Flow Cytometry Facility Room Lighting

From: Lara E Krebs <KREBS_LARA_E@Lilly.com>
Date: Thu Aug 16 2007 - 17:36:14 EDT
I shared some of this groups' comments with the fellow coordinating 
construction of our new labs (and the guy who got our lighting order 
back-filled when it was deleted from our original specs.)

Perhaps some of this could be useful...

----- Forwarded by Lara E Krebs/AM/LLY on 08/16/2007 05:32 PM -----

Lara,

As I was scanning through the e-mail, I had some thoughts and thought you 
might want to share them with your colleagues.	I'll pose it as a question 
, and then make some assumptions and observations. 

Could you use LED lights?

Assumptions - 
Architects and designers are always trying to infuse the latest technology 
into their latest projects. 

Architects and facilities engineers don't like incandescent lighting 
because they cost more to operate, bulbs fail more frequently than other 
lighting sources, and they generate more heat than other lighting sources.

Observations - 
Architects and facilities planners don't understand your science.

Other lighting options are available, but I don't know if they have been 
tested in areas where you do your science.

Facts about LED lights - 
Low power consumption
Narrow light spectrum output.  You can dial in your color temperature with 
the right bulb.
Multitude of lighting options (different power and wavelengths)
Long bulb life
Cool to look at and easy to incorporate into almost any setting.

Just my thoughts.  Feel free to share, or keep to yourself.

Regards,



picture
Received on Fri Aug 17 16:38:00 2007

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