Commercial refrigerated display cases are typically illuminated using lamps located inside the display case. When a consumer opens a door of the refrigerated display case, warmer more humid air located outside the display case flows into the display case, which contains cooler less humid air. Condensation and fog can accumulate on the lens or translucent cover of the lamp as the warmer more humid air cools inside the display case. Until the condensation evaporates from the lens, a reduction in the overall light output measured on the products displayed in the refrigerated display case results.
At present, most commercial refrigerated display cases are illuminated using fluorescent lamps. Fluorescent tubes radiate heat as power is delivered to the lamp to illuminate the lamp. Since the fluorescent tubes are cylindrical, the heat radiates in all directions around the tube. The heat that is radiated toward the lens of the fluorescent lamp warms the lens. The warm lens can prevent fog or condensation from forming on the lens because the moisture quickly dissipates into the air of the refrigerated display case.
More recently, light emitting diode (LED) lamps have been employed to illuminate the inside of refrigerated display cases. LED lamps are preferred because they consume less power (watts) than their fluorescent counterparts, which results in an energy savings. Since less power is being delivered to the LED lamp, as compared to a fluorescent lamp, there is less heat generated by the lamp to warm the lens (or translucent cover) that covers the LEDs. Moreover, as more efficient LEDs have been developed and the systems have been improved to direct the light toward more useful areas of the display case, the amount of power that is delivered to the LED lamp is further reduced.
In addition to consuming less power, lamps that employ LEDs do not dissipate very much heat via radiation. Instead, LED lamps found in refrigerated display cases conduct heat from the non-light emitting side of the LED into a heat sink, a large portion of which is spaced from the lens or translucent cover. Accordingly, it is difficult to use the heat generated by the LEDs to dissipate any fog or condensation that forms on the lens or translucent cover of the LED lamp.
Additionally, LED lamps that are used to illuminate refrigerated display cases are also only moderately sealed. In other words, the housing of the lamp assembly allows for the ingress of air and water into the housing, which can result in condensation forming on the inner (light entering) surface of the lens or translucent cover for the LED lamp.
To overcome the fogging and condensation problems associated with LED lamps in cool environments, a lamp that can be used in a cool environment where an overall light output measured on a target plane is not significantly reduced due to condensation or fog includes anti-fog material disposed on at least one of the surfaces of the translucent cover of the lamp.
For example, a refrigerated display case includes a refrigerated enclosure, a door, and a lamp assembly. The enclosure includes a door opening, and the door attaches to the enclosure and covers the door opening for providing access to inside the enclosure. The lamp assembly connects to the enclosure for illuminating products stored within the enclosure. The lamp assembly includes a plurality of LEDs, a heat sink in thermal communication with the LEDs, a cover connected to the heat sink, and an anti-fog material in or on the cover. The plurality of LEDs conduct heat into the heat sink. The cover is disposed in relation to the LEDs so that light emitted from the LEDs passes through the cover. Providing the anti-fog material lessens the likelihood of fog or condensation forming on the translucent cover, which would lessen the overall light output measured on the products stored in the enclosure.
A method for manufacturing a lamp for use in a refrigerated environment includes placing an LED in a housing and attaching a cover made from sheet stock to the housing at a location so that light emitted from the LED passes through the cover. The sheet stock in this example has already been coated with an anti-fog material.
With reference to
With reference to
The lamp 10 is generally elongated and paralleliped in configuration. The lamp without the anti-fog material is more fully described in U.S. application No. 60/889,458, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
In addition to the housing 12 and the LEDs 14, the lamp 10 also includes a printed circuit board (“PCB”) 22 and the optic 24, mentioned above. The LEDs 14 mount to the PCB 22 and the PCB is in electrical communication with a power source (not shown) for supplying power to the LEDs. The PCB is an FR4 two-sided printed circuit board having thermal vias. Circuitry is provided on the PCB in a manner that is known in the art. Alternatively, the PCB can be made from other materials such as metal clad or a metal core PCB.
The LEDs 14 are staggered on opposite sides of a central axis of the PCB 22 moving along the PCB and the direction parallel to the central axis. The LEDs 14 are driven by an external power supply that is connected to the PCB 22 in a known manner. The PCB 22 is held against the heat sink 18 by the optic 24. The PCB 22 is held in a channel 26 formed in the heat sink 18. From the LEDs 14 is heat conducted through the non-emitting side (lower) side of the LED 14 into the PCB 22, which conducts the heat into the heat sink 18. Very little heat is transmitted toward the translucent cover 16, especially as compared to a fluorescent lamp.
The lamp 10 can be easily altered so as not to include a PCB. For example, electricity can be delivered to the LEDs via a flex circuit, wires, a circuit ribbon or another known carrier of electricity. In such an instance and where the lamp includes a heat sink, the LEDs can be in thermal communication with the heat sink.
The translucent cover 16 is made from polyethylene tetraphthlate glycol (PETG) or polycarbonate (PC) flat sheet stock. The PETG or PC sheet stock is flatter and clearer than existing extruded lenses that are made to include the curve that is shown in
Because the translucent cover 16 is made of a flat sheet stock material, the flat sheet stock is bent prior to insertion into retaining grooves 32 that are formed in the heat sink 18. Contact between the translucent cover 16 and the heat sink 18 is limited to the longitudinal edges of the translucent cover 16 that are retained in the channels 32 formed in the heat sink. A majority of the heat sink 18 is spaced from the translucent cover 16. As such, a void 34 is formed in the housing 12 generally between the translucent cover 16 and the heat sink 18. The air in the void insulates the heat in the heat sink from the central part of the lens, which can allow for the buildup of condensation and/or fog. Since a majority of the heat generated by the LED 14 is conducted into the heat sink 18, and more particularly into a lower base 36 (the horizontal section in
An anti-fog film, which can also be referred to as an anti-film coating, can be disposed on at least one of the surfaces of the translucent cover 16. In the depicted embodiment, the anti-fog film is disposed on a light receiving surface 42 and a light emitting surface 44 of the translucent cover. The anti-fog film can be a two-sided polycarbonate film such as Lexan™ HP92AF film available from the General Electric Co. Other types of anti-fog films can also be used, for example the super hydrophilic coatings described in U.S. Published Patent Application No. 2007/0104922 A1, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein. Anti-fog films that exhibit similar properties to those shown in the table below can be good candidates for the anti-fog film.
In the depicted embodiment, both the light receiving surface 42 and the light emitting surface 44 are coated with the anti-fog film. The anti-fog coating, or anti-fog film, can be applied using a typical spray coating process or a typical die coating process, each of which are well known in the art. This is the case because the housing 12 is only moderately sealed. The housing includes end covers 46 (only one shown) that attach to the ends of both the translucent cover 16 and the heat sink 18. The connections between the end pieces, the cover and the heat sink allow for the ingress of air and water into the void 34. Accordingly, condensation can form on the light receiving surface 42 of the translucent cover 16.
A lamp that is useful for illuminating products found in a refrigerated display case has been described with particularity. The lamp is also useful in other cool environments. The lamp 10 can take many other configurations other than the specific embodiment disclosed. For example, the lamp can include a circular shaped or another shaped heat sink. The translucent cover can also take another configuration. The invention is not to be limited to only the embodiments that are described above. Instead, the invention is broadly defined by the appended claims and the equivalents thereof.
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WO 0100065 | Jan 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20090161350 A1 | Jun 2009 | US |