Maximum Yield USA 2016 June | Page 146

ARTIFICIAL LIGHTING “While LEDs do reduce the cost of heat removal, the cost still exists and increases as growers increase growing density.” Replacement and disposal costs, along with fragility and a nonspecific spectrum have limited the use of fluorescents in larger indoor operations. manufacturing, low operating costs and spectrum specificity tip the scales in favor of LEDs for indoor growers. Induction lighting is similar to Since more and more growers are choosing LEDs to light their farms, and more manufacturers are entering the LED space, a guide to understanding LEDs will benefit growers. fluorescents. It uses magnetic fields rather than filaments to produce light. Induction lights have long lifespans and moderate efficiency. They have yet to find significant traction in the farming industry. LEDs belong to a rapidly growing industry with continually decreasing costs. Benefits such as ruggedness, efficiency, dropping costs of A FOCUS ON LEDs ANATOMY OF AN LED A light-emitting diode is a device that emits light as one specific wavelength when energy passes through it. Two types of materials, each a different diode lens plastic shell energy released as light photons kind of semiconductor, are joined, creating the diode. Each of the semiconductors in the diode has a different charge—one semiconductor is negative and one is positive. When energy passes through the combined semiconductors, the electrons in the negative semiconductor and the “holes” (positively charged carriers) in the positive semiconductor are activated. The negatively charged electrons in one semiconductor slam into the “holes” (which are positively charged) in the other semiconductor. Since the positive and negative charges aren’t perfectly equal, they cannot perfectly cancel each other out. The excess energy has no place to go, and it is emitted as photons of light. The type of each semiconductor determines exactly how much excess energy there is, and as we know, the amount of energy in a photon determines wavelength. Therefore, each light-emitting diode emits one particular wavelength of light. The diode is packaged as a chip and encased in a plastic cap. Diodes are usually batched with other diodes that emit the same (or close to the same) wavelength of light. CHOOSING AN LED LIGHT holes electrons 144 Maximum Yield USA  |  June 2016 junction Choosing LED lights can be a slow and confusing process. There are many different variations of fundamentally similar products. To compare products, you’ll want to understand efficiency, form factors, heat outputs and warranties.