 22 years of experience as an independent lighting designer and instructor. For more information on Candela’s services, visit the Web at www.candela.com.

Useful Web Links:

General Electric Lighting

www.gelighting.com/na

International Association of Lighting Designers

www.iald.org

Lighting Research Center

www.lrc.rpi.edu

National Electrical Manufacturers Association

www.nema.org

OSRAM SYLVANIA Lighting

www.sylvania.com

Philips Lighting

www.lighting.philips.com

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

www.epa.gov

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