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How Quantum Dots Could Make LEDs as Warm as Candlelight

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I’ve had a nit to pick with LED lights and their sterile glow. But quantum dots—tiny crystals that emit a specific color—could be added to LEDs to alter their photonic output. Wee!

https://gizmodo.com/hot-electric-metal-encased-in-a-sphere-of-glass-5415502

Gizmodo buddy Kate Greene interviewed QD Vision‘s Seth Coe Sullivan and the founder of the MIT spinoff explained the process as such:

The quantum dot lighting solution is relatively simple: Adding red quantum dots to a white LED makes the resulting white light appear warmer. Light from the LED gives electrons in the quantum dots an energetic boost for a short time; when the electrons return to their lower energy state, they emit a photon, a process called photoluminescence. (Photoluminescence is in contrast to electroluminescence, in which electric current, not light, excites electrons.)

Unlike filters, the method does not soak up light and hurt efficiency — they’re taking “blue photons from the LED and outputting red photons from the quantum dots.” QD Vision’s tech got some press earlier in the year, but I hadn’t noticed it before writing my ode to the classic lightbulb. And although the bulbs aren’t out yet, they’ll be $100 when they are. We’ll have to take one for a spin when they come around. And if they work, and last as long as they say they should, I’m going to kiss the incandescent goodbye forever. [Kate Greene]

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