LIGHTING RETROFIT STRATEGIES AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

LIGHTING RETROFIT STRATEGIES AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES

Description:

... Advance Mark V/Mark VII Instant ... U.S. FCC Class A Standards Class A ... Electrode Voltage Electrode Heat Removed After Lamp Ignition Saves 1.5 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:73
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: DougA94
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: LIGHTING RETROFIT STRATEGIES AND PROJECT MANAGEMENT TECHNIQUES


1
BASICS OF BALLAST TECHNOLOGY
  • Created by the U.S. Department of Energy Rebuild
    America Business Partners
  • and
  • Advanced Transformer

2
Ballast Design
3
Design Basics
A Rapid Start Ballast Must Perform the Following
Four Functions
  • Electrode Preheat Voltage
  • Lamp Ignition Voltage
  • Regulate Lamp Current
  • Regulate Lamp Voltage

4
Electrode Voltage
  • Heater Voltage Applied Across The Pins of a
    Rapid Start Lamp
  • Approximately 3.5 Volts For F40T12, F32T8
  • Not Present For Instant Start Lamps
  • Heats Electrode to Begin Thermal Emission of
    Electrons
  • Voltage Across Pins
  • Electrode Current Flow
  • Thermal Emission
  • Lamp Ready to Start
  • .5 to 1 Second

5
Lamp Voltage Requirements
  • Voltage Applied Across The Lamp
  • Ignites The Lamp
  • Begins Lamp Current Flow
  • 200 Volts For F40T12
  • Higher For F32T8
  • Higher or Lower Than 120/277 U.S. Line Voltage
  • Ballast Acts as a Transformer
  • Voltage Must Be Reduced After Lamp Ignition
  • 98 Volts for F40T12
  • 137 Volts for F32T8

6
Fluorescent Lamp Current
  • Lamp Will Draw Excessive Current Unless Regulated
  • Lamp Failure in 1/100 th of a Second
  • Ballast Limits Current Flow
  • 430 ma For F40T12
  • 265 ma for F32T8
  • Maintains Proper Light Output
  • Maintains Correct Electrode Temperature
  • Too Little Will Decrease Lamp Life
  • Too Much Will Decrease Lamp Life

7
Starting Methods
  • Rapid Start
  • Rapid Start - Electrode Cutout (PowrKut)
  • Saves 1.5 Watts Per Electrode
  • No Reduction in Lamp Life
  • Rapid Start - Soft Start
  • Ramps Up Ignition Voltage
  • Increases Lamp Life
  • Exclusive - Advance Mark V/Mark VII
  • Instant Start
  • No Electrode Voltage, Higher Ignition Voltage
  • Possible Lamp Life Reduction if Heavily Cycled
  • Highest Efficiency

8
Lamp Starting/Circuiting
  • Rapid Start Ballasts Generally Have Their Lamps
    Wired in Series
  • When One Lamp Burns Out, all Lamps are
    Extinguished
  • Instant Start Lamps Generally Have Their Lamps
    Wired in Parallel
  • When One Lamp Burns Out, the Remaining Lamps Stay
    On

9
Lamp Life
  • IES LM-40 Measurement Procedure
  • 3 Hours On, 20 Minutes OFF
  • Rapid Starting of a RS Lamp will Achieve a 20,000
    Hour Lamp Life
  • Instant Starting of a RS Lamp will Reduce Lamp
    Life to 15,000 Hours
  • Lamp Life Equal at 12-16 Hours Per Start
  • 25,000 to 30,000 Hours
  • Occupancy Sensors
  • Up to 50 Lamp Life Reduction
  • Shorter Life, But in Fixture Same Amount of Time
  • Tremendous Energy Savings Potential

10
Performance Characteristics
  • Ballast Factor
  • Input Wattage
  • Ballast Efficacy Factor
  • Lamp Current Crest Factor
  • Power Factor
  • Harmonic Distortion
  • Electromagnetic/Radio Frequency Interference

11
Ballast Factor - Light Output
  • Delivered Lumens/Rated Lumens
  • 2700/3000 .90 BF
  • 2800 rated x .88 BF 2464 delivered lumens
  • ANSI Standards
  • .925 Minimum for Magnetic
  • .85 Minimum for Electronic
  • Typical Values
  • .95 Magnetic
  • .88 - .92 Electronic
  • Thermal Effects Allow Difference
  • Higher Lamp Bulb Wall Temperature When Operated
    in an Enclosed Fixture Reduces Light Output (and
    Watts)

12
Electronic Ballast Factor Options
  • Higher Ballast Factor - Higher Watts
  • Lower Ballast Factor - Fewer Watts
  • Normal Light Output 85-92 BF
  • Reduced Light Output 75-84 BF
  • May Cause Lamp Life Reduction
  • High Light Output 110-115 BF
  • Rated Lamp Current
  • Very High Light Output 125- 130 BF
  • Will Cause Lamp Life Reduction

13
Efficiency Vs. Efficacy
  • Efficiency
  • Power Out/Power In
  • Ballast Efficiency
  • Watts Loss
  • Magnetic - 20 W
  • EE Mag - 10 W
  • Low Freq. Elec. (Hybrid) - 8 W
  • High Frequency Elec. - 5-8 W

14
Efficiency Vs. Efficacy
  • Efficacy
  • Un-like Terms
  • Lumens/Watt (LPW)
  • Miles/Gallon (MPG)
  • LPW
  • of the Lamp
  • of the System

15
Input Wattage
  • Input Wattage to the Lamp/Ballast SYSTEM
  • Separate Wattages are Meaningless
  • Different Wattages for Same System
  • ANSI
  • Open Fixture
  • Enclosed Fixture
  • ANSI Standard is Only Repeatable Measurement
  • Wattage Decrease Follows Light Output
  • Manufacturers Catalogs are Different!
  • ANSI, Open, Enclosed, ???

16
Input Wattage Comparison
  • Four Lamp F32T8 Electronic Ballast
  • ANSI Input wattage
  • 112 Watts
  • Open Fixture Wattage
  • 109
  • Enclosed Fixture Wattage
  • 106
  • Applicable to 1,2,3,4 Lamp Ballasts
  • Two Lamp T8 Electronic
  • Advance RS - 60 w ANSI
  • Competitor - 60 w OPEN ( equiv. to 62/63W ANSI)
  • Same Rated Light Output

17
Ballast Efficacy Factor
  • Ballast Factor/ANSI Input Watts
  • 95BF/96W .99 BEF Magnetic T12
  • 90BF/72W 1.25 BEF Electronic T12
  • Basis of Legislation
  • 1.06 BEF Minimum for (2) F40T12 Lamps _at_120V
  • Measurement of Efficacy of Lamp/Ballast System
  • Use Lumens per Watt (LPW) to Compare DIFFERENT
    Lamp/Ballast SYSTEMS
  • 60 LPW - F40T12 Magnetic System
  • 85 LPW - F32T8 Electronic System

18
Lamp Current Crest Factor
  • Ipeak divided by Irms
  • Measurement of Smoothness of Lamp Current
    Waveform
  • Sine Wave 1.414
  • ANSI Maximum 1.7 Rapid Start
  • Typical Magnetic - 1.6-1.7
  • Typical Electronic - 1.5-1.6

19
Power Factor
  • Determines the Relationship Between the Voltage
    and the Current Waveforms
  • Normal Power Factor is 50-60
  • High Power Factor is gt 90
  • Magnetic Ballasts are Typically 95-99 PF
  • Electronic Ballasts are Typically 97-99 PF
  • No Discernible Difference
  • Be Careful of Large Load Reductions!
  • Reflectors
  • Delamping

20
Harmonic Distortion
  • Created by Non-Linear Loads
  • Computer Power Supplies
  • Adjustable Speed Drives
  • Arc-Discharge Lighting
  • Every Device Except a Resistor
  • Magnetic Ballasts Have it
  • Electronic Ballasts Have it
  • Computers and ASDs Have MUCH MORE!!

21
Effects of Harmonic Distortion
  • Overheating of Phase Conductors
  • Circuit Breaker Tripping
  • Transformer Overheating
  • Overloading of Neutral Conductor
  • A Properly Designed Lighting System Will Cause
    None of This!

22
Linear Non-Linear Loads
23
Distortion of the Fundamental Waveform with
Harmonic Waveforms
24
3 Phase Supply Circuit
25
Fundamental (60 Hz) Current Addition
Phase A
Phase B - 120 Degrees
Phase C - 240 Degrees
Fundamental Current Cancels on the Neutral
26
Harmonic Current Addition
Phase B - 120 Degrees
Phase A
Triplen Harmonics Add on the Neutral
Phase C - 240 Degrees
27
Harmonic Percentages
  • ANSI Standard is 32
  • IEC Standard is 34.8
  • Magnetic Ballast
  • Typically 20-30
  • Electronic Ballast
  • Typically 10-20
  • Magnetic Ballasts Draw More Current
  • Typical Electronic T8 has 50 Less Harmonic
    Current Than Magnetic T12

28
Electromagnetic/ Radio Frequency Interference
  • Electronic Ballasts Designed to meet U.S. FCC
    Class A Standards
  • Class A Commercial/Industrial Requirements
  • 450 - 2000 KHz 60 dB
  • 2.0 - 30 MHz 71 dB
  • Class B Residential Requirements
  • 450 KHz - 30 MHZ 48 dB
  • Electronic Ballasts are Class A, and Could
    Interfere with Residential Devices
  • Put on Separate Circuits
  • Place Farther Away From One Another

29
High Frequency Electronic Application Concerns
  • Power Line Carrier Systems
  • Local RF Transmissions
  • Library Book Security Systems
  • GFI Circuits
  • Infrared Control Devices
  • EMI/RFI Sensitive Locations

High Efficiency PowrKut Low Frequency Electronic
Ballasts are Recommended in These Applications.
30
System Performance Comparisons
Several Lamp and Ballast Choices
  • T8 vs. T10 vs. T12
  • Magnetic vs. Hybrid vs. Electronic

31
Lamp Comparisons
  • F40T12
  • 3050Lm/40w 76.3 LPW
  • F40T12/34w
  • 2750Lm/34w 80.9 LPW
  • F32T8
  • 2800Lm/32w 87.5 LPW
  • 3050Lm/32w 95.3 LPW
  • F40T10
  • 3700Lm/40w 92.5 LPW

32
Ballast Choices
  • Magnetic - Operates at 60 Hz
  • Hybrid - Electrode Cutout - Operates at 60 Hz
  • Electronic - High Frequency - Operates gt20,000 Hz

33
Magnetic Ballasts
  • Most Common
  • Steel
  • Copper
  • Core Coil
  • 60 Hz Lamp Operation
  • Lamp Flicker not Noticed
  • Audible Noise, Sound Rated A
  • Lowest Initial Cost

34
Hybrid Ballasts
  • Core Coil
  • Electronic Circuit Provides Electrode Voltage
  • Electrode Heat Removed After Lamp Ignition
  • Saves 1.5 Watts per Electrode
  • Electronic Circuit Provides Stable Voltage
  • Rated Lamp Life or BETTER
  • No Harmful Lamp Effects
  • 1.4-1.5 Crest Factor
  • 97-99 as Efficient as Electronic Rapid Start
  • Lower Initial Cost Than Electronic

35
Electronic Power Flow
  • Input
  • EMI Filter, Transient Protection
  • Rectification
  • 60 Hz AC to DC
  • High Frequency Converter
  • DC to 20,000 Hz AC
  • Power Factor Correction
  • THD Correction
  • Output to Lamp

36
Electronic Ballast
  • Operates at High Frequency
  • 20,000 Hz to 60,000 Hz
  • 6-16 Lamp Efficacy Gain
  • Combines Electronic Components with Small
    Magnetic Transformers
  • No Fully Electronic Ballast
  • Highest Efficiency
  • Highest Initial Cost
  • No Lamp Flicker
  • 25-75 Less Noise

37
Electronic Dimming Systems
  • Architectural
  • 100 - 1 Dimming
  • Expensive
  • Energy Management
  • 100-20 Dimming
  • Code Requirements
  • 100/50 Step Dimming
  • 5 Level Step Dimming

38
Energy Management Dimming
  • Daylighting
  • Occupancy Sensing
  • Lumen Maintenance
  • Manual Control
  • Time of Day Lighting Schedule
  • Integrated Building Management System
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com