Abstract

The measurement uncertainty of illuminance and, consequently, luminous flux and luminous efficacy of LED lamps can be reduced with a recently introduced method based on the predictable quantum efficient detector (PQED). One of the most critical factors affecting the measurement uncertainty with the PQED method is the determination of the aperture area. This paper describes an upgrade to an optical method for direct determination of aperture area where superposition of equally spaced Gaussian laser beams is used to form a uniform irradiance distribution. In practice, this is accomplished by scanning the aperture in front of an intensity-stabilized laser beam. In the upgraded method, the aperture is attached to the PQED and the whole package is transversely scanned relative to the laser beam. This has the benefit of having identical geometry in the laser scanning of the aperture area and in the actual photometric measurement. Further, the aperture and detector assembly does not have to be dismantled for the aperture calibration. However, due to small acceptance angle of the PQED, differences between the diffraction effects of an overfilling plane wave and of a combination of Gaussian laser beams at the circular aperture need to be taken into account. A numerical calculation method for studying these effects is discussed in this paper. The calculation utilizes the Rayleigh–Sommerfeld diffraction integral, which is applied to the geometry of the PQED and the aperture. Calculation results for various aperture diameters and two different aperture-to-detector distances are presented.

Highlights

  • Energy-efficient LED lamps and luminaires have become popular in general lighting

  • This paper describes an upgrade to an optical method for direct determination of aperture area where superposition of spaced Gaussian laser beams is used to form a uniform irradiance distribution

  • The uncertainty in photometric measurements of LED lamps can be improved with the predictable quantum efficient detector (PQED)-based realization of photometric unit

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Summary

Introduction

Energy-efficient LED lamps and luminaires have become popular in general lighting. It is estimated that in 2020 the global market share of LED lamps will be almost 70 % in general lighting and that luminous efficacies will grow beyond 200 lm / W [1, 2]. Total luminous flux measurement is needed in the determination of the luminous efficacy of a light source It can be performed with either a goniometric [5, 6] or an absolute integrating sphere method [3, 7, 8]. Lassila et al developed such an optical method for direct determination of aperture area [18,19,20], in which a two-dimensional superposition of spaced Gaussian laser beams is used to form a uniform irradiance distribution. This method has the benefit of having identical geometry in the laser scanning of the aperture area and in the actual photometric measurement. The impact of many recent advances in electrical and optical measurements of LED lamps—including those presented here—on the luminous efficacy measurements of white LED lamps is assessed

LED photometry
Laser scanning method for the aperture area determination
Rayleigh–Sommerfeld diffraction integral
Gaussian laser beam
Calculation procedure
Sampling
Simulation geometry and parameters
Simulation results
Anticipated uncertainty
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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