23 July 2020

Why Lumen is obsolete today

CHRISTOPHER CUTTLE ONE OF THE LEADING WORLD SCIENTISTS IN THE FIELD OF LIGHTING CONSIDERS THAT LUMEN IS OUT OF DATE AND NEEDS TO BE REVISED. MODERN APPROACH TO LIGHTING TAKES INTO LOT OF PARAMETERS

The Lumen, a measure of lighting since the 1920s, is outdated and needs replacing, one of the world’s top lighting scientists has claimed.
Dr Christopher Cuttle, lecturer in Advanced Lighting Design at the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane, Australia, says that the notion of a fundamental unit of light is no longer tenable and it needs to be revised.

His contention is that the lumen is purely a measure of visible light, and doesn’t take into account its non-visual impact on humans, such as its role in setting our sleep-wake cycle. ‘The reliance on the lumen is currently coming under pressure as practitioners seek to incorporate non-visual human responses, notably circadian effects, into their lighting solutions’.

He says that there is ‘far more to human visual sensitivity’ than is indicated by the lumen, and ‘more again when the full scope of lighting practice is taken into consideration’.
‘Lighting practitioners have been content to adopt the lumen, which is derived from the candela, for specifying quantities of light although they recognise it is inappropriate for non-visual applications such as providing for therapeutic, photosynthetic or germicidal effects, or for assessing potential for photochemical damage’, Cuttle wrote in the learned journal Lighting Research & Technology.

He suggests it would be better to measure lamp and luminaire performance in terms of its spectral power distribution in Watts per nanometre.
‘While the notion of multiple illuminance units might seem confusing, it would rid us of ‘scotopic lumens’ and other such proliferating confusions’, said Cuttle.
‘These proposed changes would enable lighting practitioners to evaluate illumination according to the purposes it is to serve as well as putting them in the role of delivering the range of benefits that advanced lighting technology offers to the community’.

 

Source: www.luxreview.com/